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whoa, whoa, whoaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa . . . slow down a tab bit, here.
Lawrence v. Texas (2003) was decided u/ the 14th amendment . . . the Due Process (DP) Clause from which a portion of the implied privacy right emanates and its long list of case law (
stare decisis). Lawrence
et al (successfully) argued that he was being deprived of his 14th amendment Due Process right of liberty and privacy as a person (individual) by the state (action) of the State of Texas when the state criminalized sodomy and charged him with that crime. I believe that Lawrence also presented a 14th amendment Equal Protection (EP) Clause argument too. I know EP was argued in the lower courts. But whether the U.S. Sup. Ct. reached that argument, I'd have to reread the case. Scalia lathered on about it in his pontificating dissent.
As for the *meatus* of the OP's argument regarding the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act (DoMA), it's a tad bit misplaced. For when an appellant petitions for review (
certiorari) b4 the U.S. Supreme Court, one doesn't toss out a viable legal argument in any kneejerk manner. Of course the EP clause and the DP clause u/ privacy issues as well as the full faith and credit clause should be presented. Hell, I'd toss in more upon reviewing the statute(s) at issue, constitution carefully, and relevant case law, too, as well as the arguments, preserved or otherwise, from the trial court transcript(s) and all lower appeals courts. And the legal analysis wouldn't stop there!
As for the EP clause (the Equal Protection Clause) of the 14th amendment, it typically is applied to "suspect classes" of persons (yes, it's plural "persons") that have immutable characteristics. The potential flaw in the soup about arguing the EP clause regarding a "suspect class" of homosexuals is that homosexuality has
not been scientifically indicated as being immutable (not changeable). BTW, if one does argue homosexuality in a court of law, one should always address the issue as "sexual orientation" (meaning immutable) and not as "sexual preference" (meaning its changeable, or "preferred"). However, all that said and done, the EP clause could still be successfully presented if the state's actions were egregious enough to not meet the rational basis test.
Uuummmmmmm, this is why one hires a lawyer in con law, and not diddle in DU about these things. And constitutional law is one of the more esoteric areas of law. That, despite all the diddlings in and around the internet about "interpreting the constitution" by layppl.
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