GENDERLESS DYSTOPIA COMETH
WHERE THINGS STAND
#TheMap
As of Friday, April 17th, 2015, 35 STATES allow for gay couples to marry. These states, in order of their legalization of marriage equality:
2004
MASSACHUSETTS - SCOMA ruling (4-3) in Goodridge v. Department of Public Health. Effective May 17, 2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
CONNECTICUT - SCOCT ruling (4-3) in Kerrigan v. Commissioner of Public Health. Effective November 12, 2008
2009
IOWA - SCOIA ruling (unan.) in Varnum v. Brien. Effective April 27, 2009
VERMONT - Legislative statue. Passed Vermont General Assembly, 26-4, 94-52. Vetoed by Republican Governor Jim Douglas, overruled by Vermont General Assembly, 23-5, 100-49. Effective September 1, 2009
2010
NEW HAMPSHIRE - Legislative statute. Passed New Hampshire General Court 14-10, 198-176. Signed by Democratic Governor John Lynch. Effective January 1, 2010.
District of Columbia - Legislative statue. Passed Council of the District of Columbia 11-2. Effective March 9, 2010
2011
NEW YORK - Legislative statue. Passed New York State Legislature 80-63, 33-26. Signed by Democratic Governor Andrew Cuomo. Effective July 24, 2011
2012
WASHINGTON - Legislative statute/Voter referendum. Passed Washington State Legislature 28-21, 55-43. Signed by Democratic Governor Christine Gregoire. Marriage equality opponents successfully collected signatures for referendum on bill on June 12, 2012. Referendum defeated November 6, 2012, 53.7%-46.3%. Effective December 6, 2012
MAINE - Initiative statue. Marriage equality supporters collected signatures for initiative on February 23, 2012. Initiative passed November 6, 2012, 52.6%-47.4%. Effective December 29, 2012
2013
MARYLAND - Legislative statute/Voter referendum. Passed Maryland General Assembly 72-67, 25-22. Signed by Democratic Governor Martin O'Malley. Marriage equality opponents successfully collected signatures for referendum on bill on June 7, 2012. Referendum defeated November 6, 2012, 52.43%-57.57%. Effective January 1, 2013
CALIFORNIA - Federal court ruling in Hollingsworth v. Perry SCOCA ruling (4-3) legalizes marriage equality, May 15, 2008. Marriage equality opponents successfully collected signatures for constitutional amendment on ballot on June 2, 2012. Constitutional amendment passed 52.24%-47.76%. Federal trial court strikes down marriage equality ban August 4, 2010, stay on appeal. Appealed to 9th Circuit, upheld lower court ruling (2-1) February 7, 2012. Appealed to SCOTUS. SCOTUS rules defendants (ProtectMarriage.com) lack standing (5-4), vacating 9th Circuit ruling, resulting with the original decision in Perry left intact. Effective June 28, 2013
DELAWARE - Legislative statue. Passed Delaware General Assembly 23-18, 12-9. Signed by Democratic Governor Jack Markell. Effective July 1, 2013
MINNESOTA - Legislative statute. Passed Minnesota Legislature 75-59, 37-30. Signed by Democratic Governor Mark Dayton. Effective August 1, 2013 (PLEASE NOTE: The term "Genderless dystopia" that we're so fond of comes from a Minnesota State Republican Congresswoman who said that passing marriage equality would create a genderless society)
RHODE ISLAND - Legislative statute. Passed Rhode Island General Assembly 26-12, 56-15. Signed by Independent Governor Lincoln Chafee. Effective August 1, 2013
NEW JERSEY - State court ruling in Garden State Equality v. Dow. Appealed dropped by Republican Governor Chris Christie after SCONJ unanimously refuses to put lower court decision on hold. Effective October 21, 2013
HAWAII - Legislative statute. Passed Hawaii State Legislature 30-19, 19-4. Signed by Democratic Governor Neil Abercrombie. Effective December 2, 2013
NEW MEXICO - SCONM ruling (unan.) in Griego v.Oliver. Effective December 19, 2013
