eolesen
Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2003
- Messages
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You're obviously right, Tree.
I'm sure that the other 29 states who have constitutional amendments in place defining marriage as opposite-sex and/or prohibiting recognition of same-sex partnerships are now all hanging in the balance based on the decision by the Most Overturned Circuit Court in the nation's judiciary branch.
Then again, if that's the case, why did the court go thru the extra step of only mentioning California in their decision, and not the other six states covered by the Ninth who have DOMA provisions in their state constitutions?...
I'm sure that the other 29 states who have constitutional amendments in place defining marriage as opposite-sex and/or prohibiting recognition of same-sex partnerships are now all hanging in the balance based on the decision by the Most Overturned Circuit Court in the nation's judiciary branch.
Then again, if that's the case, why did the court go thru the extra step of only mentioning California in their decision, and not the other six states covered by the Ninth who have DOMA provisions in their state constitutions?...