So up on your feet. Up on your feet! Somewhere there’s music playing.
Don’t you worry none. We’ll just take it like it comes. One day at a time, one day at a time.
-- "One Day at a Time" - John and Nancy Barry
TARA AND WILLOW 2GETHER 4EVER!!! BLESSED BE ETERNALLY!!!
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I don't care if it is an orgy of death, there's still such a thing as a napkin! - Willow in "Superstar"
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Web Warlock
The Other Side,
home of Liber Mysterium: The Netbook of Witches and Warlocks. Available Now!
"I'm going to open a bag of freak on all of you..." - Dr. Drakken, from "A Very Possible Christmas"
No doubt if same-sex marriage were legal, lots of lesbians and gay men would be having those same kinds of horrible marriages, too, of course, but when straight people do that, it does underscore how ludicrous it is to argue that if I can marry my girlfriend, all of human civilization will crumble around our dykey feet. It's so obvious to me that it completely invalidates any and all arguments against gay marriage. go donut go
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I don't care if it is an orgy of death, there's still such a thing as a napkin! - Willow in "Superstar"
I've gotten a couple of double-takes, but for the most part people have been taking it in stride. I always add that we were married in Canada so they know it's "real". I don't know what role the recent domestic partnership legislation is playing in this, expecially since it's not really in effect yet, but it's kind of reassuring.
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I don't care if it is an orgy of death, there's still such a thing as a napkin! - Willow in "Superstar"
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I don't care if it is an orgy of death, there's still such a thing as a napkin! - Willow in "Superstar"
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Mass. High Court Rules for Gay Marriage
By JENNIFER PETER, Associated Press Writer
BOSTON - The Massachusetts high court ruled Wednesday that only full, equal marriage rights for gay couples — rather than civil unions — would be constitutional, erasing any doubts that the nation's first same-sex marriages would take place in the state beginning in mid-May.
The court issued the opinion in response to a request from the state Senate about whether Vermont-style civil unions, which convey the state benefits of marriage — but not the title — would meet constitutional muster.
The much-anticipated opinion sets the stage for next week's constitutional convention, where the Legislature will consider an amendment that would legally define marriage as a union between one man and one woman. Without the opinion, Senate President Robert Travaglini had said the vote would be delayed.
The Supreme Judicial Court ruled in November that same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry, and gave the Legislature six months to change state laws to make it happen.
But almost immediately, the vague wording of the ruling left lawmakers — and advocates on both side of the issue — uncertain if Vermont-style civil unions would satisfy the court's decision.
The state Senate asked for more guidance from the court and sought the advisory opinion, which was made public Wednesday morning when it was read into the Senate record.
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Mass. High Court Rules for Gay Marriage
By JENNIFER PETER
Associated Press Writer
Published February 4, 2004, 11:46 AM CST
BOSTON -- The Massachusetts high court ruled Wednesday that only full, equal marriage rights for gay couples -- rather than civil unions -- are constitutional, clearing the way for the nation's first same-sex marriages in the state as early as May.
"The history of our nation has demonstrated that separate is seldom, if ever, equal," the four justices who ruled in favor of gay marriage wrote in the advisory opinion requested by the state Senate.
After seven gay couples sued in 2001, the Supreme Judicial Court ruled in November that gay couples have a constitutional right to marry, and gave the Legislature six months to change state laws to make it happen.
But the vague wording of the ruling left lawmakers -- and advocates on both sides -- uncertain if Vermont-style civil unions would satisfy the court's decision.
The Massachusetts court said any civil unions bill that falls short of marriage would establish an "unconstitutional, inferior, and discriminatory status for same-sex couples."
The state Senate asked for more guidance from the court, whose advisory opinion was made public Wednesday morning when it was read into the Senate record.
The much-anticipated opinion sets the stage for next Wednesday's constitutional convention, where the Legislature will consider an amendment that would legally define marriage as a union between one man and one woman. Without the opinion, Senate President Robert Travaglini had said the vote would be delayed.
The soonest a constitutional amendment could end up on the ballot would be 2006, meaning that until then the high court's decision will be Massachusetts law no matter what is decided at the constitutional convention.
"We've heard from the court, but not from the people," Gov. Mitt Romney said in a statement. "The people of Massachusetts should not be excluded from a decision as fundamental to our society as the definition of marriage."
Travaglini said he wanted time to talk with fellow senators before deciding what to do next.
"I want to have everyone stay in an objective and calm state as we plan and define what's the appropriate way to proceed," Travaglini said.
