160+ cities, all 50 states joining Supreme Court actions next week!
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Mar 23, 2013, 3:55:26 PM3/23/13
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Chicago's rally is
-5:30 PM, Monday, 3/25-
@ Federal Plaza, Adams & Dearborn Streets
Not in Chicago? Find events in 160+ other cities here!
Capitalizing on recent polls showing burgeoning popular support[2] for equal marriage rights, next week gay activists will hold vigils, marches and rallies in all fifty states and over 160 cities on the eve of the Supreme Courts oral arguments about two pivotal gay rights cases.
In Chicago the rally and march, sponsored by the Gay Liberation Network
and The Civil Rights Agenda, will begin at 5:30 PM, Monday, March 25 at
Federal Plaza, Adams and Dearborn Streets, followed by a march to
Pioneer Court by the Tribune Building.
On March 26 and 27 the Supreme Court of the United States will hear oral
arguments in two cases about the freedom of same-sex couples to marry.
These cases – which challenge the constitutionality of the federal
Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) and California’s Proposition 8 – are
fundamentally about whether LGBT Americans can enjoy the same freedoms
and opportunities as everyone else.
Even if Illinois legalizes same-sex marriage, more than 1100 federal
rights and responsibilities associated with marriage would still be
denied gay couples here, according to a General Accounting Office study.
The primary legislative barrier to this equality is the 1996 Defense of
Marriage Act (DOMA), signed into law by President Clinton, which denies
legal equality at the federal level even in states which have legalized
same sex marriage, and allows states which do not recognize same-sex
marriage to deny recognition of such marriages made in states that do.
DOMA and Proposition 8 blatantly
violate core constitutional principles that even conservative,
"Originalist" Supreme Court justices, if they're being intellectually
honest, should strike down.
The "full faith and credit clause" of Article V, Section 1, for example,
says that states are required to respect the "public acts, records, and
judicial proceedings of every other state," and should force a
rejection, at least in part, of DOMA. If the Court is being honest, the
"equal protection clause" of the Constitution's 14th Amendment,
requiring that "no state shall ... deny to any person within its
jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws," should force a rejection
of Proposition 8 and all other state-wide anti-gay laws.
The
reality is that the Court, for all its pretensions and rationalizations
of deciding cases based purely upon constitutional principles and
precedent, is a completely political body.
In
the 1990s, all branches of government leaned on anti-gay public opinion
to thwart core constitutional principles that should have protected
LGBT people. Today, with a massive swing in public opinion in favor of
equality, our aim through these marches and rallies is to force the
Court to live up to its Constitutional obligations that it heretofore
has botched.
We
have to send a signal to the Court that if it rejects or muddles on
equal rights, that it will pay an immense political price, that it will
discredit itself as an institution, and that ordinary citizens will
reject its legitimacy as an unelected, unaccountable body which has no
place in a true democracy.
Increasingly,
institutions that oppose legal equality for LGBT people are seen as out
of step with modern society, if not downright bigoted.
Our challenge to the Court is that it can either join such relics, or it can join the 21st Century.
Please join the Facebook event here and share with others!!