2014
OREGON - Federal court ruling in Geiger v. Kitzhaber. Effective May 19, 2014
PENNSYLVANIA - Federal court ruling in Whitewood v. Wolf. Effective May 20, 2014
ILLINOIS - Passed Illinois General Assembly 6154, 3221. Signed by Democratic Governor Pat Quinn. Effective June 1, 2014
INDIANA - Federal court ruling in Baskin v. Bogan. State appealed to 7th Circuit. 7th Circuit (unan.) upholds lower court ruling. State appealed to SCOTUS. SCOTUS denies cert, letting lower court ruling stand. Effective October 6, 2014
OKLAHOMA - Federal court ruling in Bishop v. United States. State appealed to 10th Circuit. 10th Circuit (2-1) upholds lower court ruling. State appealed to SCOTUS. SCOTUS denies cert, letting lower court ruling stand. Effective October 6, 2014
UTAH - Federal court ruling in Kitchen v. Herbert. State appealed to 10th Circuit. 10th Circuit (2-1) upholds lower court ruling. State appealed to SCOTUS. SCOTUS denies cert, letting lower court ruling stand. Effective October 6, 2014
UTAH - Federal court ruling in Bostic v. Schaefer. State appealed to 4th Circuit. 4th Circuit (2-1) upholds lower court ruling. State appealed to SCOTUS. SCOTUS denies cert, letting lower court ruling stand. Effective October 6, 2014
WISCONSIN - Federal court ruling in Wolf v. Walker. State appealed to 7th Circuit. 7th Circuit (unan.) upholds lower court ruling. State appealed to SCOTUS. SCOTUS denies cert, letting lower court ruling stand. Effective October 6, 2014
COLORADO - Federal court ruling in Burns v. Hickenlooper. Effective October 7, 2014
NEVADA - Federal court ruling in Sevcik v. Sandoval. Trial court judge upholds marriage equality ban. Plaintiffs appeal to 9th Circuit. 9th Circuit strikes down ban (unan.). Effective October 9, 2014
WEST VIRGINIA - State action/Federal court ruling. After denial of cert in 4th Circuit cases by SCOTUS, Democratic Earl Ray Tomblin and Republican Attorney General Patrick Morrisey concluded their marriage equality ban was unconstitutional and ordered state officials to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples. Affirmed in Federal court ruling McGee v. Cole. Effective October 9, 2014
NORTH CAROLINA - Federal court ruling in General Synod of the United Church of Christ v. Cooper. Effective October 10, 2014
IDAHO - Federal court ruling in Latta v. Otter. State appealed to 9th Circuit. 9th Circuit (unan.) upholds lower court ruling, denies stay. SCOTUS denies emergency stay. Effective October 15, 2014
ALASKA - Federal court ruling in Hamby v. Parnell. Effective October 17, 2014
ARIZONA - Federal court ruling in Connolly v. Jeanes and Majors v. Horne. Effective October 17, 2014
WYOMING - Federal court ruling in Guzzo v. Mead. Effective October 21, 2014
MONTANA - Federal court ruling in Rolando v. Fox. Effective November 19, 2014
SOUTH CAROLINA - Federal court ruling in Condon v. Haley. Effective November 20, 2014
2015
FLORIDA - Federal court ruling in Brenner v. Scott. Effective November 20, 2014
THE CASES
The four cases in front of the SCOTUS (henceforth known as Obergefell v. Hodges) are four cases from the 6th Circuit, where bans on marriage equality were held up on rational basis grounds. The questions in front of the SCOTUS are:
Oral arguments are to be held on April 28, 2015, hence the thread.
The 6th Circuit:
[/IMG]
http://www.buzzfeed.com/chrisgeidner/federal-appeals-court-upholds-michigan-same-sex-marriage-ban#.pn8WBl77O
This also gave us one of the most spirited dissents for marriage equality in memory:
There are many, many amicus (friend of the court) briefs that have been filed. Here's a list with a summary of all of them, with some fun ones like:
Links to amici can be found here.
