[COMMENT: This is an excellent and passionate commentary on the nature of human sexuality vs. homosexuality, and of the political implications of the homosexual demands, with the cave-in of the Massachusetts court system to tyranny. I have removed some unnecessary text and added a few headings. E. Fox]
(snip)
COME, LET US REASON TOGETHER
So, to all of the folks who have an interest here and around the country, and to
all of you who have come together tonight--I know with a heart that hopes for
both the survival of marriage and the survival of our institutions of
self-government--I would invite you to join me, and as the scripture says,
"Come, let us reason together."
In order to do so, we must first start by trying to get a right understanding of
just what is the question in front of us--and actually, it turns out that there
are two questions that are posed, I think, by the present crisis in
Massachusetts. One has to do with the institution of marriage, the other has to
do with our constitutional institutions of self-government.
The first question can, I think, be put pretty simply, though people try to make
it into something else. It's a simple question of whether same-sex couples shall
be admitted to participation in the respectable estate of lawful marriage.
(snip)
WHAT IS SEXUALITY?
But that means that in order to consider this question carefully, we've got to
really look at two questions. One has to do with the nature of human sexual
relations. (Notice I didn't say "homosexuality"; no, really, the question is
about sexuality, itself.) And the other has to do with the question of the
nature of marriage.
Now, with respect to the first, there is obviously a view now abroad which
asserts that homosexual relations, same-sex couples, have their right to love
and intimacy, and to express themselves as they would in the use of their
physical organs to derive pleasure, and so forth and so on. And at one level,
the simple level of personal choice, there are many who would say, "Oh, yes,
fine!" And they say so, by the way, because they want to grant to homosexuals
that "prerogative," shall we call it? Some would call it vice, but [we'll call
it] that prerogative which they have arrogated to themselves.
This is part of what causes the difficulty on this question. People try to act
as if we are talking about homosexual relations. No, we are talking about a
certain understanding of human sexual relations that is epitomized in the
same-sex relationship.
(snip)
...there's something that they actually talk about with reasonable frequency, in
terms of what makes this kind of sexuality so attractive--and what makes it
attractive is that it is free of consequences. It is the indulgence in sexual
relations for the sake of that sensual, and sexual, and emotional fulfillment
that the parties involved can derive from the relationship, and that's all there
is to it.
There's a certain "freedom" to it, which they often comment upon--but freedom in
what sense? Well, truth is, it's by contrast, isn't it? Because, try as we might
in our society, with pills and condoms and rampant abortion and so forth, truth
of the matter is that in the sexual relations between man and woman, there's
always a certain shadow that hangs over things. There's that possibility that,
quote, "an accident" might happen, and then there you'd be with a, quote,
"crisis pregnancy," and so forth and so on.
What all that verbiage actually is talking about is the fact that sexual
relations between a man and a woman are actually haunted relations. ....haunted
by the possibility of another party, of a third life, of a third being, which
would be the fruit of their relationship.
(snip)
A little aside, because we use this word in such careless ways, and I actually
think that in some sense, we have allowed the careless use of it with respect to
those activities that are engaged in by same-sex couples. You can call them many
things. It's not entirely clear to me you can call them sexual, because in point
of fact, sex is no part of what they do. Indeed, they have, in forming that
same-sex relationship, turned their backs on the sexual distinction. So, though
they use, in the course of it, those organs which conform to and express the
sexual distinction, their use of the organs has nothing to do with that
distinction, and therefore, nothing to do with real sexuality.
Real sexuality is about the distinction between male and female, as expressed in
the body and its differences. And the reason I say that the child isn't an
accident, is because everything about those differences points in one direction:
procreation!
Now, see, this is the kind of thinking, though, that we really have to take
patiently because we use the word so carelessly most of the time, but the truth
is that the sexual distinction as such--that is to say, human sexuality as
such--exists for the sake of procreation and nothing else. It's that simple.
So, that means that the child's life is not accident, it's essential! It's not
an incident, no. It is expressive, in fact, of the essence of human sexuality,
and it is in consequence of that essential truth about human sexuality that the
relations between men and women are always haunted by the possibility of
procreation.
But haunted, in what sense? Haunted by that possibility in the sense that that
life represents, what? It represents the possibility that there would be an
obligation, a lifelong obligation that transcended the immediate and momentary
satisfaction of the parties to any given sexual episode or relationship.
