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culture marriage and family politics, economy, etc.

The Meaning and Potential Legal Effects of North Carolina’s Proposed Marriage Amendment

As previously noted, on May 8th, voters in North Carolina will decide whether to add to the State’s constitution a provisions that provides:

“Marriage between one man and one woman is the only domestic legal union that shall be valid or recognized in this State. This section does not prohibit a private party from entering into contracts with another private party; nor does this section prohibit courts from adjudicating the rights of private parties pursuant to such contracts.”

Opponents claim that the proposed Amendment ultimately could deny domestic violence protections, child custody and visitation rights, and other legal benefits to thousands of unmarried couples in NC.  Their concerns are based on a legal analysis of the Amendment published by Maxine Eichner, a law professor at UNC School of Law and a leading academic on feminist and queer legal theory.

Campbell law professors Lynn Buzzard, William Woodruff, and Gregory Wallace have published a detailed reply to Eichner disputing the accuracy of her legal analysis and rejecting her stated concerns regarding how the Amendment might harm unmarried couples.  The Campbell professors’ purpose is to advance the public dialogue by addressing the flawed analysis of Eichner, whose misleading claims have provided the basis for the opposition’s ongoing scare campaign. The professors explain,

The reason for this paper is a narrow one. We do not endorse or oppose the proposed Amendment. There are thoughtful arguments on both sides, and we encourage a robust public debate about the Amendment. Our aim instead is to help clarify for North Carolina voters the Amendment’s legal meaning and likely effects. We believe that the Amendment debate has been distorted by concerns over certain legal consequences that are highly unlikely to occur. … We emphasize again that it is not up to us to tell anyone how to vote on the proposed Amendment. We offer this paper only as a modest attempt to explain the meaning and likely effects of the Amendment, should it pass. We believe that North Carolina voters are best served by having accurate legal information about the Amendment, so that they can properly consider the Amendment’s pros and cons and then vote their conscience.

The Campbell Law professors conclude that even if the Amendment passes, unmarried and same-sex couples still will be protected under domestic violence laws, would retain their current rights to child custody and visitation, and could continue to received public health insurance benefits.

The three professors state that because the Amendment applies to “legal unions” and not “relationships,” it bars only same-sex marriage and legal recognition of civil unions and domestic partnerships that resemble marriage unions.  The flaw in Eichner’s arguments is that she does not give the term “legal union” its proper legal effect in construing the Amendment. (Eichner admitted to me in debate that even without the “domestic legal union” clause, she still would not support a prohibition against same-sex marriage.)

The law professors’ full, detailed analysis can be found here:  The Meaning and Potential Legal Effects of North Carolina’s Proposed Marriage Amendment

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sports

Modern instrument of torture

[WARNING GRAPHIC IN NATURE]

 

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encouragement marriage and family

Husbands and wives praying together

The living God speaks to, guides, comforts and strengthens us through prayer.  Through prayer, God is the cement that bonds a husband and wife.  The Bible instructs us to pray continually.  (1 Thes. 5:17.)  Although trite, a family that prays together, stays together.  Both within the “church” and in society at large, roughly fifty percent of all marriages end in divorce.  Those numbers within the church break down, however, upon inspection.  Amongst couples who pray together, the divorce rate plummets to less than one percent.[i]  Prayer demonstrates the power of the living God in the lives of people.  A commitment to praying together on a daily basis should be included in the wedding vows of every Christian couple.  Imagine the witness to this fractured and hurting world if over ninety-nine percent of all married Christians remained married until death intervened.  Marital prayer fosters intimacy and love with each other and with God. It demonstrates the Way to our children and invites blessing to the family.


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Atheism, agnostic, evolution, etc. humor video

New advances in evolution

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humor sports

Motivational Poster

Motivational Poster

Thanks to Mark Remy at Runners World blog.

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encouragement theology

Now that Easter is over…

Easter Sunday has come and gone. As the sugar high wears off, we should take a chance to reflect.

What was it about?
Easter Bunny? White Crosses? Flowers? Going to church?

The more devout would answer that Jesus rose from the dead. But why?

Why did Jesus have to die?

Why would the God of the Universe submit himself to inhuman torture by one of the most cruel nations that ever existed? Why would God allow himself to be killed in one of the most barbaric and humiliating ways possible?

Why?

One of my favorite Bible passages about Jesus was written over 700 years before he was born. The prophet Isaiah wrote the following about Jesus’ suffering:

Surely he took up our pain
and bore our suffering,
yet we considered him punished by God,
stricken by him, and afflicted.
But he was pierced for our transgressions,
he was crushed for our iniquities;
the punishment that brought us peace was on him,
and by his wounds we are healed.
We all, like sheep, have gone astray,
each of us has turned to our own way;
and the LORD has laid on him
the iniquity of us all.
(Isaiah 53:4-6)

The Apostle Peter repeats this in the New Testament:

He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree, that we might die to sin and live to righteousness. By his wounds you have been healed. For you were straying like sheep, but have now returned to the Shepherd and Overseer of your souls.
(1 Peter 2:24-25)

Notice how little goodness we have to give God. We are nothing more than straying sheep.  There is nothing — absolutely nothing — that we can give to God to earn his favor.  (See also Titus 3:5)

But Jesus took all of this.  Not because he was weak, but because he was the only one who could.  All of this barbaric punishment, all of this blood and beating was meant for us. Jesus took the punishment that we deserve.

It would be just another tragedy if the story ended that Jesus died, but that is not the ending — Jesus is alive again!

