Sentinel & Enterprise

It’s not paranoia. Court could flip gay marriage, contracept­ion

- By Isadora Rangel Isadora Rangel has been a member of the Miami Herald’s Editorial Board since February 2021.

Women and LGBTQ people woke up on Friday to a world in which their rights to prevent pregnancie­s, have sex and marry could vanish with the stroke of a Supreme Court ruling

his dystopian, “Handmaid’s Tale” scenario isn’t just liberal hyperbole, I hate to say.

The U.S. Supreme Court opinion reversing Roe v. Wade released Friday took away the constituti­onal right to an abortion, leaving states to decide the issue. The 200-pluspage package delivered by the court also contains something even more chilling: a concurring opinion penned by Justice Clarence Thomas arguing the court “should reconsider” other rulings that codified rights to same-sex relationsh­ips and marriage as well as access to contracept­ion. The court based Roe v. Wade and these other rulings — Griswold v. Connecticu­t, Lawrence V. Texas, and Obergefell v. Hodge — on the 14th Amendment’s due process clause.

Under Thomas’ reasoning, Friday’s ruling elicits the revision of all similar precedents.

He wrote that “… we have a duty to ‘correct the error’ establishe­d in those precedents.” He spoke for himself, not the other five conservati­ve justices, but his opinion is an implicit invitation for red states to pass laws that run afoul of those precedents in hopes of reversing them.

His writing confirms fears that the overturn of Roe v.

Wade is just the first shoe to drop in the court’s usurpation of rights we thought were woven into the fabric of our society. The court’s three liberal justices echoed that concern, writing in their dissenting opinion that “no one should be confident that this majority is done with its work.”

For women who couldn’t care less about the end of Roe v. Wade — thinking they’d never have an abortion, anyway — it’s time to start caring. Thanks to the 1965 Griswold v. Connecticu­t ruling, the middle-aged men who run most state capitols cannot prohibit you from accessing birth control.

But, c’mon, women take the pill like they take vitamins nowadays. Who would ban contracept­ion? Probably people like the governor of Mississipp­i, who won’t rule that out, or Republican­s who tried to stop Missouri’s Medicaid agency from paying for the morning-after pill and IUDS.

These are the kinds of politician­s in control of many state legislatur­es, which, without constituti­onal protection­s, would be in charge of deciding what happens to contracept­ives, same-sex relationsh­ips and same-sex marriage. That would create a divide in America, where your liberties are dictated by the state in which you live.

And Florida isn’t looking too good.

The Sunshine State is home of the parental rights bill dubbed “Don’t say gay,” of a governor who has rallied against drag queen shows and where a state senator took to the Senate floor to declare that “LGBT is not a permanent thing.” Miami Sen. Ileana Garcia’s Republican colleagues who run state government didn’t rebuke her nonsensica­l speech.

If the landmark 2015 ruling on Obergefell v. Hodge is reversed, you can guess on which side of the gay-marriage debate Florida would fall.

Things could get even more absurd.

In 2003’s Lawrence v. Texas, the court ruled that a Texas law that made same-sex sexual activity a crime violated the 14th Amendment’s due process clause. Not surprising­ly, Thomas dissented. Without that precedent, states would be allowed to arrest and prosecute people who engage in gay sex.

That seems unlikely to happen in 2022. But it’s not paranoia to wonder what could happen in red states when you read the Texas Republican Party’s 2022 platform: “Homosexual­ity is an abnormal lifestyle choice. We believe there should be no granting of special legal entitlemen­ts or creation of special status for homosexual behavior.”

There’s a bit of solace in Florida GOP U.S. Sen. Rick Scott’s rebuke of the Texas platform this week. He said his party is “inclusive,” but his words ring hollow given how Florida Republican­s have treated their LGBTQ constituen­ts.

A world in which our rights could be taken so quickly used to feel like the stuff of literary fiction. But Thomas’ opinion reads more like a bad omen.

 ?? AP FILE ?? A crowd of people gather outside the Supreme Court on May 3 in Washington, D.C., as a draft opinion circulated among Supreme Court justices suggesting they might overturn the 1973 case Roe v. Wade that legalized abortion nationwide. Now they’ve done just that.
AP FILE A crowd of people gather outside the Supreme Court on May 3 in Washington, D.C., as a draft opinion circulated among Supreme Court justices suggesting they might overturn the 1973 case Roe v. Wade that legalized abortion nationwide. Now they’ve done just that.

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