There's no confusion or contradiction in what I've written.
You said that you don't decide what is law. Than you said something was the law.
You determined that something was law. I presume it's now onto word-games about "determined," when what you meant was clear.
We were talking about individuals, first about the clerk. I said and it remains true that we don't as individuals decide what laws are valid.
And yet you have, as in individual, DECIDED that obergefell
IS LAW. Note, to avoid stupid word games, I mean that you internally thought about obergefell and decided that it was indeed law.
You've clipped out: Are you seriously going to try and have us believe the farce that you wouldn't/couldn't decide that a mafia goon pushing the protection scheme was or wasn't trying to enforce law? That you would have no internal standard for doing so?
Well? Could you decide if the protection racket wasn't law? If you could, you'd than be determining, as an individual, that something isn't law.
The laws are objective restraints and guarantees relating to right. Those rights and laws begin with the Constitution and the Court is charged with determining what meets or runs afoul of it.
You are here expressing standards for determining what is and what is not law. There is no silly infinite regress here, at some point you decided internally for whatever reason what was/was not law.
So if you don't care for that you'll have to change the Constitution itself. And there's just not the will or numbers to do it.
THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT NEVER PASSED AND THE TEXT OF IT DOES NOT GIVE ANY JUSTIFYING GROUNDS FOR THE OBERGEFELL RULING.
Now, either we can keep going back and forth, or we can move forwards and start assessing the justification of our statements. Or you can engage in games-playing for no good reason.
Rather, I'm just telling you the plain fact of it independent of your desire and belief.
I know what your position is. You say "it's the law" and "the court has ruled" and make vague references to the constitution; that's your stated position. Are you simply unable or unwilling to move on from that point to justify your position? Or did you make a more full statement of your position and I missed it?
Just as demonstrably wrong as the first time you wrote it, supra and prior.
And yet you refuse to demonstrate why it's wrong. I'm beginning to suspect/believe you don't even know what my words mean, and that you're seeing a bit of text, deciding it doesn't agree with you, and just putting the same thing onto the screen, again and again, in response only to the vague idea in your head. *can you* make a semi-concise statement of what you think is my position, in your own words? Or will you make some sort of excuse and back out of doing so? Or just say nothing and shirk the very idea?
Well, I'm having a conversation with you, so I understand the speculation, but no. I have no more reason to think I'm either than I do to believe you're capable of sustained civil discourse.
If you were civil, I'd be civil to you. "Civil" includes more than being "sweet."
You don't have to go to hypothetical extremes for that point though. We have laws that legalize killing right now. Abortion. Is it the law? Absolutely. Is it morally objectionable? I believe so. Would I perform an abortion if someone added it to my duties as an attorney? No, I wouldn't. And I'd take whatever consequence came with that position. Wouldn't alter the fact of the law though.
I don't know you well enough to know what you'd object to for sure, so I chose something that I was pretty sure you'd object to.
You selectively (and quite handily for yourself) clipped this section out: would you say "the court has ruled?" Would you also think that the constitution must mean what they said? If you wouldn't, WHY? Would you try and appeal by saying anything like "that's not what the constituion means?"
Why are you avoiding this?
The state can not enforce immorality; to enforce such is not to enforce law, *by definition of what law is.*
As I said to someone earlier, allowing people the freedom to make choices relating to their own personal and moral consequence isn't tyranny. Denying them that can be.
What you've just stated gives no appearance of having anything at all to do with the content of what I posted.
I'm continuing to step around your notions regarding constitutionality because it just doesn't control anything and given the name calling and shouting I'm fairly sure you wouldn't listen to me anyway.
Are you saying that the constitution has no control over what is and what is not law? If you mean something else, it's not clear what you mean. Why the shouting and blunt questions? You're uncivil. You don't hand the mint-julep tea and parasol and be oh-so-sweet to the local troll under the bridge if you want an intellectually honest and hopefully worthwhile interaction with him. Yes, i just unfavorably compared you to a troll; mostly because you play word-games, not only with my words but your own as well.
I've said we don't determine the law as individuals. I've never said anyone isn't free to an opinion about whether a law is just or unjust, well reasoned or idiotic.
Now it's word games over "determined." If only you'd use your thinking ability to do something besides being intellectually dishonest and hypocritical to keep out of a corner you've painted yourself into.
Your opinion about what is and is not law is what you think is and is not law. You have just admitted yet again that you determined what you will and will not call law. Calling it "opinion" doesn't let you off the hook.
You determine what is and is not law, than you say you've not done so, than you give a standard for determining what is and is not law.