That is the truth, in fact, of human sexuality. It is haunted by that line which
separates the choice of pleasure from the obligations and responsibilities that
are the consequence of procreation.
PROCREATION VS. HEDONISM
Now, I go through this because that sets up a clear distinction--and it's not a
distinction that prevails just between homosexuals and so-called heterosexuals.
No. It's the distinction between what we could call an understanding of human
sexuality that is based in the end upon hedonism and self-gratification, and an
understanding that is based upon the essential acknowledgment of the
responsibilities and obligations of procreation.
These are two distinct alternatives. And I use the word "hedonism," by the
way--and some people will think that that's pejorative. It's not. The word
"hedonism" comes from the Greek hedone, and it means "pleasure."
(snip)
The relationship between man and woman can be incidentally about pleasure, but
essentially about procreation and family, and things that in fact transcend the
immediate gratification of the parties involved. The same-sex relationship is
haunted by no such necessities, no such obligations. It is essentially about
fulfillment of the passions, the needs, the dreams, the ambitions, the this or
that. You can put up any words you want, but at the end of the day, it's just
the people that are there. It's about them!
It is not about the future! It is not about the society! It is not about that
which at any given moment can transcend the pleasure of the individuals! It's
not about that.
Now, wait. I'm walking through all of this, y'all, because I think it's
important to remember, though. And that's why I call it the view of sexuality
based on hedonism and self-gratification, but you and I both know that this
understanding of human sexuality is not confined to same-sex couples.
Whole industries, both in the entertainment media and in the production of all
kinds of contraceptive devices and pills and this and that--all based upon,
what? All based upon the pursuit of this form of sexual fulfillment, to free
oneself from the shadow of procreation, so that it will no longer haunt the
relationship, no longer burden the relationship, no longer be there as something
which calls one away from the vocation of self-gratification toward a vocation
that requires responsibility and self-sacrifice.
Now, I have walked through this, and I understand why y'all are applauding, but
in point of fact, these are just subjective differences. And we are asked, well,
shall be one, shall be the other--and let's not deny that there is something in
our nature that finds that kind of view of human sexuality, what one of our
authors called the "zipless you-know-what," that finds it kind of attractive,
like sort of taking off all of the constraints, running through the fields of
flowers with nothing to answer to except the call of your own fulfillment. And
there is an understanding in this society of happiness and individual choice and
freedom, and all of that, that fully conforms with this understanding, and for
which this is in fact the notion of human sexuality that predominates.
Now, we do have to ask ourselves, though, from another point of view--the point
of view of the question that we're raising here. Which of these do you think
constitutes a better basis for the marriage estate? Well, to answer that
question, we have to kind of take a look at what marriage is all about--don't
we? .....
WHY GOVERNMENT INVOLVEMENT IN MARRIAGE?
It doesn't exist, by the way, so people can get pleasure from sex. I think most
people could manage this without an institution. They could manage it without
the government. They could manage it without the approval and participation of
society--and by and large, they do. Why does society get involved?
I saw a columnist right here in the Boston Globe was asking that question some
while back, in an article that was like Michael Kinsley in Slate, where
he actually raised the possibility that the government should just get out of
the business of marriage, have nothing to do with it. It would just be private.
People could go to their churches, do what they please.
The problem is, it begs the question. We look at the whole range of human
history, and guess what? We will find, in every society, in every civilization,
we will find that society gets involved in the business of regulating the
marriage relationship--of understanding about what constitutes that
relationship, what shall be the obligations and expectations that flow from it,
what shall be society's attitude toward it, what shall be society's reaction in
enforcing those things. Why?
You see, I think the answer to that question is pretty simple. It's because,
throughout human history, there has been an acknowledgment that, well, marriage
is about family; it's about having kids. And guess what? Though because we have
lived for a long time in a civilization in which this is done in an orderly way,
we forget it--we ought to be reminded just by a visit to the family court on any
given day of the week--there are some very complicated, emotional, even violent
issues involved in the consequences of marriage.
See, because once you have a sexual relationship and children result, somebody's
got to decide who's are they, first of all. Who's responsible for them? Who has
to take care of them? That's step number one. Step number two: what expectations
exist, in terms of who they have to listen to, who's household they shall belong
to, who's authority they will be subject to? Then, of course, there's a whole
range of issues that have to do with inheritance and kinship relationships and
obligations.
