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Answering the Miscegenation Analogy
Sen. B. J. Cruz, in advocating the adoption of Bill 138, which would establish same-sex unions here on Guam, likes to point to the anti-miscegenation laws of Virginia. These laws made the marriage of a man and woman from different racial backgrounds unlawful. In 1967 the U. S. Supreme Court declared these laws unconstitutional, thus ending all race-based restrictions on marriage. Sen. Cruz argues that, in the same way, all gender-based restrictions on marriage are unconstitutional or at least should be abolished because they are inherently unfair and discriminatory. Does he have a point?
The restrictions that Virginia placed on marriage in the Racial Integrity Act of 1924 were aimed at promoting the racist notion of “racial purity” popular at the time. Since the race or ethnicity of a person does not have any intrinsic link with anything that would prevent them from being part of a biological couple who wish to place their love for one another at the service of life, these restrictions are irrational and unjustly. Up to this point the Catholic Church is in complete agreement with Sen. Cruz.
Sen. Cruz, however, finds any restrictions based on gender to be equally irrational and unjust. To arrive at this conclusion he has separated sharing love from sharing life. He understands marriage to be simply the union of any two persons, irrespective of their gender, who want to share their love and their lives to the point of having sexual intimacies. Those who have accepted the notion that marriage has no intrinsic link with procreation of children are forced by his logic to agree with him. If you think that marriage is not about the union of a biological couple (i.e., a man and a woman), the requirement that couple to be married be of different genders will appear odd and out-of-place to you too.
The Catholic Church, however, because she has never accepted the idea that the unitive and the procreative aspects of marriage can be separated, finds the restriction of marriage to persons of different sexes not only rational, but necessary for the future of Guam, the future of the Church, the future citizens of Guam, and the health of the culture in which the children of the next generation will have to be reared. Therefore, for us, the analogy of civil unions with the abolition of the Virginia laws against interracial marriage simply does not fly.
P.S.
“The Majority Opinion of the New York Court of Appeals in Hernandez v. Robles rejected any reliance upon the Loving case as controlling upon the issue of same-sex marriage, holding that:
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[T]he historical background of Loving is different from the history underlying this case. Racism has been recognized for centuries — at first by a few people, and later by many more — as a revolting moral evil. This country fought a civil war to eliminate racism's worst manifestation, slavery, and passed three constitutional amendments to eliminate that curse and its vestiges. Loving was part of the civil rights revolution of the 1950s and 1960s, the triumph of a cause for which many heroes and many ordinary people had struggled since our nation began. It is true that there has been serious injustice in the treatment of homosexuals also, a wrong that has been widely recognized only in the relatively recent past, and one our Legislature tried to address when it enacted the Sexual Orientation Non-Discrimination Act four years ago (L 2002, ch 2). But the traditional definition of marriage is not merely a by-product of historical injustice. Its history is of a different kind. The idea that same-sex marriage is even possible is a relatively new one. Until a few decades ago, it was an accepted truth for almost everyone who ever lived, in any society in which marriage existed, that there could be marriages only between participants of different sex. A court should not lightly conclude that everyone who held this belief was irrational, ignorant or bigoted. We do not so conclude.[13] |
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Similarly the concurring opinion in the same case stated that:
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Plaintiffs' reliance on Loving v. Virginia (388 US 1 [1967]) for the proposition that the US Supreme Court has established a fundamental "right to marry the spouse of one's choice" outside the male/female construct is misplaced. In Loving, an interracial couple argued that Virginia's antimiscegenation statute, which precluded "any white person in this State to marry any save a white person, or a person with no other admixture of blood than white and American Indian" (id. at 5 n 4), violated the federal Due Process and Equal Protection clauses. The statute made intermarriage in violation of its terms a felony carrying a potential jail sentence of one to five years. The Lovings—a white man and a black woman—had married in violation of the law and been convicted, prompting them to challenge the validity of the Virginia law. The Supreme Court struck the statute on both equal protection and due process grounds, but the focus of the analysis was on the Equal Protection Clause. Noting that "[t]he clear and central purpose of the Fourteenth Amendment was to eliminate all official state sources of invidious racial discrimination in the States," the Court applied strict scrutiny review to the racial classification, finding "no legitimate overriding purpose independent of invidious racial discrimination which justifies this classification" (id. at 10, 11). It made clear "that restricting the freedom to marry solely because of racial classifications violates the central meaning of the Equal Protection Clause" (id. at 12). There is no question that the Court viewed this antimiscegenation statute as an affront to the very purpose for the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment—to combat invidious racial discrimination. In its brief due process analysis, the Supreme Court reiterated that marriage is a right "fundamental to our very existence and survival" (id., citing Skinner, 316 US at 541)—a clear reference to the link between marriage and procreation. It reasoned: "To deny this fundamental freedom on so unsupportable a basis as the racial classifications embodied in these statutes . . . is surely to deprive all the State's citizens of liberty without due process of law" (id.). Although the Court characterized the right to marry as a "choice," it did not articulate the broad "right to marry the spouse of one's choice" suggested by plaintiffs here. Rather, the Court observed that "[t]he Fourteenth Amendment requires that the freedom of choice to marry not be restricted by invidious racial discriminations" (id. [emphasis added]). Needless to say, a statutory scheme that burdens a fundamental right by making conduct criminal based on the race of the individual who engages in it is inimical to the values embodied in the state and federal Due Process clauses. Far from recognizing a right to marry extending beyond the one woman and one man union, it is evident from the Loving decision that the Supreme Court viewed marriage as fundamental precisely because of its relationship to human procreation.[13]” |
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Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loving_v._Virginia" on June 12, 2009.




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