“The very being or legal existence of the woman is
suspended during the marriage, or at least is incorporated and
consolidated into that of the husband; under whose wing, protection and
cover, she performs everything.”
-Sir William Blackstone, 1765
On Monday, the Supreme Court brought the legal battle over marriage equality just inches from a conclusion. By refusing to review
several court decisions holding that the Constitution requires gay
couples to be treated the same way as straight ones, the justices
effectively increased the number of states where same sex marriage is legal to 30. This is the way marriage discrimination ends, not with a bang, but a whimper.
Yet, while total victory for the forces of marriage equality now seems inevitable, supporters of discrimination are unlikelyto give up
without one final fight. Nor should there be any doubt how opponents of
equality plan to defend what remains of marriage discrimination. “[T]he
‘marriage’ that has long been recognized by the Supreme Court as a
fundamental right is distinct from the newly proposed relationship of a ‘same-sex marriage,’”
according to an opinion by Judge Paul Niemeyer, one of just three
federal judges who concluded that marriage discrimination is permissible
under the Constitution. When gay people marry, Niemeyer’s argument
presumes, they form a fundamentally different bond than the one that
exists in a straight couple, and thus it is permissible for the law to
treat same-sex couples differently because their marriages are entirely
unlike opposite-sex couples’ marriages.
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