Conservative leaders said they were not surprised by the advisory opinion, and vowed to redouble their efforts to pass the constitutional amendment.
Mary Bonauto, an attorney who represented the seven couples who filed the lawsuit, said she anticipated a fierce battle, saying that "no matter what you think about the court's decision, it's always wrong to change the constitution to write discrimination into it."
When it was issued in November, the 4-3 ruling set off a firestorm of protest across the country among politicians, religious leaders and others opposed to providing landmark rights for gay couples to marry.
President Bush immediately denounced the decision and vowed to pursue legislation to protect the traditional definition of marriage. Church leaders in the heavily Roman Catholic state also pressed their parishioners to oppose efforts to allow gays to marry.
And legislators were prepared to vote on a proposed amendment to the state constitution that would seek to make the court's ruling moot by defining as marriage as a union between one man and one woman -- thus expressly making same-sex marriages illegal in Massachusetts.
What the case represented, both sides agree, was a significant new milestone in a year that has seen broad new recognitions of gay rights in America, Canada and abroad, including a June U.S. Supreme Court decision striking a Texas ban on gay sex.
Legal experts, however, said that the long-awaited decision, while clearly stating that it is unconstitutional to bar gay couples from marriage, gave ambiguous instructions to the state Legislature.
Lawmakers remained uncertain if civil unions went far enough to live up to the court's ruling -- or if actual marriages were required.
When a similar decision was issued in Vermont in 1999, the court told the Legislature that it could allow gay couples to marry or create a parallel institution that conveys all the state rights and benefits of marriage. The Legislature chose the second route, leading to the approval of civil unions in that state.
The Massachusetts decision made no mention of an alternative solution, but instead pointed to a recent decision in Ontario, Canada, that changed the common law definition of marriage to include same-sex couples and led to the issuance of marriage licenses there.
The state "has failed to identify any constitutionally adequate reason for denying civil marriage to same-sex couples," the court wrote. "Barred access to the protections, benefits and obligations of civil marriage, a person who enters into an intimate, exclusive union with another of the same sex is arbitrarily deprived of membership in one of our community's most rewarding and cherished institutions."
The Massachusetts case began in 2001, when the seven gay couples went to their city and town halls to obtain marriage licenses. All were denied, leading them to sue the state Department of Public Health, which administers the state's marriage laws.
A Suffolk Superior Court judge threw out the case in 2002, ruling that nothing in state law gives gay couples the right to marry. The couples immediately appealed to the Supreme Judicial Court, which heard arguments in March.
The plaintiffs argued that barring them from marrying a partner of the same sex denied them access to an intrinsic human experience and violated basic constitutional rights.
Over the past decade, Massachusetts' high court has expanded the legal parameters of family, ruling that same-sex couples can adopt children and devising child visitation right for a former partner of a lesbian.
Massachusetts has one of the highest concentrations of gay households in the country with at 1.3 percent of the total number of coupled households, according to the 2000 census. In California, 1.4 percent of the coupled households are occupied by same-sex partners. Vermont and New York also registered at 1.3 percent, while in Washington, D.C., the rate is 5.1 percent
Copyright © 2004, The Associated Press
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Web Warlock
Coming Soon to The Other Side, The Netbook of Shadows: A Book of Spells for d20 Witches
"Does anybody remember laughter?" - Robert Plant, "The Song Remains the Same"
Lost in Ecstacy
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I don't care if it is an orgy of death, there's still such a thing as a napkin! - Willow in "Superstar"
Time flies by when the Devil drives.
It's not the pace of life that concerns me, it's the sudden stop at the end.
It's hard to be precise, though. Alternate universes don't stay put. Sending him to a specific place is like, like trying to hit a puppy by throwing a live bee at it. Which is a weird image and you should all just forget it. -Willow in Triangle
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I don't care if it is an orgy of death, there's still such a thing as a napkin! - Willow in "Superstar"
"The stories we tell - that's us explaining how we think the world works. Once we speak it, once we say it aloud, that makes it real for us - and real for everyone else who hears it too. When we tell a story, we invite people to visit our reality. We invite them to move in. Our stories are the reality we live in." - David Gerrold, The Martian Child
Edited by: BBOvenGuy
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I think civil unions is a reasonable comprimise
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Overall, granting gay and lesbian relationships legal recognition through civil unions instead of marriages implies—and may help confirm or even perpetuate—second-class status.
