Originally posted by an0n
Pfff. People should conform to norms dictated by the state. The state should not be forced to conform to the ideals and beliefs of a bunch of rebelling scum who want things changed just because they wanna **** each other in the ass.
Sure, if everyone goes "We like gays." then change stuff. But if a few people go "Change to law so we can be gay." they should just shoot them. When murderers, rapists and single-mothers try to change the law, they get ignored. Why the hell should gays get special treatment?
Death to all the non-conformists and hypocrits........Except me!
When I first read this, I wasn't sure if I was supposed to take it seriously. Hell, this is
an0n we're talking about, so I know enough not to take him
too seriously.

All the same, there are a few things I want to respond to in An0n's post that I feel need addressing.
Originally posted by an0n
Pfff. People should conform to norms dictated by the state.
This is true enough, as far as it goes. Of course for the rule of law to function and to keep society safe from murderers, rapists and other lawbreakers, people have to obey the law or be punished when they do not. That's not in dispute. However, the function of law is to keep people from harming one another. No one can reasonably claim that two guys having sex in their own bedroom in the privacy of their own home harm anyone else. Conservatives claim the opposite, but c'mon, what sort of harm does consensual gay sex done away from the sight of everyone else and in the privacy of their own home really do?
Yes, the state has a legitimate interest in prohibiting behavior that harms others, but here the court is only saying that the state cannot just prohibit consensual gay sex by just claiming "This is immoral, we don't like it so it's now illegal." The state now has to state a legitimate public interest if it wants to regulate behavior that might be considered immoral.
To illustrate, here are a couple of examples: Prostitution can still be outlawed because the state has a legitimate interest in preventing sex being sold for money. Bestiality can still be illegal because animals are incapable of consenting to sex with a human. Incest can still be prohibited because it very often leads to sexual abuse of children.
But consensual gay sex is now permissible because the state has no legitimate reason to prohibit it. Just saying "it's immoral" is not enough; there has to another underlying legitimate purpose for the state to prohibit it, as in the above examples. And as I said above, there is no way to say that consensual gay private sex causes harm. Since there's no showing of harm, the state can't have a good reason for prohibiting it.
That's pretty much the Lawrence ruling in a (mostly accurate) nutshell.
Originally posted by an0n
The state should not be forced to conform to the ideals and beliefs of a bunch of rebelling scum who want things changed just because they wanna **** each other in the ass.
Funny thing about that term "rebelling scum": gays are neither "rebelling" or "scum". They're not rebelling because they are just asserting their voice in our political system, the same as any other politically active group. They're not "scum" because I've met quite a few gay people through mutual friends and they were the nicest people I've ever met. All they want is to live their lives free of discrimination, something the Equal Protection clause guantees them as Americans.
Originally posted by an0n
Sure, if everyone goes "We like gays." then change stuff. But if a few people go "Change to law so we can be gay." they should just shoot them. When murderers, rapists and single-mothers try to change the law, they get ignored. Why the hell should gays get special treatment?
Actually, criminal defendants have managed to change some criminal law statutes by appealing their cases to the Supreme Court; they haven't always been ignored. Some of them were even innocent and had their convictions overturned. (Here's a rhetorical Zen question: If an innocent man is convicted of a crime he didn't commit and he later overturns his conviction on appeal, is he still a criminal?)
And gays aren't seeking "special treatment," they're only seeking equal protection and equal enforcement of their privacy rights that they are entitled to as Americans. It never ceases to amaze me when conservatives loudly proclaim that gays are seeking "special" rights when all gays want is to be treated like everyone else.
Back in the 19th and 20th Centuries, conservatives made the same argument about "special rights" when women demanded equal treament under the law as separate persons rather than be treated as the property of their husbands, when African-Americans demanded freedom from slavery and when African-Americans fought to get the right to vote. Today is no different. Gays are going to get equal treatment, the same as any other previously discriminated minority. The Court's ruling has made this even more inevitable.
If you're an American you're entitled to be treated the same as any other American, regardless of your skin color, gender or sexual orientation. Period.
Originally posted by an0n
Death to all the non-conformists and hypocrites........Except me!
This is classic an0n. It was this line that convinced me that he wasn't being (at least entirely) serious.

This is gays all over the country today:
This is conservatives all over the country:
This is me:
Any questions?

EDIT: I think Rictor asked earlier how the dissenters made their argument against yesterdays's ruling. I read the two dissents (one by Scalia and the other by Thomas) and I'll post summaries of both.
Thomas (his dissent was mercifully short, only two or three paragraphs) basically said that while this Texas anti-sodomy law was "silly" he thought it should have been the job of the Texas legislature to strike it down. But being a "strict constructionist," he didn't see the right of privacy applied at all because he doesn't even think the right to privacy even exists.
(Meh, Thomas never struck me as someone who is particularly smart anyway. He got to where he is through affirmative action, then decides to say that affirmative action should no longer be used to help promote other African-Americans. Classic case of a guy climbing to the top, then pulling the ladder up after himself so no one else can follow him to the top.)
I need to re-read Scalia's dissent to try to make sense of it. I already read it once so I can tell you guys for sure he was
pissed.