Winstonm, on 2015-July-02, 12:39, said:
The SC also did not rule of whether gay marriage was a "good thing or bad thing". What they ruled was that it was Constitutionally legal.
Have you actually read the opinion? I just perused through part of it, and it spends a good amount of time extolling the virtues of marriage, how central it is to living a happy life, raising a family, etc. And just as in Loving, which legalized interracial marriage, they believe that this applies as well to same-sex couples.
Quote
Would you prefer that this law was subject to change every so often depending upon what party was in power, or have each state decide on its own whether or not gays could marry?
I guess I simply do not understand your complaint.
As I said, I just find it weird that such a small body gets to make such an important decision that affects the entire country.
In this case, I agree with their opinion. But I can understand how the opponents would consider it "anti-democratic" that people they had no hand in choosing got to decide something so central to society. And it doesn't even have to be unanimous, like a criminal conviction does. Many of SCOTUS's most important decisions are 5-4 votes.
I'm reminded of some works of fiction:
Isaac Asimov wrote a short story
Franchise in which voting by the whole population is replaced by a system where a citizen is chosen at random, he's asked a bunch of questions, and a computer uses his answers to determine what the result of an election would have been (basically, extrapolating statistical sampling to its most extreme).
And the movie
Swing Vote, in which the Electoral College is tied with one state's results to add in, and that state's votes are tied until Kevin Costner's character votes.