- Jan 24, 2008
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You made a claim, the linked case shows that your claim was not accurate. To try to wave it away because we were discussing the Supreme Court case (Windsor), and not this case, is a pathetic excuse. The fact is that the linked case shows that both the original trial judge and the Federal Appeals Court for the First Circuit disagree with you. In fact, none of the judges that heard the case agreed with your opinion.
Now, I'll agree that if it had been heard by the full Supreme Court (instead of Windsor) some of the justices likely would have agreed with you, so your opinion is not completely without merit. The fact remains, though, that based on the Windsor ruling, your opinion would have been a minority opinion and, particularly due to the states rights slant of the case, it may not have even been a 5-4 decision (basing this on the Prop. 8 ruling).
We are discussing the U.S. Supreme Court decision and my claim is in regards to the U.S. Supreme Court decision. This thread is not about the lower court decisions, so trying to refute my argument about a case nobody in this thread was ever discussing, until you interjected with it, is a pathetic exercise of refutation.
Furthermore, you can cite the number of people in disagreement with my opinion, judge, lawyer, layperson, it doesn't matter, because the number of people in disagreement with a position indicates nothing about the strength of the opinion, whether the opinion is true, likely true, accurate, or correct. So you can dispense with this argument by popularity.
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