Evolution of the wedding party
By Wes Pruden
PrudenPolitics.com
Sodomy is the latest hot thing in Washington. You
don’t have to participate in it to think how cool it
is. The love that dare not speak its name has become
the passion that shouts from the housetops. Closets
are emptying all over town.
From
now on – “going forward,” in the cliché of
washingtonspeak – reporters and pundits need not
interview candidates for Congress. They’ll just talk
to their kids to see what the candidates think. The
Children’s Hour hasn’t been this popular since Jimmy
Carter reassured us that he had consulted little Amy
about arms control and she agreed that nuclear war
is not good for living things.
Rob
Portman, the senator from Ohio who was almost Mitt
Romney’s running mate, took his marching orders from
his son after the boy told Mom and Dad that he was
gay. The senator couldn’t wait to announce it in the
newspapers, writing a long op-ed about it in the
Columbus Dispatch. We’re all for privacy in modern
America until we get the urged to “share” the smarmy
details of our lives.
Mr.
Portman explained the deviation from his convictions
of the past, when as a member of the House of
Representatives he voted for the Defense of Marriage
Act now being argued at the Supreme Court, as a
function of evolution. Evolution has hit hard in
Washington, as the pols line up to tell everyone how
they’ve learned to appreciate the yucky expansion of
the marital bed.
First
it was President Obama, whose mind turned out to be
a triumph of Darwinian speculation. Then it was Joe
Biden, or maybe the vice president leaped first and
the president tagged along; then Hillary Clinton,
followed by Bubba, who can’t remember everything he
evolved from in that dark and mysterious land of the
magic huckleberry. Evolution soon spread across the
partisan aisle, first to Mr. Portman and then back
across to Sen. Claire McCaskill of Missouri.
A
first cousin of Chief Justice John Roberts arrived
in Washington from San Francisco on Monday and
announced that she is a lesbian and will attend the
Supreme Court hearings as a guest of Cousin John.
“He’s a smart man,” says Jean Podrasky. “He is a
good man. I believe he sees where the tide is going.
I do trust him. I absolutely trust that he will go
in a good direction.” Ordinarily no one can guess
what a Supreme Court justice will say or do, but
Justice Roberts demonstrated in the Obamacare
decision that he tries to fit respect for the
Constitution into his decisions when he can, but a
good public opinion of the court is more important.
Like Justice Anthony Kennedy, he’s a swinger, too.
Over
the weekend Karl Rove, ever in pursuit of the hip
and the hot, said he could “imagine” the next
Republican presidential nominee endorsing same-sex
marriage. Karl suffers a stunted imagination.
Republicans of Karl’s ilk are demonstrating
evolution on steroids and by 2016 there may not be
room on either ticket for anyone but a man of lace,
lavender and peau de soie. Or Hillary.
Handicapping Supreme Court deliberations is a fool’s
game, as any lawyer will tell you, and ordinarily
the justices don’t read the Gallup Poll, or
Rasmussen, either. But this is a new day and who
knows? Justice Roberts’ cousin may be on to
something.
The
latest uninformed speculation is that the high court
will find a middle ground, to leave it to the states
to define marriage and what sanction to give
synthetic versions of it. The Washington Post,
always lustful about the latest fashion, decrees
that “the political argument over same-sex marriage
is over.” That’s what other wiseheads said about Roe
v. Wade 40 years ago.
Nobody wants another 40 years of angry debate and
contentious argument over a “right” found not in the
Constitution but in a “penumbra,” like the one the
high court found to support Roe v. Wade. If the
justices find another one the debate will no more
end than a penumbra ended the abortion debate. Like
the abortion debate, the same-sex marriage argument
is one between personal convenience and moral
conviction.
Chief Justice John Roberts
Gays
in America seek something beyond the power of the
courts to convey – the blessing of the straight
society they profess to disdain, and the recognition
that homosexual union is equal to marriage as
society has known it since before the Flood.
Thousands of years of tradition, nurtured by the
church, the synagogue and the mosque, can’t be
dissolved by whim or caprice, however artful.
Wesley Pruden is editor emeritus of The Washington
Times.