General Discussion Undecided where to post - do it here. |
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#1 |
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Taking all the issues out of this, since I agree that the child shouldn't be punished, but shouldn't the child's birth certificate have the mother's name on it so genealogy can be checked later if necessary. I know sometimes the father's name isn't given but I always thought the mother's was mandatory. Was the mother not known here?
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#2 |
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Children of Gay Parents Target of Bigotry |
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#3 |
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Mr Fun thread? Yes. I don't see why Louisiana should be forced to recognise other state laws. This is just the standard procedure. It is standard procedure to recognize other states laws. Particularly with regards to family law (marriage, adoption, etc). This is the standard procedure. Why don't you know anything? Gay people move to states in order to force them to change their laws. You aren't a 'victim' if you've got an agenda backing you. You just called anyone discriminated against for being a Christian "not a victim". I don't think you realize that yet. |
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#4 |
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#6 |
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No, it's not the standard procedure. States are under no obligations to recognise other state laws. States can change their own laws to recognize whatever they want. The standard procedure is to recognize marriages/unions from other jurisdictions unless there is legislation specifically to the contrary (eg, State A gay-marries Ben and Ned, Ben and Ned move to Arkansas which has legislation banning gay marriage, so their marriage is not recognized in Arkansas). |
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#7 |
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I think you'll find recent court precedents are that out-of-state unions/marriages must be recognized unless there is specific legislation to the contrary. Not the case wrt to Massachusetts, although this is a common tactic. Get married there, move to a state that bars gay marriage and try to overturn the law there. Again, these folks aren't targets, the states are targets.
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#8 |
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States can change their own laws to recognize whatever they want. Yes, and the corollary is that other states are not required to recognise their laws. Look at this from the other side. If massachusetts were required to have the same laws as other states, they never would have been permitted to change their law.
It's a double edged sword. Yes, states are free to have their own laws, but they are not free to force their laws on the other states. The standard procedure is to recognize marriages/unions from other jurisdictions unless there is legislation specifically to the contrary (eg, State A gay-marries Ben and Ned, Ben and Ned move to Arkansas which has legislation banning gay marriage, so their marriage is not recognized in Arkansas). Which is exactly the case in Louisiana. So, your point here is that Massachusetts laws should take precedence over Louisiana laws in LA. |
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#9 |
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You asserted that no one can be a victim if they have an agenda backing them. That applies to anyone and everyone regardless of what the US constitution says. You are not a victim if you move to another state to target their law. You are targetting the state, not the other way around.
Someone who is practicing their faith, that's different. If the state changes their law to prevent them from practicing then they run afoul of the constitutional guarantees wrt religious freedoms. For instance, a Christian who is killed going door-to-door preaching is nota victim as he has an agenda backing him. That's your logic. He is not a victim of religious persecution, no. But he is still a victim of homocide. In this case, they are not a victim of anything at all. They are attempting to overturn a law that they don't like. How are they negatively affected and persecuted by the law as it stands in LA? |
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#10 |
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#11 |
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Truth's a ***** innit. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schizophrenia |
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#12 |
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#13 |
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#15 |
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#16 |
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I guess you missed this part when you read the article, Solomwi, because it does show where Caldwell stands: |
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#17 |
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They can't both be his biological fathers, can they? The certificate should have the name of the mother and the real father, the other father will have to adopt the child. |
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#18 |
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Did you? Caldwell isn't defying any ruling, and no Louisiana court has even made a ruling in this case for him to deny. Let me try to clarify: It's fair to make the conclusion that his actions are motivated by homophobia - I don't think Lamda article would make such a blantant, bald-faced lie (not saying Lambda is perfectly honest 100 percent of time, either). You're giving Caldwell the benefit of the doubt, that in all likliehood, he does not deserve. You're also ignoring the fact that more and more conservative (Democrat or Republican) politicians know it's become less acceptable to articulate blantantly bigoted, homophobic reasons for their actions so even when Caldwell does speak for himself, he will probably make up some other rationality for his actions other than the fact that he does hate gay people. But, I did make the mistake - it was not the state court's ruling, but a federal appellate court. |
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#19 |
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#20 |
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