That is what we celebrate at Easter — Jesus is alive!!!

But in fact Christ has been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep. For as by a man came death, by a man has come also the resurrection of the dead.
(1 Corinthians 15:20-21)

Categories
marriage and family politics, economy, etc.

Marriage Amendments – NC & Surrounding States

The North Carolina Marriage Amendment is modeled after Idaho’s, as shown below.  As shown below, the North Carolina Amendment is less restrictive than Virginia’s, effectively the same as South Carolina’s and more restrictive than Tennessee’s.  In my opinion, the North Carolina Amendment is the most clear and concise as compared to our surrounding States.

North Carolina the Marriage Amendment:

Marriage between one man and one woman is the only domestic legal union that shall be valid or recognized in this State. This section does not prohibit a private party from entering into contracts with another private party; nor does this section prohibit courts from adjudicating the rights of private parties pursuant to such contracts.

Idaho Amendment (2006):

A marriage between a man and a woman is the only domestic legal union that shall be valid or recognized in this state.

[Unlike the NC version, Idaho does not expressly protect private contracts pertaining to domestic relations between same sex adults]

Virginia Amendment (2007):

Only a union between one man and one woman may be a marriage valid in or recognized by this Commonwealth and its political subdivisions. This Commonwealth and its political subdivisions shall not create or recognize a legal status for relationships of unmarried individuals that intends to approximate the design, qualities, significance, or effects of marriage. Nor shall this Commonwealth or its political subdivisions create or recognize another union, partnership, or other legal status to which is assigned the rights, benefits, obligations, qualities, or effects of marriage.

[prohibits same sex marriage, civil unions, and private contract]

South Carolina (2006):

This amendment provides that the institution of marriage in South Carolina consists only of the union between one man and one woman. No other domestic union is valid and legal. The State and its political subdivisions are prohibited from creating or recognizing any right or claim respecting any other domestic union, whatever it may be called, or from giving effect to any such right or benefit recognized in any other state or jurisdiction. However, this amendment also makes clear it does not impair rights or benefits extended by this State, or its political subdivisions not arising from other domestic unions, nor does the amendment prohibit private parties from entering into contracts or other legal instruments.

[prohibits same sex marriage and civil unions]

Tennessee (2006): 

The historical institution and legal contract solemnizing the relationship of one man and one woman shall be the only legally recognized marital contract in this state. Any policy or law or judicial interpretation, purporting to define marriage as anything other than the historical institution and legal contract between one man and one woman is contrary to the public policy of this state and shall be void and unenforceable in Tennessee. If another state or foreign jurisdiction issues a license for persons to marry and if such marriage is prohibited in this state by the provisions of this section, then the marriage shall be void and unenforceable in this state.

[prohibits same sex marriage]

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encouragement praise video

He Reigns!

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culture marriage and family politics, economy, etc.

A Civil and Legal Case for the NC Marriage Amendment

On May 8, 2012, North Carolinians will vote on whether to add the following language to the Constitution of North Carolina:

Marriage between one man and one woman is the only domestic legal union that shall be valid or recognized in this State. This section does not prohibit a private party from entering into contracts with another private party; nor does this section prohibit courts from adjudicating the rights of private parties pursuant to such contracts.

Meanings often change with times.  The meaning of a word changes when people use it in a new and different way.

Gay.  Fifty years ago, if I told you I was gay, it would mean something quite different than what it means to people today.

Word usage by people determines new meanings.

Marriage.

It’s a word.  But it is also a civil, legal and religious institution.  I support the NC Marriage Amendment because I believe the legal and civil purpose for the institution of marriage is to protect and encourage the lifelong commitment between one man and one woman to raise a family. Marriage is the institution designed for the creation and nurturing of children.

I will offer the following four points:

1.  Some say that we do not need the Marriage Amendment because it already reflects the status of state and federal statutory law.  However, I believe that the Marriage Amendment is necessary to ensure that marriage is defined by the people of North Carolina, and not by a handful of judges. As a Constitutional amendment, the people of North Carolina would directly control the meaning and purpose of this institution.

2.  There are two views of marriage in this debate – the traditional view that the institution of marriage is the lifelong commitment between a man and a woman to create, sustain and raise a family. The competing view purposes the institution for adults to express and validate lifestyle choices.  Some have characterized this debate as “child centric” versus “adult centric” views on marriage or whether the institution is tied to promoting procreation.

3. The law is normative.  How you define the purpose for the institution of marriage has consequences. When the institution of marriage is no longer about a lifelong commitment to family and children – it stops functioning to produce commitment, family and children.  Accordingly, the countries that have been progressively redefining marriage to be about adult preferences, marriage and reproduction rates are plummeting to dangerously low numbers.  I find merit to the concerns expressed by some that the West is committing societal suicide by demographics.

4. The numerous and mutating objections about the Marriage Amendment causing harm to families, business and domestic violence protections are disingenuous and ignore what has happened in the 29 other states that have amended their constitutions to ban gay marriage.  Critics have failed to put forward credible evidence of these threatened harms occurring in these numerous states over the past several years.

This brings us to the first issue with the Marriage Amendment –

I.          Is the Marriage Amendment necessary? 

YES.  American’s have not redefined the word nor the institution of marriage.  The effort to redefine marriage has been spearheaded by lawyers, the legal academic elite and a handful of judges.

Institutions and morals can change with times.  When morals change, the law often changes to reflect the new values.  But there’s no evidence the meaning of the word has changed through popular usage nor the institution.