There are, of course, in our society, as well, a whole set of obligations that
everybody seems to be forgetting about, which arise from the fact that--though
they may not last too much longer if the folks on your [Massachusetts] supreme
court have their way--there are still laws on the books against things like
incest.
One of the questions I've had about the whole train of things in our
society--this whole idea of sexuality without responsibility, without respect
for the essential mission of procreation, what has it resulted in? Leave aside
homosexuality. It has resulted in rampant illegitimacy. It has resulted in the
black community and other communities in a situation where there are many, many
children being born who don't even know who their father was, where the mother
couldn't identify the father if she tried. And we can all talk all we like about
DNA and this or that. You think everybody's going to have a DNA test before they
hop into the sack? You've got another think coming.
And that basically means that as we lose track of who's fathering whom, and
who's mothering whom, we lose track of who's your sister and who's your brother.
We lose track of those things which are essential to know if you are to respect
what still remains the society's sensitivity about incestuous relationships.
We won't even go into that question, at least not right this minute. The other
question about how you deal with whole question of parental authority and
honoring your father and mother, that's a question for a different venue--but I
do get into it sometimes when I'm talking to church people less exclusively, you
know. I try to point out to them it's hard for me to understand how you can
honor your father and your mother when you don't even know who they are. OK,
well, that's a kinda hard one.
And why is this relevant? Well, if you know of the practices of some of the
same-sex couples who want to get involved in procreation--I was reminded of it
the other day. I was reading an article about this case in California, where two
lesbians were fighting over the custody of children that genetically were
traceable to one, but which the other had raised. And I know, probably nobody
else reading that article--well, no, I won't say nobody, because Sandy thought
of it, too--was sitting there, thinking how ironic it was that they're fighting
over whether the genetic mother should have any claim, while whether this other
person in the lesbian relationship who has no genetic relationship should
continue to have a claim. You know what? Nobody even thought about or mentioned,
nobody asked a simple question about whether the father of those children should
have any claim, because, very often in these relationships, they are conducted
in such a way and conception occurs in such a way as to intentionally mask who
the father might be, so that children must grow up without knowing who their
father is. And that means that an incestuous situation could easily arise in our
society, it's more than likely to arise--not to mention every other kind of
incestuous complication.
We're not thinking, are we?!
No, we're not. But I wish to get back to the process of thought that we're going
though, and asking the simple question: which will be the better basis for
marriage--that hedonistic self-gratification approach to human sexuality, or the
approach that sees procreation as its heart?
Well, that must be asked from society's point of view, so that we understand why
society gets involved. It gets involved to regulate the consequences of
procreation. It gets involved in order to avoid the feuds and disputes and
conflicts that lead to violence and war when they are left to fester in a
society. And it gets involved also with a larger view to assuring that the
society, itself, shall be perpetuated, through citizens who are reliably
conceived, responsibly raised, in order to constitute the future of the society.
That means that from society's point of view, marriage is essentially about the
children. Marriage is essentially about the future. Now, you see, this an
understanding we get away from, but we shouldn't. See, because we have, in some
ways--and I understand why, because there's a certain charm to it that helps
people to be attracted to the marriage estate. Why do we need them to be
attracted to the marriage estate? So we can have children who will be
responsibly raised, and who will become the basis for a decent future for the
society--and as a result, we want to make marriage as attractive as possible.
We paint it in rosy and romantic terms. We portray it in the movies as the
"choice of the heart" as people go toward one another, and so forth and so on.
Well, on the other hand, there may have been a certain greater honesty in the
past, when people called it the "bonds of marriage," when they referred
to "holy wed-lock."
And when, in the context of that discussion, it was quite clear that, yeah, it's
definitely a choice--at least at first. It's sort of like the choice that a
prisoner might make to take the first step forward and hear the door clang
behind him.
Now, you and I both know that I don't really take this dim view of marriage. I
rather like being married. I like being a father. A matter of fact, I love it. I
couldn't think of myself any other way. But we should look, though, at the
truth, that underlying it is not this well of airing about with choice and
liberation and so forth. No. Marriage is about bondage, marriage is about
obligation. Both words mean a tie that binds you, obliges you, puts you in a
position where you must meet certain responsibilities, or fail in your moral
obligations.