THE COURT
But this is a conservative court! you say. They gave us Bush v. Gore and Citizens United! Why would they rule for marriage equality?! It's very simple: They've been telegraphing this move since last year. This is Anthony Kennedy's legacy.
The Supreme Court Has Been Preparing The Country For Marriage Equality
A majority of the court already has made the outcome of the same-sex marriage showdown nationwide marriage equality almost certain.
![hBSqram.gif](http://i.imgur.com/hBSqram.gif)
![QWsDkLq.gif](http://i.imgur.com/QWsDkLq.gif)
WHERE THINGS STAND
#TheMap
![jbOmSF1.png](http://i.imgur.com/jbOmSF1.png)
![4ganXVH.png](http://i.imgur.com/4ganXVH.png)
As of Friday, April 17th, 2015, 35 STATES allow for gay couples to marry. These states, in order of their legalization of marriage equality:
2004
MASSACHUSETTS - SCOMA ruling (4-3) in Goodridge v. Department of Public Health. Effective May 17, 2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
CONNECTICUT - SCOCT ruling (4-3) in Kerrigan v. Commissioner of Public Health. Effective November 12, 2008
2009
IOWA - SCOIA ruling (unan.) in Varnum v. Brien. Effective April 27, 2009
VERMONT - Legislative statue. Passed Vermont General Assembly, 26-4, 94-52. Vetoed by Republican Governor Jim Douglas, overruled by Vermont General Assembly, 23-5, 100-49. Effective September 1, 2009
2010
NEW HAMPSHIRE - Legislative statute. Passed New Hampshire General Court 14-10, 198-176. Signed by Democratic Governor John Lynch. Effective January 1, 2010.
District of Columbia - Legislative statue. Passed Council of the District of Columbia 11-2. Effective March 9, 2010
2011
NEW YORK - Legislative statue. Passed New York State Legislature 80-63, 33-26. Signed by Democratic Governor Andrew Cuomo. Effective July 24, 2011
2012
WASHINGTON - Legislative statute/Voter referendum. Passed Washington State Legislature 28-21, 55-43. Signed by Democratic Governor Christine Gregoire. Marriage equality opponents successfully collected signatures for referendum on bill on June 12, 2012. Referendum defeated November 6, 2012, 53.7%-46.3%. Effective December 6, 2012
MAINE - Initiative statue. Marriage equality supporters collected signatures for initiative on February 23, 2012. Initiative passed November 6, 2012, 52.6%-47.4%. Effective December 29, 2012
2013
MARYLAND - Legislative statute/Voter referendum. Passed Maryland General Assembly 72-67, 25-22. Signed by Democratic Governor Martin O'Malley. Marriage equality opponents successfully collected signatures for referendum on bill on June 7, 2012. Referendum defeated November 6, 2012, 52.43%-57.57%. Effective January 1, 2013
CALIFORNIA - Federal court ruling in Hollingsworth v. Perry SCOCA ruling (4-3) legalizes marriage equality, May 15, 2008. Marriage equality opponents successfully collected signatures for constitutional amendment on ballot on June 2, 2012. Constitutional amendment passed 52.24%-47.76%. Federal trial court strikes down marriage equality ban August 4, 2010, stay on appeal. Appealed to 9th Circuit, upheld lower court ruling (2-1) February 7, 2012. Appealed to SCOTUS. SCOTUS rules defendants (ProtectMarriage.com) lack standing (5-4), vacating 9th Circuit ruling, resulting with the original decision in Perry left intact. Effective June 28, 2013
DELAWARE - Legislative statue. Passed Delaware General Assembly 23-18, 12-9. Signed by Democratic Governor Jack Markell. Effective July 1, 2013
MINNESOTA - Legislative statute. Passed Minnesota Legislature 75-59, 37-30. Signed by Democratic Governor Mark Dayton. Effective August 1, 2013 (PLEASE NOTE: The term "Genderless dystopia" that we're so fond of comes from a Minnesota State Republican Congresswoman who said that passing marriage equality would create a genderless society)
RHODE ISLAND - Legislative statute. Passed Rhode Island General Assembly 26-12, 56-15. Signed by Independent Governor Lincoln Chafee. Effective August 1, 2013