The black letter dictionary on law – Black’s Law Dictionary defines marriage as the legal union of one man and one woman as husband and wife.  The second edition of the Oxford American Dictionary is the most recent, comprehensive lexical analysis of American English.  Completed in 2005, it defines marriage as the union between a man and a woman.

Similarly, our current statutes reflect the view that marriage is between a man and a woman.  The federal Defense of Marriage Act, signed into law by President Clinton states that “’marriage” means only a legal union between one man and one woman as husband and wife …) 1 USC § 7.  North Carolina General Statute § 51-1.2 establishes that same sex marriages are not valid in North Carolina.

However, the force for changing the definition of marriage to include gay marriage was a handful of judges and the power of their courts.  Eight states recognize homosexual marriages – the first three States in our Republic to do so – were the result of judicial decree.

Massachusetts: May 17, 2004, Court Order
Connecticut: Nov. 12, 2008, Court Order
Iowa: April 24, 2009, Court Order
Vermont: Sept. 1, 2009, Legislation
New York: June 24, 2011, Legislation
New Hampshire: Jan. 1, 2010, Legislation
Washington: Feb. 14, 2012, Legislation
Maryland: passed Mar. 1, 2012; effective Jan. 1, 2013, Legislation

This issue of marriage should be resolved by the people of North Carolina and not by attorneys or judicial decree.  Through the legislative process, only five states have adopted homosexual marriage.  In contrast 29 states have expressly prohibited homosexual marriage by Constitutional Amendment, and one state has passed a constitutional amendment authorizing the legislature to ban gay marriage.

10 States w/amendments that ban same-sex marriage: Alaska, Nevada, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Oregon, Colorado, Tennessee, Arizona, California – whose ballot initiative banning gay marriage is presently enjoined by the 9th Circuit

18 States w/amendments that ban same-sex marriage & civil unions but not other contracts: Nebraska, Arkansas, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Utah, Kansas, Texas, Alabama, Idaho, South Carolina, South Dakota, Wisconsin, Florida

2 States w/amendments that ban same-sex marriage, civil unions & related contracts: Michigan, Virginia

The people, not a judge, should decide whether we want to redefine what marriage means in North Carolina.  If the Marriage Amendment is passed by the voters, then under state law, it can only be changed by a vote of the people.

II.  The traditional versus the radical feminists and critical legal theorist’s theory of marriage

What’s the purpose for the institution of marriage?  Why do we have “marriage”?

Is marriage primarily about family or about the individual’s liberty of lifestyle?

How you answer this should largely inform your views on whether you think the institution of marriage ought to include homosexual partners.

A.  The traditional definition of marriage.

In his 1828 American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster defined marriage as follows:

The act of uniting a man and woman for life; wedlock; the legal union of a man and woman for life.  Marriage is contract both civil and religious, by which the parties engage to live together in mutual affection and fidelity, till death shall separate them.  Marriage was instituted by God himself for the purpose of preventing promiscuous intercourse of the sexes, for promoting domestic felicity, and for securing the maintenance and education of children.

Webster’s definition reflects the traditional, Judeo-Christian perspective on marriage. This is the definition to which the people of the Carolinas have regulated the legal institution for over 343 years, since the original royal charter of the Province of Carolina.  It is the view held uniformly throughout the West for the past 2000 years, until about 20 years ago.

Under this traditional view, marriage is a life long commitment between a man and a woman and is the foundation of the family.  The family is the foundation of society as it is the family that creates, nurtures and raises the next generation.  In this view, marriage is a sacred bond between the man and woman, in the presence of the family, friends and before God.  The family is the foundation of any and every society.

The traditional view on marriage is premised on the idea that marriage and raising children are hard work that requires a lifetime of largely selfless commitment.  The institution of marriage is to encourage and protect that union and labor for the benefit of the children.

The traditional view of marriage is also premised on the idea that society should promote and protect children being raised by their biological mothers and fathers who are committed and legally obligated to the well being of the family.  There is great and ancient wisdom in this sentiment that we should all recognize.  There is an overwhelming common pathology in our prisons and on our welfare roles: children raised without their fathers. Every year about one million more children are born into fatherless families. If we have learned any policy lesson well over the past 35 years, it is that for children living in single-parent homes, the odds of living in poverty are great. The policy implications of the increase in out-of-wedlock births are staggering. Marriage drops the probability of poverty by 80%.

Decades upon decades and hundreds if not thousands of empirical studies repeatedly demonstrate that children raised in a home with their married mother and father are substantially more healthy, wealthy, happy, and productive than their counterparts who were not. 

Under the traditional view of marriage and family – the self is subordinated to the good of the family, particularly to the good of the children.  Through the traditional institution of marriage, adult society protects, promotes and encourages a child’s right to be raised in a secure environment by his or her biological parents. The traditional view of marriage is child focused.

B.  The radical feminist and critical legal theorist’s view of marriage.

The moral and legal theory behind the gay marriage effort finds its genesis in radical feminist and queer legal theory[1], the scholars of which are not laudatory of the traditional institution of marriage.

The motto of the feminist legal theorists and sexual revolutionaries of the late 60s was “smash monogamy”.  Marriage was portrayed as an institution of suppression. Now, a generation later, they are fighting for homosexuals to be admitted into the legalized institution of monogamy – marriage.

