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California’s Supremes Confer the Right to Deceive

The Supreme Court of California did not increase the value of domestic partnerships; instead, it devalued and dehumanized the notion of marriage, writing marriage, as most understand it, completely out of California law. The result is a massive, unconstitutional, increase in the scope of government. Members of the gay community should be as troubled as every other Californian about this radical increase in government. Surely, this is not what the gay community expected. Additionally, people who would otherwise have had no animus towards the gay community will begin to see it as partners in this court’s deception and tyranny. For instance, in “cheating a little” the court seems to have conferred, on certain Californians, the right to deceive others. 

Deceiving people is what the Court has, directly or indirectly, sanctioned by its discussion of “privacy rights” on page 105 below:

“Plaintiffs point out that one consequence of the coexistence of two parallel types of familial relationship (marriage and domestic partnerships) is that — in the numerous everyday social, employment, and governmental settings in which an individual is asked whether he or she “is married or single” — an individual who is a domestic partner and who accurately responds to the question by disclosing that status will (as a realistic matter) be disclosing his or her homosexual orientation, even if he or she would rather not do so under the circumstances and even if that information is totally irrelevant in the setting in question.”

The opinion of the majority in re Marriage Cases explains that disclosing one’s sexual orientation is protected under a right to privacy, but the Court’s resolution of the issue should not be to sanction intentional deception as a remedy. Under this court’s ruling same sex couples may mislead an employer, whether it is a government office or a private enterprise, by leading individuals to believe that their status is heterosexual. That is, they may rest assured that when they say they are “married,” their employer, insurance company, or fertility clinic will understand the ordinary sense of the word and assume they are heterosexual. Doesn't it seem that the court recognizes that the high goal of “equality” justifies deception as a means to achieving that end? Should we assume that the Court, with its own high view of equality, felt that, for itself too, deception as practically necessary is a dogma worthy of application? Even if we occasionally tell the white lie, Supreme Court Justices are under oath. If we conclude that they purposely employed deception in their ruling, no only should we vote “yes” on Proposition 8, but we should recall these judges.

The deceptions above, seemingly advocated by the Court, could well have potentially serious implications for insurance, credit, and medical institutions. Although the court rightly recognized that some of these requests for information are not relevant, the discretion on when to deceive seems to be entirely in the hands of a member of a same sex partnership.

Some may argue that the destruction of the word marriage would result in “marriage” would no longer implying heterosexuality. Hence, there would be no deception. However, until the process of reconstructing documents in which one’s sexual orientation is necessary information and, instance by instance, allowing courts to decide upon this necessity, many instances of deception on important matters will have been perpetrated and seemingly sanctioned by this Court.

Such deception is simply not a necessary instrument for achieving equality in the United States of America. No one can seriously imagine women seeking equal opportunity by bubbling in "man" on their employment applications. No, in order to equalize the playing field women proudly declared their gender and insisted on access. In fact, African Americans all the more proudly declared their ethnicity as they demanded the equal rights they were entitled to under the law.

Secrecy is no ally of civil rights, so why does the Court appear to confer the right to deceive on a special segment of California? There are other instances of seemingly innocuous kinds of misleading evidence or overly euphemistic uses of legal jargon (such as “family relationships” and “family units). However, the most dangerous element of re Marriage Cases is that it has so altered the meaning of marriage that when most citizens say marriage they mean something that is entirely different than what is meant by marriage in California’s law.

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California Supreme Court Twists the Meaning of Family

People should vote “Yes” on Proposition 8 because it will put a very deceptive Court Ruling out of business. This is the first of a series of posts which expose elements of the Court’s deceptiveness. This deceptiveness is important to defeat because the deceptive languages and practices employed by the Court will become part of California’s legal structures and culture. This first post handles the use of a new deceptive legal terminology involving the English word “family.”Here, from Dictionary.com:

“Family – 1. parents and their children, considered as a group, whether dwelling together or not. 2. the children of one person or one couple collectively: We want a large family. 3. the spouse and children of one person: We're taking the family on vacation next week…”

There are thirteen definitions of family given on Dictionary.com. All of the definitions, even the idiomatic ones, explicitly include or figuratively imply children. In “re Marriages…” the California Supreme Court defines the union of same sex couples as a “family” relationship. It is by this euphemism that the Court names the congress of couples heterosexual and homosexual.