MARRIAGE LIKE MILITARY LIFE -- DISCIPLINED
And if we adopt an understanding of marriage that is on the wholesale basis of
hedonism and self-gratification, one of the problems with it is that we're lying
to people. We're giving them the impression that you enter an estate by your
will, and that you can stay in it, leave it when you please; it's all about
freedom. Marriage isn't all about freedom. It's a little bit, I think, like
military life.
No, no. I mean this seriously. It's a little bit like military life. My father
was a soldier. There are some great joys in military life. There are. It is an
experience that has to it sometimes a kind of fulfillment that I doubt you get
in any other estate in human life--especially after you have been through the
business of risking your life with courage for the sake of your country, and can
look back upon what you have done with a sense of pride, a sense of honor, a
sense of fulfillment, a sense of verification of who you are and what God has
made you, that you get in no other way.
And those who have known the camaraderie of the military life will tell you that
there is a degree of friendship and trust and loyalty that binds human beings
together and reaches into places of the heart never known to any others but
those who have had to rely upon one another in the face of an enemy meaning for
you only death.
Yes, there are some really deep and profound joys and gratifications involved in
military life, but nobody in their right mind would think that's what it's
about. What it's about is getting yourself ready to fight and face death and go
through a whole lot of miserable conditions in order to make sure that you can
effectively pursue the mission of defending your country, defeating the enemy.
So, though it involves joys, those joys are kind of incidental, they're kind of
nice spin-offs--but the truth is that there's an essential discipline, an
essential sacrifice, an essential conformity of the heart to the requirements of
the institution.
At the end of the day, until you have accepted the discipline, until you have
learned to redefine yourself in terms of that conformity, you do not discover
the pleasures, and you do not know the happiness that the institution can
provide.
And as I think this is true of military life, so it is true of marriage. See,
the joys of marriage are there, but they are a part and parcel of a heart that
understands that it is not the whim of the heart that decides what happiness is.
It can be the needs of the child. It can be the potential of the offspring. It
can be the hopes that are born of the talents that you see in them, which become
for you a discipline--rising early and staying up late, and working at jobs that
you hate so that they can have what they need, forgoing the pleasures you used
to know so that they can be moved forward. At the end of the day, it's all at
the heart of it about a willingness to shape the heart in an understanding of
love that has at its heart not gratification, but service; not passion, but the
deep commitment to do what serves the good of others.
So, we have to ask ourselves: what do you think is a better basis for marriage
that will satisfy the need for that kind of a response, that kind of a formation
of the human heart and character?
HEDONISTIC MARRIAGE
Is it marriage to which we have admitted the idea of human sexuality based upon
hedonism and self-gratification?
Now, people will say, "Well, homosexual couples who adopt children. . . ." Well,
yes, but see--if, though, you start out with a relationship that has at its base
a paradigm of hedonism and self-gratification, it will not be true of everyone,
but it's certainly going to be true of some folks that your desire for children
will be an outgrowth of that same view.
I think it's one of the things that not only is a problem in terms of
considering homosexuality. The whole hedonistic understanding of human sexuality
has infected the view that people have of who children are. You're going to have
your children when you're ready for them, and then when you're
ready, and they fit into your life, and they fit into your career,
then when they're a fulfillment for you--I listen to all these actresses
talk about this sometimes. That's entirely the way they talk about it. "Well, I
reached that stage in my life when my needs would be fulfilled by a
child."
That is the extension of the mentality of self-gratification to the business of
the child--and what does that mean? It means that, in the end, that child has
not come into this world for its own sake, for the sake of what it represents to
the future and in the eyes of God. It has come into the world for the sake of
that individual who saw it as a source of fulfillment, a source of
gratification. In that sense, it comes into the world not as an end in itself,
respected as human beings ought to be for the sake of their intrinsic dignity,
but rather as a commodity meant to serve the convenience, and the pleasure, and
the self-gratification of the one who has welcomed the child into the world.
It may very well be that in many of these cases, the presence of that child will
turn the heart in a different direction, but the turning may be required--and
that's the problem.
LAW & MORALITY
Now, why is that a problem? Well, see, it's a problem because, when we talk
about what marriage ought to be from the point of view of society and the law,
we are talking about the law, aren't we? And that requires that we remember what
law is.