This isn’t irony.  It’s intentional.  It’s a deliberate and ongoing effort to redefine how society views and lives marriage.  From this radical perspective, the primary purpose of the institution of marriage is to fulfill and validate the individual’s liberty of lifestyle, be it heterosexual, gay, lesbian, transgender, polygamous, or polyamorous.  Same sex marriage repurposes marriage from a child-focused institution to an institution focused on validating and facilitating the expressive desires of adults.

Under this individual liberty view of marriage, marriage exists as an institution through which adults live and express themselves on the issues of family and sex.

This radical individualism and radical egalitarianism is not something new.  In fact, it’s not even new to the institution of marriage.  Starting in the 1970s, we began redefining marriage.  Now if marriage doesn’t make you happy, end it. The no fault divorce – divorce rates since the 1980s have vacillated between 40 to 50%.

Instead of a lifelong commitment to the family, we began changing the institution of marriage into a perishable commodity.  The institution is still focused on family and children, but only for so long as we feel like it.

The youth of today are the first generations raised in the culture of disposable marriage.  It also shouldn’t be surprising then for us to find that a majority of these youth attach little moral, legal, or emotional significance to the institution of marriage being extended to gay adults who want to “enjoy” this celebration of individual liberty.

I respectfully suggest, and having lived through it personally can testify, that this concept of marriage as a disposable commodity is not at all healthy for children nor for the future of this Republic.

The proper view of marriage in a healthy society is that marriage is a life long union between a man and woman for purposes of raising a family together.  Marriage should remain child focused.

The underlying issue pertaining to the Marriage Amendment is not about homosexuals raising children.  It’s about the purpose of marriage: is it an institution to celebrate individual liberty, or is it a lifelong commitment between a husband and wife for the purpose of raising their children?

Marriage should not be an institution for validating sexual preferences.  The institution of same sex marriage would change the institution of marriage from a child-focused institution to an adult-centered institution.

Deliberately conceiving a child with the life plan that he or she will never have a relationship with his or her father is unjust and cruel to the child.  Sex is not an irrelevant category for parenting. All else being equal, children do better when there is both a mother and father in the home dedicated to raising them.  Further, there is already a crisis of absentee fathers in this country.

The West has led the world in redefining marriage to be about individual liberty interests.  There has been a pronounced and undeniable impact, and it has not been family or child friendly.

III.  There are serious consequences to redefining marriage to be about the wants and needs of adults.

When marriage stops being primarily about commitment to and raising a family, then marriage stops producing commitment and family.

We talk a lot about the importance of education for equipping the next generation for tomorrow.  But there is a more important, a more fundamental imperative for our children’s future:  the future first belongs to those that show up.  Our Western liberal democracies are showing an ever fading interest in showing up for tomorrow.  To the contrary, there is compelling evidence that we are in a demographic death spiral, particularly in Europe, which spiral appears to have started with our redefining the institution of marriage to be about the wants and needs of adults instead of the creation and sustenance of families, i.e. children.

The family in the West is crumbling and our reproductive rates are plummeting.

1. Netherlands in 2001 legalized gay marriage – the public debate there and lawsuits started in earnest in 1989.  I was there in 1990.  A funny thing happened. Starting in the 1990s, the institution of marriage began to crumble.  In 1995, 15% of births were out of wedlock.  By 2009, out of wedlock births increased to 41% of births;– fertility rate of 1.78 children per couple. A healthy country requires a fertility rate of 2.1 to sustain its population;

You cannot prove causality – however, free and open sexual expression and treating marriage as a validation of lifestyle choices has not produced more families or more children.  The opposite has happened.

The law is normative.  It counsels what is acceptable conduct.  Gay marriage is about validating the liberty of lifestyle choices. When the institution of marriage is no longer about commitment, family and children – it stops functioning to produce commitment, family and children.

2. Belgium legalized homosexual marriage in 2003 – from 1995 to 2009, out of wedlock births increased from 18% to 42% of births out of wedlock; fertility rate of 1.65

3.  Spain legalized homosexual marriage in 2005 – from 1995 to 2009 – out of wedlock births increased from 10% to 32%; fertility rate of 1.48

United States – we presently have a fertility rate of 2.06; our births out of wedlock were 41% in 2008 according to the CDC.  Within that, for Asian’s the rate is 17% of births out of wedlock, 28% for whites, 52% for Hispanics, and 72% for blacks.  Marriage and procreation are already under great duress in this country. The collapse of the institution in the United States coincides with the advent of the “no fault” divorce here. Making the institution of marriage even more adult and expressive centric will likely only lead to what we see in Europe – a collapsed institution and unsustainable level of procreation.

Procreation is the most fundamental function of a healthy society.

How do these fertility rates compare with countries that have not followed the lead to make marriage about adult expression?  You need 2.1 fertility rate to sustain.

Brazil has a fertility rate of 2.2.
Mexico has a fertility rate of 2.5
India – 2.58 fertility rate
Egypt – 2.94 fertility rate
Pakistan – fertility rate 3.52

The nations that have openly and aggressively redefined marriage to be adult focused are perhaps not surprisingly, not having children. Examining the countries that have led the way on gay marriage, we find fertility rates from 1.48 to 1.78.  That’s not family friendly.

To the contrary, the West is in a demographic death spiral.  This will result in declining and aging populations; changed social relations, economic pressure from shrinking populations; and if given large immigration patterns with disproportionately higher birth rates persist (which is the case in Europe with robust fertility rates within the immigrant Muslim demographic) – we will have entirely changed cultures/societies within a few generations.

When the institution of marriage ceases to be about children, sustainable reproduction dies and you have a dying country.

