Here’s some more proud point-missing from the Iowa For Freedom coalition. This time from a voter who believes the state Supreme Court justices “ignored” the DOMA law, even if in reality, the Varnum panel quite openly and honestly found the law to be unconstitutional:

The down and dirty fact is that social conservatives tend to think any and all laws ever made that go against LGBT people and their rights are somehow cast in indelible stone, the likes of which can only to be reconsidered by a 50%+1 vote of “the people.” In this mindset, the only decision that any court can reach that’s in accord with righteousness is a decision that says, for the first time in American history’s clearly archived inevitability, that a minority group’s civil freedoms are to be ultimately determined by a majority of (largely) faith-motivated voters. As in always. As in only.

And it’s not just in states where courts roll back prior bans, either. In jurisdictions like Maine, where legislators reversed bias and implemented civil freedom, these same suspects come out of the political woodwork, this time decrying the “activist legislature” as opposed to the “activist court.” So don’t be fooled into thinking it’s only the judiciary that’s the “bad branch” in the “pro-family” community’s eyes. It’s *any* branch that opens its eyes to equal protection and due process. It’s *any* branch that does the right thing for America and her populace.

Now In Iowa, voters have a chance to do the right thing with this retention vote. And I’m not even saying that the right thing here is to automatically cast a “yes” vote for the three justices up for retention. No, no — the right thing is to look at the judge’s full record and to cast a vote based on a fleshed out, far-reaching assessment of the individual jurist’s merits, and not a monolithic vote based on vindictive spite for the one certain pro-equality opinion.

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*SEE ALSO: Our complete Iowa For Freedom Archive



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