This is hard, too, for people these days. What is law? People say ridiculous
things about law sometimes. One of the most ridiculous things they say about law
is that you can't legislate morality. I mean, there's a great problem with this,
because the truth of the matter is, when you look at it, what is law,
essentially? It is the codification of rules of behavior or conduct--in the
light of, what? In the light of standards of what constitutes correct and
incorrect conduct, right and wrong conduct.
And meaning no offense to anybody, when you are considering what constitutes
right and what constitutes wrong, you are making a moral decision, you are
involved in moral issues.
And in point of fact, there's hardly a law that one can consider that doesn't
involve such issues. The laws that have to do in our society right now with all
the issues of social welfare, are at their heart pieces of morality
legislation--legislation that is based upon, what? The appeal politicians get up
and make and say, "We must care for the poor! We can't leave people behind when
we are enjoying prosperity!" Why not? Romans didn't care about it. They left
people behind with glee. They figured it was their tough luck, they weren't
favored by the gods. See?
When we decide that it is wrong to neglect the poor, to leave them without our
aid, that it is wrong unfairly to structure a society so that others will be
left behind and neglected, when we decide to tax people for that reason, and to
set up huge bureaucracies for that reason, and to send people out in welfare
programs and housing programs for that reason, we are legislating morality! We
are deciding what is right and what is wrong!
We do so when we pass the criminal laws, we do so when we pass the laws that
govern our economic life. Caveat emptor was the great byword of human
economic life at one time. What did that mean? It meant, "Let the sucker
beware."
But the truth of the matter was that just like military power at one time was
seen as a legitimate basis for acquiring dominion over people, at another time
superior knowledge was considered quite a legitimate basis for acquiring money
from people. If I knew something you didn't, and took advantage of you, that
wasn't fraud, that was clever business! If I was in a position to gouge you with
usurious interest rates, that wasn't fraud, that was clever business! The
change, where you start to look askance at such practices, and decide that you
must put down in legislation codes of conduct that require that people respect
the needs of the (what do we call ourselves these days?) consumer, that's a
decision about conduct, about what conduct's right, what conduct's wrong. That
is legislating morality.
And it turns out, doesn't it, that as you go down the list, taxation is the same
way. When we're considering what is a fair and equitable tax code, we're asking
a question about what shall be the right distribution of the burden for
supporting societies, what shall come from the rich, what shall come from the
laborers. And you know what that is? That's a decision about right and wrong.
That's a decision about equitable treatment. That's a decision about what
conduct in the society as a whole constitutes right conduct, and what conduct
would be wrong because it neglects fundamental principles of fairness.
We are legislating morality. These moral issues not only are involved in
legislation, it turns out that they are the very substance of the law. They are
the very heart and essence of almost every decision that is codified in the law,
because the laws represent standards for regulating conduct, and standards for
regulating conduct and decisions about what conduct is right and what conduct is
wrong.
Now, this brings us to a very important point, because in point of fact, that's
what we've been considering. We have these two different understandings of human
sexuality: the hedonistic, self-indulgent understanding, the self-interested
one; and the one that has procreation at its heart, and that is characterized by
the need to acknowledge responsibility and obligation. Two separate
understandings of how human beings should conduct themselves, how they should
behave with respect to the pleasures and gratifications that are involved in
sexual relationships.
And just so no one will miss the point: the reason that homosexuality epitomizes
the [first] one is that homosexuals are not haunted by the prospect or
possibility of procreation--because they're simply not capable of it. I think
this is pretty obvious, isn't it? And it was understood in human society at one
point that if you're not capable of procreation, marriage doesn't have anything
to do with you, because marriage is about procreation.
MASSACHUSETTS SUPREME COURT
But now comes along the supreme court of Massachusetts in order to tell us,
what? Well, in order to tell us, under the specious argument about rights that
they prefer the understanding of human sexuality that regards hedonistic
self-gratification as right conduct that must be legitimized, made lawful and
acceptable to the society.
And yet, the law of Massachusetts embodies another view that says that marriage
is based upon a sexual distinction haunted by the essence of that sexual
distinction, which is the capacity for procreation and the responsibilities and
obligations that are involved; that marriage should be based upon a clear
understanding embodied in the very flesh of the parties to the marriage that
that vow, that commitment to the married estate, means that one has acknowledged
the stepping across the line from a realm of simple choice and free pleasure to
a realm where pleasure will be connected with procreation and obligation and
responsibility.