NEW JERSEY - State court ruling in Garden State Equality v. Dow. Appealed dropped by Republican Governor Chris Christie after SCONJ unanimously refuses to put lower court decision on hold. Effective October 21, 2013
HAWAII - Legislative statute. Passed Hawaii State Legislature 30-19, 19-4. Signed by Democratic Governor Neil Abercrombie. Effective December 2, 2013
NEW MEXICO - SCONM ruling (unan.) in Griego v.Oliver. Effective December 19, 2013
2014
OREGON - Federal court ruling in Geiger v. Kitzhaber. Effective May 19, 2014
PENNSYLVANIA - Federal court ruling in Whitewood v. Wolf. Effective May 20, 2014
ILLINOIS - Passed Illinois General Assembly 6154, 3221. Signed by Democratic Governor Pat Quinn. Effective June 1, 2014
INDIANA - Federal court ruling in Baskin v. Bogan. State appealed to 7th Circuit. 7th Circuit (unan.) upholds lower court ruling. State appealed to SCOTUS. SCOTUS denies cert, letting lower court ruling stand. Effective October 6, 2014
OKLAHOMA - Federal court ruling in Bishop v. United States. State appealed to 10th Circuit. 10th Circuit (2-1) upholds lower court ruling. State appealed to SCOTUS. SCOTUS denies cert, letting lower court ruling stand. Effective October 6, 2014
UTAH - Federal court ruling in Kitchen v. Herbert. State appealed to 10th Circuit. 10th Circuit (2-1) upholds lower court ruling. State appealed to SCOTUS. SCOTUS denies cert, letting lower court ruling stand. Effective October 6, 2014
UTAH - Federal court ruling in Bostic v. Schaefer. State appealed to 4th Circuit. 4th Circuit (2-1) upholds lower court ruling. State appealed to SCOTUS. SCOTUS denies cert, letting lower court ruling stand. Effective October 6, 2014
WISCONSIN - Federal court ruling in Wolf v. Walker. State appealed to 7th Circuit. 7th Circuit (unan.) upholds lower court ruling. State appealed to SCOTUS. SCOTUS denies cert, letting lower court ruling stand. Effective October 6, 2014
COLORADO - Federal court ruling in Burns v. Hickenlooper. Effective October 7, 2014
NEVADA - Federal court ruling in Sevcik v. Sandoval. Trial court judge upholds marriage equality ban. Plaintiffs appeal to 9th Circuit. 9th Circuit strikes down ban (unan.). Effective October 9, 2014
WEST VIRGINIA - State action/Federal court ruling. After denial of cert in 4th Circuit cases by SCOTUS, Democratic Earl Ray Tomblin and Republican Attorney General Patrick Morrisey concluded their marriage equality ban was unconstitutional and ordered state officials to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples. Affirmed in Federal court ruling McGee v. Cole. Effective October 9, 2014
NORTH CAROLINA - Federal court ruling in General Synod of the United Church of Christ v. Cooper. Effective October 10, 2014
IDAHO - Federal court ruling in Latta v. Otter. State appealed to 9th Circuit. 9th Circuit (unan.) upholds lower court ruling, denies stay. SCOTUS denies emergency stay. Effective October 15, 2014
ALASKA - Federal court ruling in Hamby v. Parnell. Effective October 17, 2014
ARIZONA - Federal court ruling in Connolly v. Jeanes and Majors v. Horne. Effective October 17, 2014
WYOMING - Federal court ruling in Guzzo v. Mead. Effective October 21, 2014
MONTANA - Federal court ruling in Rolando v. Fox. Effective November 19, 2014
SOUTH CAROLINA - Federal court ruling in Condon v. Haley. Effective November 20, 2014
2015
FLORIDA - Federal court ruling in Brenner v. Scott. Effective November 20, 2014
THE CASES
The four cases in front of the SCOTUS (henceforth known as Obergefell v. Hodges) are four cases from the 6th Circuit, where bans on marriage equality were held up on rational basis grounds. The questions in front of the SCOTUS are:
Issue: 1) Does the Fourteenth Amendment require a state to license a marriage between two people of the same sex? 2) Does the Fourteenth Amendment require a state to recognize a marriage between two people of the same sex when their marriage was lawfully licensed and performed out-of-state?