The institution of the family is in duress across the very Western liberal democracies that have taken it upon themselves to redefine the purpose of marriage.  We should not redefine the institution further.  Marriage should be about the life long commitment of a man and a woman for the purposes of raising their biological children.

IV.       Subterfuge Arguments

There have been numerous allegations that this Amendment would have countless unanticipated ramifications that would hurt children and families.

Most of these claims lack merit.

1.  The Amendment cannot be both unnecessary and too dangerous?  On the one hand, critics claim the Amendment is unnecessary because it doesn’t change the current status of the law.  On the other hand, we’re told that the Amendment will harm heterosexual couples. If the amendment does not change the legal status quo, it should have no affect the day after enacted.  The only difference the day after enactment is that the people of North Carolina will control the definition of marriage in North Carolina.

2.  What’s the motive?  This debate is not about the wording of the Amendment.  The people raising these arguments do not want to fix imprecise wording.  The wording is not imprecise.  The people making these arguments object to the traditional notion of marriage being the institution through which one man and one woman raises a family. They object to the fundamental moral dispute.  Not the wording of how it is enacted.  They do not support a more carefully worded restriction.

3.  We’re not the first.  We’re looking at being the 31st State to pass a constitutional amendment limiting marriage to one man and one woman.  The critics’ unintended consequences arguments might be more persuasive if we were the first state to pass such an Amendment.  Or maybe if we were the second, third or even fourth state.  We’re not.  This Amendment was based on studying the 30 current amendments already on the books and enforced in other states.  This is a well-worn path.  From the 30 prior iterations, the critics have not produced any meaningful evidence of these harms.  Our Amendment is nearly identical to Idaho’s amendment, which was passed in 2006.  Critics cannot point to one adverse resulting event there.  Our Amendment is far less restrictive than Virginia’s, yet again, there is not one example of harm there.  Despite amendments in dozens of states for many years, there is no pattern or evidence of adverse, unintended consequences. Critics claims to the contrary are unsubstantiated.

4.  Based on a 2011 report by the American Legislative Exchange Council, the Marriage Amendment should not adversely affect North Carolina’s economy. A 2011 report by the American Legislative Exchange Council ranked states by economic performance between 1999 and 2009 and by economic outlook. Eight of the top ten economically performing states have amendments banning homosexual marriage. None have legalized same-sex marriage, civil unions or domestic partnerships. Nine of the 10 states forecasted to have the poorest economic growth have legalized same-sex marriage, civil unions and/or domestic partnerships.

5. The amendment should not affect the enforcement of domestic violence laws. This is perhaps the most spurious of arguments.  Out of 30 states having already amended their constitutions, the opponents rely upon an instance in Ohio where a trial court refused to enforce a domestic violence statute based on the Ohio Marriage Amendment.  What the critics don’t tell you is that the trial court was reversed by the Ohio State Supreme Court in 2007.  The critics rely upon a reversed decision that has nothing to do with North Carolina’s domestic violence statutes. For lawyers, the trial court’s decision is called bad precedent.  See Ohio v. Carswell, 871 N.E.2d 547 (Ohio 2007)

6. The amendment will not nullify medical powers of attorney (MPOAs) wills and trusts if the parties are homosexual partners. Under G.S. 32A-18 “any competent person who is not engaged in providing health care to the principal for remuneration, and who is 18 years of age or older, may act as a health care agent.” The relationship between the patient and the designated agent does not matter. The intent of the testator and trustor is the “gold standard” in N.C. for interpreting wills and trusts. The amendment does not change the intent of the testator in either type of these instruments. The amendment explicitly states that it will not affect the rights of parties to enter into private contractual agreements.

7. The Marriage Amendment will not determine the custody and visitation rights of unmarried parents unless their behavior affects the child. Custody orders are based on the parent/child relationship, not on the domestic relationship between the parents. Courts have based custody and visitation on the “best interest of the child.” NCGS 50-13.2(2007) The sexual behavior of the party petitioning for custody or visitation is not determinative except as it affects the child. The “de facto parenting doctrine” was applied in 2010 in Boseman v. Jarrell, 704 S.E.2d 494 (N.C. 2010). The Supreme Court refused to allow adoption to an unmarried same-sex partner but did award joint custody and visitation rights to that non-biological same-sex partner who had become a de facto parent to the child.

8. Homosexual couples will still be able to visit each other in the hospital.  I don’t believe there are visitation restrictions currently against homosexual couples in North Carolina, and we have not legalized gay marriage or civil unions.  Further, I don’t think a public or private hospital could refuse the designation of an unmarried partner and remain in Medicare. the final rule from the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services regarding hospital visitation, which can be found here:  http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2010-11-19/pdf/2010-29194.pdf, is a broad provision that, from my reading of it, basically says that if you want to participate in Medicare you must inform patients of their right to receive visitors and the hospital may not limit those visitation rights based on sexual orientation.  I haven’t been able to find specific statistics on the percentage of that accept Medicare funds, but it must be extremely high.

CONCLUSION

All citizens of North Carolina, gay and straight, are respected and welcomed and they have the right to private commitment ceremonies as they choose.  But, they do not have the right to redefine marriage for our State.

Marriage is the foundation institution for creating, sustaining and raising the next generation.  When the institution of marriage is no longer about a life long commitment to family and children – it stops functioning to produce commitment, family and children.

For these reasons, I will be voting in favor of the Marriage Amendment.


