Home | Commentary | News | Forum | The Loft | Online Activist | State News | Resources | Classifieds Subscribe | Mobile | RSS | Contact
Breaking News -- Health care bill clears first Senate hurdle on party-line vote

Other Columns by Star Parker
Star Parker Bio

       

Printer-Friendly Version

Reasons For Optimism
By Star Parker
June 13, 2006

A gift from the Lord for which I remain eternally grateful is my inherent optimism. I am blessed with a natural inclination to see the glass half full rather than half empty.

In this vein, I believe that, although the Senate's vote this past week rejecting the federal Marriage Protection Amendment may be a battle lost, the prospects for long term victory in the cultural war to preserve traditional values in America remain excellent.

The defeat of the marriage amendment flows from the reverence of Americans for our Constitution rather than support for endorsing homosexuality as an acceptable social norm. Furthermore, the arguments against the amendment are sufficiently weak and transparently false that over time more Americans will appreciate the need for this measure.

As many have noted, 45 out of 50 states already have enacted protections for traditional marriage, either through statute or constitutional amendment. Consistent with this, polls show Americans overwhelmingly opposed to legalization of homosexual marriage.

Support drops off, however, when the issue becomes amending the federal Constitution.

The reverence that Americans have for our Constitution is inherently good news. It is this attitude that distinguishes our country. Other nations write constitutions that wind up in the trash can in short order. Ours stands as it does because Americans both love and understand the importance of freedom and hold our national institutions in awe and respect that can only come from a truly religious people.

We relate to our federal Constitution as the unique and delicate document that it is. It takes a lot for us to approach it and tamper with it.

Americans don't need convincing about the importance of preserving traditional marriage. They need more convincing that amending the federal Constitution to protect marriage would bolster our freedom rather than abridge it.

Clearly, this is going to take more time. More Americans need to appreciate that the liberal elite now controlling our courts, already overturning homosexual marriage bans passed by voters in five states, will ultimately do so at the federal level. As Judge Robert Bork, and others, have argued, the Defense of Marriage Act, which insulates states from having to recognize homosexual marriage legalized in one state, will inevitably be challenged and overturned by the Supreme Court.

Thus, without amending our federal constitution, we are likely to be looking at national recognition of homosexual marriage.

It may well be that the reverence for our constitution is so profound that even with a sense that there is a high probability that the Defense of Marriage Act will be found unconstitutional, Americans will not move to amending the constitution until this actually happens.

This gets to my second point regarding my optimism.

Because Americans do want to preserve traditional marriage, the case seems compelling that a federal marriage amendment will be enacted if indeed the Defense of Marriage Act is negated by the Supreme Court.

>> Continued -- Page 1 2

       

 

++ Check out the GOPUSA home page for the latest information.

Last Updated:
Saturday 5:45 pm EST



Not a member? Click here.
Weekend Chat by Ohiowoman
Weekend Chat by Terri
Health care bill clears first Senate hurdle on party-line vote by oldjules
Health care bill clears first Senate hurdle on party-line vote by ReneeCA.
Discuss Issues in the Forum

Grassroots Survey Team
View recent survey results
Join the survey team!



GOPUSA Cartoons
Click here!

++ Action Alert: No more apologies....get to work!

++ Semper Fi - Now Just Die - Obama Pushes Euthanasia on Veterans

++ New Survey: Future of America's health care