Oral arguments are to be held on April 28, 2015, hence the thread.
The 6th Circuit:
![XweOFVu.gif](http://[img]http://i.imgur.com/XweOFVu.gif)
http://www.buzzfeed.com/chrisgeidner/federal-appeals-court-upholds-michigan-same-sex-marriage-ban#.pn8WBl77O
Judge Jeffrey Sutton, writing for the 2-1 majority of the court, wrote the opinion upholding the constitutionality of Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and Tennessees bans reversing trial court decisions striking down each ban, or the ban on recognition of same-sex couples marriages granted elsewhere, below.
When the courts do not let the people resolve new social issues like this one, they perpetuate the idea that the heroes in these change events are judges and lawyers, he wrote. Better in this instance, we think, to allow change through the customary political processes, in which the people, gay and straight alike, become the heroes of their own stories by meeting each other not as adversaries in a court system but as fellow citizens seeking to resolve a new social issue in a fair-minded way.
[...]
Even outside of that, however, of the constitutional claims brought by same-sex couples including originalism; rational basis review; animus; fundamental rights; suspect classifications; evolving meaning Sutton concluded, Not one of the plaintiffs theories, however, makes the case for constitutionalizing the definition of marriage and for removing the issue from the place it has been since the founding: in the hands of state voters.
This also gave us one of the most spirited dissents for marriage equality in memory:
In addressing the majoritys opinion, Daughtrey examined the four other appellate opinions from the 4th, 7th, 9th, and 10th circuits before concluding, t would seem unnecessary for this court to do more than cite those cases in affirming the district courts decisions in the six cases now before us.
She then added: Because the correct result is so obvious, one is tempted to speculate that the majority has purposefully taken the contrary position to create the circuit split regarding the legality of same- sex marriage that could prompt a grant of certiorari by the Supreme Court and an end to the uncertainty of status and the interstate chaos that the current discrepancy in state laws threatens.
In responding to the entire premise of Suttons ruling in her conclusion, Daughtrey wrote, If we in the judiciary do not have the authority, and indeed the responsibility, to right fundamental wrongs left excused by a majority of the electorate, our whole intricate, constitutional system of checks and balances, as well as the oaths to which we swore, prove to be nothing but shams.
There are many, many amicus (friend of the court) briefs that have been filed. Here's a list with a summary of all of them, with some fun ones like:
62. Same-Sex Attracted Men and Their Wives Amici are 6 same-sex attracted men who offer their experiences of being married to women and argue that same-sex attracted men are therefore not excluded from marriage.
Links to amici can be found here.
THE COURT
But this is a conservative court! you say. They gave us Bush v. Gore and Citizens United! Why would they rule for marriage equality?! It's very simple: They've been telegraphing this move since last year. This is Anthony Kennedy's legacy.
The Supreme Court Has Been Preparing The Country For Marriage Equality
A majority of the court already has made the outcome of the same-sex marriage showdown nationwide marriage equality almost certain.
WASHINGTON On Friday, the Supreme Court announced that it will be deciding the question of same-sex couples marriage rights this year.
Left unsaid, however, was the fact that the outcome is almost certain: nationwide marriage equality by July of this year.
Since the Supreme Court struck down the Defense of Marriage Acts ban on federal marriage recognition in 2013, the nations lower courts have created significant momentum toward this moment.