Could the court have picked a more deceptive title to describe the relationship that is the basis of a domestic partnership? From this relationship no family can ever, by nature, grow.

All through its judicial history California has used the words marriage and family appropriately. For instance, here is a direct quote from a 1995 case cited in Judge George’s opinion:

“And in Warfield v. Peninsula Golf & Country Club (1995) 10 Cal.4th 594, in discussing the types of relationship that fall within the scope of the constitutionally protected right of intimate association (one component of our state constitutional right of privacy (id. at pp. 629-630)), we [Judge George himself is the we because, in his office as a Judge of the Supreme Court of California, he wrote the court’s opinion] explained that “the highly personal relationships that are sheltered by this constitutional guaranty are exemplified by ‘those that attend the creation and sustenance of a family — marriage . . . , childbirth . . . , the raising and education of children . . . and cohabitation with one’s relatives . . . [page 56].

The comment in brackets and the emboldened text added for clarification show that in 1995 the Supreme Court of California, and its current chief justice Ronald George, knew the difference between a marriage and a family. Marriages were part of the creation of a family. The raising and education of children were part of the sustenance of a family. In 1996 Supreme Court Judge Ronald George was elevated to Chief Justice.

However, by 2003 that the legislature of California introduced confused language into the jurisprudence of the state with this uncodified statement of legislative intent:

"This act is intended to help California move closer to fulfilling the promises of inalienable rights, liberty, and equality contained in Sections 1 and 7 of Article 1 of the California Constitution by providing all caring and committed couples, regardless of their gender or sexual orientation, the opportunity to obtain essential rights, protections, and benefits and to assume corresponding responsibilities, obligations, and duties and to further the state’s interests in promoting stable and lasting family relationships, and protecting Californians from the economic and social consequences of abandonment, separation, the death of loved ones, and other life crises” [Stats. 2003, ch. 421, § 1, subd. (a) excerpted from page 38 “re Marriages…”].

It is unclear from the immediate context what the legislature intended by “in promoting lasting family relationships…” This may refer to the resolution of problems same sex couples had gaining access to loved ones during hospital stays. The domestic partnership act made one’s partner [Party A] a legal member of party B’s extended family. In that way, despite objections by Party A’s immediate family, Party B had full access and legal authority over Party A’s medical care.

By 2005 the change of language from confused wording to deceptive jargon was completely effected:

As we (Judge George in his office of the Chief Justice of Supreme Court of California in its majority opinion) explained in Koebke, supra, 36 Cal.4th 824, 843: “[T]he decision . . . to enter into a domestic partnership is more than a change in the legal status of individuals . . . . [T]he consequence[] of the decision is the creation of a new family unit with all of its implications in terms of personal commitment as well as legal rights and obligations” (excerpted from page 46 of “re Marriages…”).

In this quote from the 2005 majority opinion in Kobke vs. Bernardo Club Country Club, the court plainly uses the terms family unit and domestic partnership synonymously. What is new in the court’s jargon in “re Marriages” is the wider use of “family relationship” to mean marriage and domestic partnership. It is in this 2008 opinion that the Court has simply decided to dispense with dictionaries, histories, statutes, or linguistic contexts of any type. Whether or not members of this court participated in making this deceptive change in the jargon for the express purpose of deception in “re Marriage Cases” is an open question. The prior use of the unclear language of legislative intent in the 2003 to express the Court’s opinion in 2005 can be argued as an authentic representation of the liberal intent of the California Legislature.

In the evolution of the jargon of the California judiciary, it becomes plain that “marriage” is now only what a court says it is. In the Court’s eyes the consummating act of marriage is not required, nor is it recognized. Sadly, like marriages, “families” too are now no more or no less than what some court decides they are.
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