Tuesday, May 26, 2009

a bad day

my blood is boiling

A Sad Day in California: Prop 8 is Upheld, But Not Retroactive
by: Be_Devine

Building off the earlier open thread - In a 6-1 decision, the California Supreme Court upheld the validity of Prop 8. It held that a bare majority of California's voters has the right to single out an unpopular group and strip them of fundamental rights.

The only justice on the right side of history is Justice Moreno.

The Court held that a constitutional revision occurs only when it makes "far reaching changes in the nature of our basic governmental plan." Anything else is an amendment an can be passed by a bare majority. The court held that the effect of Prop 8 is "only" one of nomenclature, and thus it does not make any changes to the nature of our government plan.

Justice Werdegar was the only justice in the majority who is intellectually honest enough to call a spade a spade. She didn't hide behind the majority's false argument that California's law on revision/amendment distinction has always supported the decision to uphold Prop 8. Instead, she wrote her own concurring opinion specifically to point out what the majority hides: that the California Supreme Court had to make new law in order to reach its result of upholding Prop 8:

until today the court has gone only so far as to say that “a qualitative revision includes one that involves a change in the basic plan of California government, i.e., a change in its fundamental structure or the foundational powers of its branches.” (Legislature v. Eu, supra, at p. 509, italics added.) Today, the majority changes “includes” to “is,” thus foreclosing other possibilities.

* * *

The history of our California Constitution belies any suggestion that the drafters envisioned or would have approved a rule, such as that announced today, that affords governmental structure and organization more protection from casual amendment than civil liberties.

This is judicial activism. Today, the Supreme Court significantly narrowed the definition of what is a "revision" that has been California law since the 1894 case of Livermore v. Waite. They invented a new definition only because it would suit the result they wanted.

Today is a sad, sad day in California's history.


i can't believe we still have to protest this crap

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