Which should we choose?
Now, of course, I know if I were in the Massachusetts legislature or if I were
just talking to the people myself, I know what I'd ask them to choose, and I
would make the arguments I have been making tonight, and I would point out that
if you want to get safely to the future, you need to base your family system on
an institution that encourages people to have the heart, to have the character,
to have the discipline, to have the understanding that is needed in order to
dedicate themselves to the business of raising children responsibly for the
future.
This is what I would say to them, and I would say that they must remain
committed, as they always have been, to that understanding of marriage which has
procreation at its heart--not because they are against homosexuality, but
because they are in favor of the future!
CONSTITUTIONAL SELF-GOVERNMENT -- SEPARATION OF POWERS
I would say such things if I could speak to the legislature, I would say such
things if I could speak to the people--but guess what? And now we get to the
second element of this crisis. We live in a society based upon constitutional
self-government, and in all the constitutions of the states and the federal
government of the United States, that constitutional self-government embodies an
understanding of the separation of powers--an executive branch, a judicial
branch, a legislative branch.
And for the sake of maintaining what our Founders called republican--small
r--government, that is, what Lincoln defined as "government of the people, by
the people, for the people," all those constitutions respect this fact, that no
law can be made in our country that does not emanate from the people or their
representatives.
What does this mean? Now, see, what I just said, by the way, has to do with what
goes into making a law. Now, you say, "What do the judges do, then?" Well, the
judges decide cases in conformity with law. They decide whether this or
that is done against the law, whether this or that conforms to the law. They
decide whether conduct conforms to the rules, they do not decide what the rules
shall be!
They decide what outcome conforms to the law, they do not decide what the
substance of the law will be!
Our Founders warned us unequivocally. And I think it's time that the legislators
of Massachusetts and Governor Romney and everybody else stopped talking in
abstractions, and went back to look at the understanding of republican
government on which this nation was founded!
That understanding is clear and explicit--in this especially, that without the
separation of powers, where any two of the powers are joined in the same hands,
where the executive is the judge, where the judge is the legislature, where the
legislature is the executive, when those powers are joined, you do not have the
rule of law, you have the tyranny of the judges, the tyranny of the legislature,
the tyranny of the executive!
We are faced in this country now, at the federal level and at the state level,
with judges who have arrogated to themselves the prerogatives of the people--and
in this particular case, they have masked their decision about what shall be the
right basis for marriage under a specious argument about rights.
But the specious argument about rights can't mask the truth! They are not
deciding about someone's rights, they have usurped the right of the people to
decide in the law what is right, the right of their representatives to decide in
the law what is right!
And that means that if the officials in this state, from the governor on down,
acquiesce in their decision, they have not respected the rule of law, they have
put it aside to allow the reign of abusive judges!
REMEDIES
Now, that gets us to the question, finally, of what are the remedies here. What
are the remedies? Well, see, there's actually a remedy that's supposed to be in
our system, and that is implied in the separation of powers and in pretty much
all the constitutions of our country. It's called the system of checks and
balances. People used to talk about this when I went to school. Do they talk
about it in school for you? They used to. I don't know, because some of the
schools have been dumbing down our education so much that they don't let the
children understand these things anymore.
But the thing is that the system of checks and balances meant that the powers
were divided, but it also meant that each branch of the government was armed
with something that allowed it to defend itself against unlawful usurpation of
its prerogatives by the other branches. Why have people forgotten this? The most
important prerogative of the executive when faced with unlawful action by the
judiciary is, what?
[audience: "Impeachment."]
No. The executive, what can the executive do? Well, I'll tell you what the
executive can do--and this is what I think governors need to remember, the
president has to remember at some point when faced with lawless judges. They
need to remember exactly what all of us in our hearts know that those soldiers
over in Iraq should have remembered: that when you are bound by oath to respect
certain rules of conduct--whether they are in the uniform code or the
constitution of the state of Massachusetts--when you are bound by personal oath,
if you stand aside while others abuse and destroy those rules and that
constitution, you have not secured the rule of law. You have in fact abdicated
your oath, abdicated your responsibility, and destroyed the rule of law!
