The Question
Eternal
I don't think it should. But I do think that's an extremely large 'if'.
Yes, it is. Marriage practices are central to most religions.The Question said:But it's not discriminatory against a religion,
You're having a hard time reading the history books.only against a practice associated with one. Bigamy is illegal, but bigamy isn't practiced exclusively by a single religion, so I'm having a hard time seeing where the illegality of bigamy is aimed exclusively at a single religion.
No, I'm not.Anglo-Saxon law is based on either theist or deist principles. The entirety of modern Western law is composed of relative expressions of religious principles. So are you proposing doing away with all law just because every law on the books more or less parallels a religious ideal?
No such law exists, because it would be clearly discriminatory on the face of it, in the exact same fashion that laws against poly marriages are clearly discriminatory.Thank you for indirectly supporting my argument -- no such law exists, because the law isn't being used that way.
"One chosen religion."Again, you're indirectly supporting my own argument here. In order to support a state religion, a law must be tailored explicitly and exclusively to favor one chosen religion. This simply is not the case.
As a purely incidental measure, measured in terms of other illegal activities involved in the practice.I should think that kidnapping, conspiracy and murder neatly cover such events, just as you've noted, which makes human sacrifice de facto illegal.
Amaze me by digging it up.Likely they did have some scriptural bases for that activity, though absolutely not phrased that way.
How specific does a state religion need to be to qualify as state establishment of some portion of religion?Doesn't it? How do you establish a state religion without specificity and exclusivity? Without specificity and exclusivity, you don't have a state religion. You may have a cultural commonality of religious thought, but that's not an official anything.
I have. Done deal.I'm having trouble buying that. I've never seen an atheist pray.
"Yes, and."I had always thought that it was thrown out on the grounds that it's pseudo-science.
I.e., thrown out on the basis of (a) not being a scientific theory AND (b) being religious doctrine instead.MSNBC said:Jones decried the “breathtaking inanity” of the Dover policy and accused several board members of lying to conceal their true motive, which he said was to promote religion.
A six-week trial over the issue yielded “overwhelming evidence” establishing that intelligent design “is a religious view, a mere re-labeling of creationism, and not a scientific theory,” said Jones, a Republican and a churchgoer appointed to the federal bench three years ago.
The strength of the disestablishment clause is that freedom of religious practice is to be allowed, so far as it does not conflict with some other compelling interest.Again, you're proving my own argument. The strength of the disestablishment clause counters, very effectively, the argument that traditional marriage is an exclusive or specific expression of religion.
TQ, the potentially sticky legal questions of freedom of association and privacy (often dismissed) do not come out of the question of whether or not poly marriages should receive legal benefits in full. (Privacy I'm echoing from someone else in this thread - in saying "could argue," I was not offering an argument.)They don't win out on either of those, I'm afraid. Not for court-recognized marriage, at any rate, because the official "benefits" of marriage, in things like tax benefits and insurance benefits, are a matter of public, not private, record. And free association doesn't guarantee those privileges, either.
No objection to the exclusion at the state level (based on freedom of association) of benefits. Federal laws barring polygamy are perhaps another matter.The Question said:So what it boils down to, then, is this -- bigamy is already practicable in pretty much every state other than Utah, excluding the financial benefits imbued by a state-recognized marriage -- which exclusion you seem to offer no strong objection to.
So don't do it in Utah.
the Supreme Court ruled that sincere religious belief can excuse compliance with otherwise valid general laws, unless the government can demonstrate that it has a "compelling interest" that cannot be achieved by granting religious exemptions.
the Supreme Court ruled that sincere religious belief can excuse compliance with otherwise valid general laws, unless the government can demonstrate that it has a "compelling interest" that cannot be achieved by granting religious exemptions.
A widely accepted reading of religious freedom (free exercise of religion), first used by the Court in 1962, that Congress attempted to expand upon in subsequent legislation. Remember, the First Amendment establishes separation of church and state as both the nonestablishment of state religion of any variety, and barring the government from regulating the free exercise of religion.The Question said:Okay, well that's just a bad ruling, and a pretty fucked-up instance of SCOTUS "legislating from the bench", which is something that, ironically, fundamentalist religionists also complain of them doing.