[1] “Queer Legal Theory” is not a term of derision but is the term of reference used within academia to refer to a particular school of jurisprudence and its scholars.  The leading academic proponent of same sex marriage in North Carolina, UNC Law Professor Maxine Eichner is a well known legal feminist in academia who is well versed in critical legal theory.  Her most acknowledged work is a review of feminist and queer legal theory with regard to “sexual citizenship.”  See Eichner, Feminism, Queer Theory, and Sexual Citizenship.  The paper can be downloaded at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1451059

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entertainment marriage and family video

The Best Birthday Video Ever … [World Premier]

Dove Award?  Grammy?  Maybe not.  Each child sings the song I sang to them as “their” lullaby song.  Not sure where “It’s a Dad’s Life” came from …

Categories
praise video

Cannons

You are holy
Great and Mighty
The moon and the stars
Declare who you are

I’m so unworthy
but still you love me
Forever my heart
Will sing of how great you are

 

Thanks to Phil Wickham for penning these words and putting it to music.

Thanks to God for giving us the universe to show how great he is!

 

Categories
marriage and family

Marriage Sunday – Please Pray

From Alan Sears at the Alliance Defense Fund:

As I am sure you are aware, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit issued its ruling in Perry v. Brown, the federal challenge to California’s marriage protection amendment.  To the surprise of none of us here at the Alliance Defense Fund, Judge Stephen Reinhardt, the most overturned federal appeals judge in America, wrote an opinion striking down the expressed will of over 7 million Californians who voted to define marriage as only the union of one man and one woman.
 
Of course, this case is far from over.  This is one setback in a struggle which we will tirelessly fight – all the way to the United States Supreme Court, if necessary.
 
The future for marriage, both in California and the nation, is far from decided by the events at the Ninth Circuit, and what is occurring in California is just another battle in the ongoing war over marriage.  Nevertheless, the need for prayer has never been more urgent, for without Christ we can do nothing (John 15:5).
… 
We are encouraging this Sunday, February 26th to be a day for all believers, to pray for marriage – that marriages across our land will be strengthened, and that God’s design for marriage be upheld and honored.  The document here is a prayer guide that we would encourage you to use, and pass along to others to inform them about this special day.
 
Would you please consider sharing this with your pastor, Bible study, friends and family – so that as many believers as possible will know, and participate, in this day of unified, focused prayer? You can also encourage them to visit www.TellADF.org/marriage to find out more.
 
Thank you for all you do to honor the Lord in your personal and professional life. May God continue to give us all more of His grace and blessing, as we endeavor to faithfully follow Him toward victory.
 
With sincere appreciation and best regards.
 
Yours for religious freedom in America,
Alan E. Sears
In addition to praying for the institution of marriage in our country, we should be praying for our own marriages and for our spouses.
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entertainment music praise video

The Power of the Cross – One of the Best Songs of the Past Ten Years

The Getty’s are simply divine songwriters and performers.  I could listen to them all day …

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books encouragement Ministry

From the tears of a precocious peasant child who loved Jesus …

And thus we see in this life that God has need of the high and the lowly, the great and the small, the gold and the baser metal; and out of all, and through all, and in all, He works His wondrous way, and permits His Creatures to join, as it were, with Him in the turning of the world from darkness to His marvelous light.  Mary E. Ropes, Mary Jones and Her Bible (1882)

Little Welsh Mary Jones was dirt poor.  She loved Christ from the earliest age and studied God’s word from a neighboring farmer’s Bible.  Welsh Bibles were exceedingly rare and hard to come by.  This intelligent and precocious girl was determined to one day have her own Bible.  She worked and saved, and after six years finally had enough to purchase her own.  She walked barefoot from her village at the foot of  Cader IdrisLlanfihangel-y-pennant to  Bala – 25 miles away to buy one from the renowned Pastor Thomas Charles.  He did not have one to give her.  Her immediate tears and obvious devotion inspired the creation of the British and Foreign Bible Society in 1804.  That organization and its spin-offs have distributed millions of Bible and conducted thousands of translations in the past two centuries.

Although he didn’t have one to give her, Mary’s tears melted Pastor Charles and he nonetheless found someone else’s Bible to give the girl.  Mary Jones’ story is an inspiring read and insight into the not terribly distant past.  Thanks to Mark Hamby and Lamplighter publishing, the book is in print and available: Mary Jones and Her Bible.

From the Bible Society’s website:

The need we address
Bible Society exists because millions lack the Bible in a language they can understand, in a form they can use or at a price they can afford. At the same time millions still have no understanding of the Bible’s value for them and their communities.

We call this Bible poverty.

The vision we have
We are working to see a day when the Bible’s God-given revelation, inspiration and wisdom is shaping the lives and communities of people everywhere.

Our task is urgent. This is because of what people, communities and nations lose when the Bible’s life-changing message is not theirs.

Our task is huge:

  • More than 4,400 languages still wait for even one book of the Bible.
  • Though a billion people can’t read, only 3 per cent of languages have the Bible in audio.
  • Every 5 seconds, someone goes blind but the complete Braille Bible exists in only 35 languages.
  • In our own country the Bible is no longer a point of reference for everyday life.
  • Christians often lack the confidence to apply the Bible’s message in a society that increasingly sees it as irrelevant.

Mary Jones died in 1864 and was buried at the graveyard of Bryn-crug Calvinistic Methodist Chapel. The Bible, she walked 25 miles to buy, is now stored in the Bible Society’s archives in Cambridge University Library.