But it is the Supreme Courts actions over the past 15 weeks, and the broad set of cases the court agreed on Friday to hear this spring, that makes the coming ruling practically preordained.
By issuing several orders in recent months allowing for more and more same-sex couples to be marrying in more and more states, the Supreme Court has made nationwide marriage equality a far less radical decision. It also has made it so that a decision upholding state marriage bans as constitutional would cause significant, difficult problems.
The Supreme Court has, in fact, played the key role in creating the national landscape that now exists: Same-sex couples are marrying in, at least parts of, 37 states and Washington, D.C.
On Oct. 5, 2014, that number was 19 states and D.C.
And though there have been no opinions explaining why the Supreme Court has done what it has done since then and though the decisions do not, technically, bind the court, there is at least a majority of the court comfortable creating this landscape, which would be difficult and extraordinarily painful to undo.
In that time, the Supreme Courts actions have directly or indirectly led to same-sex couples being allowed to marry in 14 of the additional states with same-sex couples marrying now.
The justices, on Oct. 6, 2014, denied five states requests for the court to hear their cases and reverse the appeals court decisions that struck down marriage bans. That decision to deny those writs of certiorari meant same-sex couples began marrying in those states, as well as in six other states within those appeals court circuits.
Then, the Supreme Court refused to issue stays (or holds) of lower court rulings in Idaho and later Alaska while the states attempted to appeal the rulings. Those orders, which came with no reasoning, followed the decision of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals to strike down Idaho and Nevadas bans. Because there already was an appeals court ruling in favor of marriage equality that applied to those states, the orders were seen as being similar to the courts Oct. 6 decision.
But then, on Dec. 19, 2014, the Supreme Court denied a stay during Floridas appeal of the federal marriage case challenging its ban. In Florida, unlike in any of the other states where the justices allowed same-sex couples to begin marrying, the appeals court for that circuit had not ruled on the issue.
This decision by a majority of the justices to allow same-sex couples to marry while appeals are ongoing and before the Supreme Court has resolved the issue itself means that a majority of the court is comfortable with that reality becoming the default.
More than that, the decision to allow same-sex couples to marry before the Supreme Court has decided the issue creates more legitimacy for an eventual decision striking down the bans by increasing the number of states where same-sex couples already can marry. At this point, a decision striking down such bans nationwide only changes the situation in 15 states. Before the justices started down this path on Oct. 6, 2014, it would have meant changing the law of more than 30 states.
Additionally though, and perhaps making the outcome of this springs Supreme Court showdown even more certain, the Supreme Court would be opening up an unprecedented mess if it upheld the bans now as being constitutional.
If the justices rule that Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and Tennessees bans are constitutional, that means that questions are going to be raised and litigation is going to be filed over the legitimacy of the now-closed cases in which review was denied in October 2014. In fact, the same thing would happen as to any state in which marriage equality was the result of a court decision that the ban was unconstitutional under the U.S. Constitution.
More striking, there would be questions raised as already have been raised in Michigan about the validity of marriages entered into by same-sex couples during the times when the respective state bans were declared unconstitutional.
It is almost incomprehensible to imagine the majority that created this landscape would turn around and force the rest of the country to take these painful steps to tear it apart.
But all actions suggest there is a majority of the court that does not wish to see that and plans, after Aprils arguments, to craft a ruling striking down those remaining bans and bringing nationwide uniformity to the issue.
The clearest indication that the court seeks uniformity: They took cases involving both marriage itself and recognition of same-sex couples marriages entered into out-of-state.
Although some have suggested that this means the court could consider ruling in favor of same-sex couples on the recognition issue while deciding against them on the marriage issue, such a decision would still create complex problems in states where same-sex couples have legally married. Taking both issues is an all in approach that will require an all in decision.
The past 15 weeks have shown, time and time again, that a majority of the Supreme Court is not only ready for, but has been preparing the country for, a decision enforcing nationwide protection of same-sex couples right to marry.