The right response when, in the army, you are given an unlawful order, is to
refuse that order. The right response of a chief executive in this state and in
this nation, when faced with an order by a court that he conscientiously
believes violates the constitution he is sworn to respect, is to refuse their
order!
And then, so that the constitution of his state and the fate of his people will
not be left at the mercy of this crisis in the government, it is his
responsibility to turn to the legislature and ask on behalf of the whole people
that those who refuse to respect the constitutional prerogatives of the people
and their representatives be removed for the sake of law, for the sake of
self-government, for the sake of constitutional integrity!
The simple truth is that if the governor doesn't understand his responsibilities
and refuses to act on them, if the legislature doesn't understand its
responsibilities and prerogatives and refuses to act on them, then guess what?
There are no checks, no balances, there is no constitution. And do you know who
loses?
[audience: "We do."]
HOLDING GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABLE
Because the sad thing is--and this is a thing I think we need to think about as
we decide how we're going to hold these people accountable. If they allow the
consolidation of power in such a way as to destroy and undermine the
representative nature of our government, to substitute the will of a few judges
on the substance of the law for the will of the representatives elected by the
people, then elections mean nothing, then laws are no longer being made by the
representatives of the people, they are being made by an irresponsible oligarchy
answering to no one except their own whims, their own will, their own perverted
judgment.
I'm afraid, when you think it through, we are not only in a crisis that has as
its import the destruction of the institution of marriage as it respects the
essential mission of procreation, we are also faced now with a crisis that
involves a deep threat to our system of constitutional self-government, to our
entire way of life.
If a handful of individuals responding to the immoral clamorings of a small
minority can substitute their judgment of right conduct for the judgment of the
representatives of the people, can impose their dictates as laws, even upon
those who are, according to the Constitution, the right fount and source of law,
then our republic is dead, and our freedom is gone.
And I don't say that with a light heart. I look at what's going on in this
country with a sense of deep grief and almost betrayal. I come, as you know,
from a race of people who, for the longest time, did not know full participation
in this society based upon real liberty, self-government of, by, and for the
people--and now, after all the years of struggle, they have been admitted to the
precincts of full participation only to see some abuse the heritage of civil
rights, in order to promote an approach that will destroy the very legacy of
self-government for which people fought and died, in the name of civil rights.
I was on one of these programs the other night, and the interviewer asked me
about a comment apparently made by Barney Frank--that he said that in six
months, this whole thing would blow over, and everybody will have forgotten
about it.
[crowd reacts]
Well, wait. Wait, wait. I would remind Barney Frank that that's what they said
about Dred Scott, and you see what happened. It's also what they said about Roe
vs. Wade, and you have seen what is happening.
I think that in spite of the corruption of our elites, the corruption of our
media, the corruption of our professional leadership, the corruption and
gutlessness even of many of our political leaders, I think the conscience of
America is still a conscience that fears God, that seeks truth, and that knows
that it cannot sustain real liberty if it is willing to surrender to tyranny.
I believe this, but you know, just as checks and balances won't work if the
branches don't have that understanding, courage, and conviction to stand for
their prerogatives, so self-government will not survive if, in this great crisis
of our land, we, the people, do not stand together to demand that which is our
right--and it is our right to make the laws in this country, through our
representatives. It is not the right of judges to usurp that prerogative.
In Massachusetts, that will mean that, even as we listen to the temporizing
verbiage of politicians at play, the people conduct their serious business. And
I have to tell you, I think your serious business is clear. Some people have
stood aghast at the thought that you would try to remove the judges because they
made this decision, but when the judges are in the business of destroying both
the fundamental, moral institution of your society and the constitutional
balance of power that sustains self-government in your state and in your land, I
think that you had better organize relentlessly to remove them, or they shall
remove your freedom!
So, I would say that far from what Barney Frank has said, whatever happens on
Monday in this state, I think that in every way that we can, by those means that
our Constitution and our freedom leave within our reach, we must organize and
work to send clearly the message in this state and around the country that those
who sit by and tolerate the destruction of our constitutional liberty will and
must be replaced by others who will defend them.
Commit yourselves to this: across every line of party, across every line of
affiliation, across every line of religious belief and faith, commit yourself to
this defense of self-government and liberty, and then, like the true
marriage-based family, you shall be what is required to secure for our posterity
the blessings of liberty.
God bless you.
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