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entertainment Ministry

Answers in Genesis Announces Properties Purchased for Ark Encounter Park

Answers in Genesis made the following announcement this past week about completing the necessary real estate purchases for the Ark Encounter Park and that the ministry has received over $ 5 million in donations for the park, to date.  In addition, the ArkEncounter.com website re-design was also rolled out this week.  Keep praying that we’re able to complete and open this park soon!

Final Piece of Land for Full-size Ark Purchased

Petersburg, Ky., Feb. 15, 2012—Passing another significant milestone, the Ark Encounter, LLC, closed today on the last and largest piece of land for its planned development on an 800-acre site in Williamstown, Ky., off Interstate 75 (south of Cincinnati). Under the direction of Answers in Genesis (AiG), a full-scale Noah’s Ark will be constructed as the featured attraction at the Ark Encounter. Research indicates the Ark Encounter will draw well over a million people in its first year.

In addition, the completion of complex engineering and architectural work on the Ark structure has allowed for significantly greater guest capacity inside the Ark than originally anticipated. This finding has eliminated the need to build additional biblical attractions simultaneously to accommodate the projected crowds.

Accordingly, the Ark Encounter will be built in multiple phases over many years, with the Ark and other supporting elements opening during phase one. This approach will reduce the initial construction period and funding requirements. It will also allow the utility infrastructure to be able to grow with the Ark Encounter’s expansions at a reasonable pace. Phased-in construction is also a safe way to proceed in a difficult economy. Even then, over $5 million in donations have already been received for the building of the Ark itself. In addition to that milestone, many more millions of dollars in memberships and private funding have been raised or committed for the construction of the other attractions surrounding the Ark, the centerpiece of the project.

Michael Zovath, Senior Vice President of Answers in Genesis and the Ark Encounter, declared he was “elated to cross two milestones this week in the Ark’s progress.” Zovath, who was in charge of building AiG’s successful, high-tech Creation Museum, noted that “due to the rolling hills and ravines of this scenic property, about 800 acres are needed in order to get at least 160 useable acres—plus create a necessary buffer around the Ark Encounter attraction. It has taken considerable, but necessary, time to close on all the different parcels, and there have been environmental studies that took time to perform on parts of the land, but all the needed acreage has been purchased.”

Additional updates on the Ark Encounter include the following:

  • The worldwide media coverage of the full-size Noah’s Ark has exceeded expectations, including a news item on ABC-TV’s “World News with Diane Sawyer.” With some exceptions, the mainstream media have generally been fair and accurate.
  • With the Creation Museum successfully drawing over 300,000 visitors a year, AiG is already master-planning the museum complex in Petersburg, Ky. (40 miles from the Ark site) to handle even larger crowds when the Ark opens. A 1,000-seat auditorium has been finished, as has a new observatory with high-power telescopes.
  • AiG continues to be encouraged to see that even in a difficult economy, thousands of supportive people have already made donations to the full-size Ark (including through the “Pegs, Planks, and Beams” sponsorship program) or have purchased boarding passes (lifetime Ark memberships). Now that the land has been secured, AiG—as more revenue is received—has the next milestone in its sights for the ambitious project: groundbreaking.

Donations to AiG for the Ark structure itself are just one aspect of the entire Ark Encounter funding. The major part of the funding is coming through private funding from the Ark Encounter, LLC, a Missouri limited liability company, which will own the attraction. Through a wholly owned subsidiary, AiG is the managing member of the LLC and is raising a portion of the funding (i.e., to build the Ark component).

“The Ark Encounter, LLC, and AiG continue to trust the Creator of the Universe to supply the needed funds for this project, just as He did with our successful Creation Museum, even with some bumps along the way in its construction,” said co-founder and CCO Mark Looy. “The museum’s attendance has exceeded projections since it opened in May 2007, and it has been a major economic asset to the region. Moreover, with an Ark coming to the region, it is anticipated the Creation Museum’s best days for attendance are ahead of it.”

Answers in Genesis is a biblical apologetics ministry which conducts about 300 teaching meetings each year, publishes the growing family magazine “Answers” (winner of the 2011 best Christian magazine award from the Evangelical Press Association), and produces the “Answers” radio program heard on more than 500 stations in the U.S. The AnswersInGenesis.org website is this year’s “Best Ministry Website” as picked by the 1,200-member National Religious Broadcasters (about 1 million web visits a month). AiG’s Creation Museum, which opened in 2007 to much international press coverage, has welcomed over 1.5 million visitors in four and one-half years.

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politics, economy, etc. video

Uncle Sam Candy Man

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politics, economy, etc.

Taxpayer-Funded Idiocy For Further Destroying US Jobs

President Clinton’s former cabinet member, now professor, Robert Reich hosts a regular “Market Place” commentary on National Public Radio.  (Yet another unfortunate use of my tax dollars.)  He recently explained to the audience that federal oversight and expenditures were essential for returning quality jobs to the United States.

Reich claimed that American business cannot lead the way to economic recovery because businesses are globally focused, not US focused.  Reich explained that their objective is profit, not jobs.  Businesses are cutting jobs.  CEOs are beholden to shareholders, not employees.  Apple employs eight times more employees overseas than they do here.  Reich stated that all of “Asia” now spends more on R&D than does the USA, however, US firms have doubled their R&D investments in China.  Finally, Reich claimed that too many workers are not competitive in the global marketplace.  In short, Reich blamed, decaying schools, not enough R&D, and suffering infrastructure.  Reich finished with a rhetorical flourish, claiming that businesses petition DC for less taxes and regulations, however, no one in America is petitioning for Americans.