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I don't care if it is an orgy of death, there's still such a thing as a napkin! - Willow in "Superstar"
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marriage is a legal status that already exists and provides everything I want in the way of governmentally imposed rights, benefits, and obligations for my relationship
"The stories we tell - that's us explaining how we think the world works. Once we speak it, once we say it aloud, that makes it real for us - and real for everyone else who hears it too. When we tell a story, we invite people to visit our reality. We invite them to move in. Our stories are the reality we live in." - David Gerrold, The Martian Child
Edited by: BBOvenGuyQuote:
So I have a radical idea: Let's declare all unions - homosexual and heterosexual -to be "civil" in the eyes of the government, and give them equal protection under the law. It would then be left to each religious institution to decide for itself who they considered "married" and who they didn't. If Catholics and Southern Baptists didn't want to marry same-sex couples, they wouldn't have to. If Episcopalians thought it was all right, they could do it.
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Although really, if people want to defend the "sanctity" of marriage, they shouldn't be bothering with same-sex couples who have already lived through years or even decades of commitment to each other - they should be more concerned about Britney Spears or people who get married by Elvis impersonators.
Time flies by when the Devil drives.
It's not the pace of life that concerns me, it's the sudden stop at the end.
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Daley has 'no problems' with gay marriages
Tribune staff reports
Published February 18, 2004, 3:20 PM CST
At a news conference called to announce his appointments to fill two key city jobs, Mayor Richard Daley weighed in on a national controversy by saying he had no problem with gay and lesbian couples becoming married.
Asked for his thoughts on gay marriages, Daley pointed out only County Clerk David Orr, not the city, has the power to grant marriage licenses. The county does not issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, though last October it established a Domestic Partnership Registry.
"David Orr can do it any way he wants. That would be up to him. But I have no problems with that issue at all," Daley said.
"A lot of people are opposed to it. So be it," the mayor said. "But again, you have to point out the strength of that community -- they're doctors, they're lawyers, they're journalists, they're politicians, they're someone's son or daughter, they're someone's mother or father.
"They're parents, and I have been with them. They've adopted children. They have wonderful children. To me, we have to understand this is part and parcel of our families and our extended families."
Daley said "we have to understand" what the gay couples have been saying: "They love each other, just as much as anyone else. They believe that the benefits they don't have, they should have. And so I have a very open mind on it."
Asked about criticisms same-sex marriages undermine traditional families, Daley responded that it was divorce, not gay or lesbianism, at the root of the problem.
"People have to look at their own lives and at their own marriages," he said. "Don't blame the gay, lesbian, transgender community, please. Don't blame them for it."
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Web Warlock
Coming Soon to The Other Side, The Netbook of Shadows: A Book of Spells for d20 Witches
"Monkeys? Why is it always monkeys, why can't I be attacked by crazed super-models?" - Ron Stoppable, "Kim Possible"
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S.F. to Sue State Over Gay Marriage Ban
By LISA LEFF, Associated Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO - After sanctioning more than 2,800 gay marriages in the past week, the city said Thursday it is suing the state of California, challenging its ban on same-sex marriages on constitutional grounds.
City Attorney Dennis Herrera said he planned to file the suit by late afternoon.
"The city and county of San Francisco is going on the offensive today to protect the mayor's action" allowing gay marriage, Herrera said.
Two judges already are considering challenges from conservative groups seeking to halt the marriage spree that began last Thursday. The city's lawsuit asks that those cases be consolidated into one.
Mayor Gavin Newsom said he doesn't regret giving out marriage licenses before the city filed a legal challenge to the state's marriage laws, but added that he's glad the question is now in the courts.
"I think what we have done is affirm marriage here in San Francisco," Newsom said. "We affirmed it because we are celebrating people coming together in their unions. I feel affirmed as a married man by what's happened here in San Francisco."
A lawyer for a group trying to halt the gay marriages described the city's move as a delaying tactic.
"This is as much a maneuver to keep this in court and keep the issue alive as it is anything else," said Benjamin Bull, an attorney with the Alliance Defense Fund.
The city is asking Superior Court Judge James Warren to declare unconstitutional three sections of the California Family Code that define marriage as a union between a man and a woman.
City officials want the judge to determine if barring same-sex couples from marrying violates the equal protection and due process clauses of the state constitution.
On Tuesday, Warren gave the city the choice of ending the same-sex wedding march or returning to court in late March to show why the process has not been halted. The city said it would continue issuing such licenses until forced to stop.
Judge Ronald Quidachay is considering a lawsuit filed by another conservative group, the Campaign for California Families. He said Tuesday he was not prepared to issue a ruling, and scheduled another hearing for Friday.
Like the city, conservatives want the two cases consolidated into one, but they want Quidachay to hear it instead of Warren.
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