Courts Descriminate Essay, Research Paper
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In the last ten years, the federal courts have turned away every claim for protection under
the Constitution
made by lesbians and gay men. If lesbians and gay men want protection from
discrimination, the courts said, they
should look to legislatures, governors, city councils — the political branches — not to
the courts.
To a very large extent, the movement for lesbian and gay rights has taken the courts at
their word. The movement
has gone to the political branches for protection against discrimination. And while
lesbians and gay men have not
won every political battle in the past ten years, we have won a fair number. Between
1989 and 1995, eight states
passed laws outlawing discrimination, as did scores and scores of cities. At the urging
of their gay and lesbian
employees, many businesses adopted their own nondiscrimination policies, and many
cities and businesses began
to recognize lesbian and gay relationships.
Colorado’s Amendment 2 is the opposition’s answer to the gay rights movement’s
partial legislative success.
Amendment 2 says the state of Colorado will have two different rules for passing civil
rights laws–the usual one
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for most citizens, which lets the legislature or a city council decide who ought to be
protected from discrimination,
and a special rule for lesbians, gay men and bisexuals, which says they can never be
protected.
Amendment 2 is designed, quite simply, to end the political debate about whether
lesbians and gay men should be
protected by civil rights laws for good. The opposition’s answer, since it can not defeat
us every time, is to change
the rules.
In Romer v. Evans, the Supreme Court will decide if Amendment 2 violates the equal
protection clause of the
federal Constitution, as the Colorado Supreme Court said it did. The decision could
potentially affect the lesbian
and gay rights movement in three significant ways.
First, the result itself will be important, of course. The effort to obtain state laws
protecting lesbians and gay men
from discrimination continues. If the U.S. Supreme Court upholds the Colorado
Supreme Court’s decision, we
will be guaranteed the right to ask for the same civil rights protection that any other
group in America can ask for.
If it does not, in Colorado lesbians and gay men alone will be prevented from ever
getting civil rights protection
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unless we convince the voters to change the rules again. A decision like that would also
allow other states to
adopt similar changes in the rules for making laws, and in at least a few states,
opponents of the lesbian-gay rights
movement are sure to try to have similar rules changes adopted.
Second, the Court’s reasoning will be important. Our challenge to Amendment 2 makes
two arguments. First, we
say, the federal Constitution guarantees everyone the fundamental right to have an
equal voice in democratic self
government. Everyone should get the same chance to convince a state to adopt any
particular kind of law. That
means that any change in the structure of a state’s government that creates different
rules about how laws can be
passed for different groups of citizens ought to be examined by the courts with deep
suspicion, and should be
upheld only if it is absolutely necessary to achieve some compelling nondiscriminatory
public purpose.
This is the argument the Colorado Supreme Court accepted. If the U.S. Supreme
Court accepts it, it means an
end to the recent rash of anti-gay initiatives that try to change the rules. Moreover, it
would prevent this kind of
device from being used against any other minority in the future (it has been used once
in the past, against
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African-Americans in the 1960s).
Our second argument is that the discrimination built into Amendment 2 — that civil
rights laws can be passed to
protect anyone but lesbians and gay men — can not be explained by anything other than
hostility to lesbians and
gay men. Dislike of a group of citizens, we argue, is never a legitimate reason for
treating them differently. This
argument — that dislike is never a “rational basis” for different treatment — has been
developed in the last ten years
as a way of obtaining at least some minimum protection from federal courts that are
unwilling to see government
policies that explicitly discriminate against lesbians and gay men as any more suspicious
than discrimination
between different sized-buildings in zoning regulations.
There are many cases in federal courts now where the issue is the constitutionality of
discriminating against lesbian
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