What drivel. I thought Americans owned and operated American businesses.  More importantly, more and more federal government is why we have less and less of a manufacturing and high skilled production (or even trade skill production) in the US.

Businesses are screaming to Washington why they’re leaving, but their explanations only make for the chattering class’s rhetorical fodder. In dissecting the collapsing manufacturing and production capacity of the US, Reich ignores the giant white elephant, just like most the rest of his ilk on the political and journalistic ilk.  This despite the fact businesses are pleading with our elected federal officials to remedy the cause for US companies fleeing.  When producing for a global marketplace, the US is one of the least attractive countries in which to manufacture, primarily for two reasons: high taxes and a byzantine network of onerous federal regulations.

Our spending on education is not the problem.  Researchers at USC report that although the US significantly outspends leading industrial nations on education expenditures, we lag toward last place on math and science competency results.  See here and graph below.  The OCLC reported,

The United States spent the most on education in 2001 at roughly $500 billion, followed by Japan, Germany and France at $139 billion, $89 billion and $82 billion respectively. While the U.S. spent the most in absolute dollars, it ranked tenth in education spending as a percent of GDP at 4.8 percent.

See full article here.  As of 2008, we are spending on average over $10,000 per student per year on primary school education.  See here.  We spend close to 5% of our gross national income on education; the Chinese spend less than 2%.  See here.  While we spend close to $15,000 per student, China spends a little more than one-tenth that amount according to the OECD:

In 2008, China spends USD 1 593 per student from primary to tertiary education – the lowest amount of annual expenditure per student among the countries surveyed. In comparison, Brazil spends USD 2 416, Argentina spends USD 3 204 and the Russian Federation spends USD 4 878, all far below the average for OECD countries (USD 8 831) or for EU21 countries (USD 8 702). These figures relate to public institutions only. At the other end of the spectrum, the United States spends USD 14 923 and Switzerland USD 14 977 on public institutions

The Heritage Foundation conducted a study demonstrating that spending on education has increased dramatically over the past several decades in the United States as compared to our historical trends, however, this has not led to similarly improved student performance.  See full report here.

In contrast, the United States competes with Japan for the highest corporate tax rate in the developed world – approaching 40%.  The corporate tax rate on technology companies in China: 15% .

There are approximately 50 federal agencies that regulate every aspect of existence in this country, particularly nearly all aspects of commercial activity.  The laws from these unelected agencies are contained in the Code of Federal Regulations (“CFR”) over 51 titles.  At last printing, the federal regulations ran 200,000 pages.  That’s separate and apart from the thousands of pages of federal statutory law and separate and apart from State statutes and regulation. The US tax code (Title 26) alone is reported to take up over 2,500 pages containing over 5 million words.  It takes hundreds of thousands of highly educated and trained corporate attorneys and accountants for businesses to comply with just the tax code.

The federal register in 2010 (where presidential orders, official agency actions, and new and proposed federal regulations are published) hit over 81,000 pages in 2010.  Think about what that means.  Incidentally, that wasn’t a record.  President Carter’s executive branch published 83,000 pages in his final term.  See here.

Exceedingly high taxes and more regulations than any people in the history of humanity – that’s why businesses are fleeing.  Not surprisingly, those that make their living promulgating, lobbying, and enforcing these laws and earning their living off those tax receipts don’t see it that way.  The problem is those greedy companies, according to taxpayer-funded Reich on his taxpayer-funded radio station.

If you want to see real jobs – high technology manufacturing jobs in the USA – it will take time.  If you want to see those cool Apple products built-in the USA again, our tax and regulate culture must change.  Lower the corporate tax rate to a simple 15%, or lower, abolish capitol gains tax, and take an ax to the impenetrable (and grossly unconstitutional) regulatory regime that employs hundreds of thousands of attorneys, lobbyists, accountants, and bureaucrats, but stifles US business and meaningful job creation.  Our federal leviathan could live on more modest means if we had the courage to scale the beast back to something at least faintly resembling our Constitutional parameters.

Compare this incredible legal burden to what businesses in China have to deal with.  Not only is there no such overbearing government intrusion into every nook and cranny of your business, there are no unions, no patent trolls, no regular stream of largely frivolous  lawsuits from your workers and anyone else who might be disguntled, there is effectively no army of administrative overlords.  Is it a panacea there?  Hardly.  But it’s far easier to do business there and in most places of the world not located in Europe.

Oh yeah, don’t forget the substantially lower taxes, per above.  Would you prefer to keep 80% or 85% of your earnings, or 50% to 60%?

Companies worldwide would once again seek to open business here if we leveled the playing field.  Americans are still the hardest working, cohesive, and spirited work force in the world.  We work, pray, and play hard.  We practically invented the middle class.  We still have the best infrastructure and are richly blessed with natural resources.  We’ve invented the lions share of the greatest technology of the past century.  Moreover, investors worldwide will look to invest here if the government doesn’t gouge their returns.  Substantially less federal intervention, the opposite of what taxpayer-funded Reich claims, will lead to a robust job and technology growth for another generation. Real jobs, not baristas and mowing each other’s lawns.

image from the MAT@USC University of Southern California

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Uncategorized

A Legend of Love

Is a good day to remember The Legend of Valentine.

Happy Valentine’s Day!

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humor video

Ode to a dog

We welcome Lila as the new dog in our family. This was the inspiration for her name:

Categories
Atheism, agnostic, evolution, etc. video

Monitoring Christian Science