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Constitution Bashing And so says the recently submitted proposed amendment to the federal Constitution of the United States of America. Proponents of the amendment see it as the best way to protect the historical and religious significance of the legal union between a man and a woman, while others denounce it as discriminatory and blatant gay-bashing. Who’s right? Answer: it doesn’t matter. The arguments are irrelevant. This isn’t about gay-bashing. It’s worse. This is constitution bashing. The sole function of a constitution is to specifically define and therefore limit the powers of the state. It is not to tell individuals how they must live. It is to protect the freedom of individuals by restraining the activities of government. Individuals have rights and prerogatives, the state has only clearly delineated functions. And so:
A wonderful thing, the written restraint of power. But, even better, the clear enumeration of rights. Witness:
And, just to ram it home, in case the sons of the fathers forget what the hell it was all about in the first place:
And so the state is placed in bondage. Nicely shackled. A thing well done. But, sometimes, the sons did forget what the fathers taught them:
That one has enabled the state to grow into a suffocating behemoth.
That one let loose a wave of organised-crime violence and was repealed, a failed experiment, a decade later. The lesson is clear. When a constitution functions as it should and limits authority it enhances the liberty and prosperity of all; when it seeks to restrain and penalise individuals it turns them into subjects and criminals. The proposed marriage amendment is, at the worst, setting a bad precedent, and at the least it is silly, worthless and a waste of time and effort. It certainly trivialises the intent of a great document and exemplifies the outlandish politicisation of everyday life. Individuals are best able to determine their own emotional, physical and legal arrangements. And that is all a marriage is: a special relationship, as determined and defined by the persons involved, that is voluntarily entered into. If any disputes subsequently arise, then as a matter of common law, the courts can make judgements. There is no need for any government to define or clarify what marriage is just as there is no need for it to define what a sports club, an orchestral group, a religious organisation or any other voluntary association of individuals is. The proposed amendment should go the same way as the recently proposed flag burning amendment—in the bin. Furthermore, it’s sponsors should be told to go away, stop wasting everyone’s time, read some Jefferson, Madison, et al, and learn what a constitution is properly about. Discuss this Article (17 messages) |