Dale Carpenter is calmer than John Aravosis, but here's the rub:
The DOJ brief goes further than it needs to go at this point in the case by addressing the merits of the constitutional issues in the case, which attacks both DOMA
Section 2 (interstate recognition) and DOMA Section 3 (federal
recognition).
Again, the question is not why the DOJ should defend existing law; it is why they chose to lard it up with such egregious anti-gay rhetoric and religious right arguments. Maybe because a member of the religious right filed it? Dale again:
The Obama DOJ is saying that DOMA doesn't discriminate against gays and
lesbians because they are free to marry people of the opposite sex... It's identical in form to the defense of
Texas's Homosexual Conduct law in Lawrence v. Texas: a law
banning only gay sex doesn't discriminate against gays because it
equally forbids homosexuals and heterosexuals to have homosexual sex
and because it equally allows homosexuals and heterosexuals to have
heterosexual sex. This sort of formalism has incited howls of laughter
over the years when made by religious conservatives. Now it's the
official constitutional position of the Obama administration.
And so we just have howls of pain. An important addendum:
My point here is not to claim that the DOJ's arguments are anti-gay,
homophobic, or even wrong. Much of the brief seems right to me, or at
least entirely defensible, as a matter of constitutional law. My point
is only to note how much continuity there is in this instance, as in
others, between the Bush and Obama administrations. In short, there's
little in this brief that could not have been endorsed by the Bush DOJ.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/daily-dish/archive/2009/06/yes-we-can-not-that-we-necessarily-will/200552/
