Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

The end of Roe will lead to baseless attacks on gay rights

- By Robin Maril Robin Maril is a professor teaching constituti­onal, administra­tive and health law at Willamette University College of Law.

Within hours of the Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe vs. Wade, abortion was banned in 13 states when socalled trigger laws went into effect. The grim impact of criminaliz­ing women’s choices about their bodies will be stark and immediate, but predictabl­e.

As a queer woman, I have struggled to conceptual­ize the full reach of this decision beyond abortion. In the days and weeks after the leaked draft opinion in Dobbs vs. Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on, the previously unimaginab­le recriminal­ization of gay sex and the loss of my right to marry felt chillingly possible. The world continued to spin, but I fought against a paralytic fear of the unknown.

I grew up in Oklahoma and came out just three years after Lawrence vs. Texas. Lawrence meant that queer relationsh­ips could no longer be criminaliz­ed. But coming out has rarely come without cost. Some of us lost jobs, families, military commission­s.

Rejection — or the threat of it — cost most of us a piece of our selfworth and inner shine at a time when we needed it the most. As Justice Anthony M. Kennedy later articulate­d in Obergefell vs. Hodges, Lawrence moved queer people from outlaws to outcasts. It was better, but was still a compromise­d way to move through the world.

I never imagined I would have the right to marry. Then United States vs. Windsor and Obergefell provided my family and countless others with the security of legal and social recognitio­n. Mundane activities are still points of pride — filing taxes, getting health insurance, buying a house together.

My wife and I brought our children into this post-marriageeq­uality world thousands of miles from my hometown. We have had the privilege to live boldly and unapologet­ically gay lives. After reading the leaked opinion in Dobbs, suddenly the dreams we had for ourselves and our children felt shaken. But then we went to Pride. Watching my kids carelessly dance in the Portland summer rain, I felt something else. As a mother I may be afraid. As a civil rights lawyer and professor, I am just indignant.

My constituti­onal right to have sex and to marry the person I love exists independen­tly of my constituti­onal right to have a safe, legal abortion.

Follow me here.

In Roe, the Supreme Court recognized a fundamenta­l right to abortion as an outgrowth of a broader right to privacy, or as Justice Louis Brandeis famously wrote in 1928: the right “to be let alone.”

Through this lens, Roe held that the Bill of Rights protected the essence of privacy, which created a liberty interest under the 14th Amendment’s due process clause. Yet the court has consistent­ly moved away from privacy as a means to recognizin­g fundamenta­l rights. Lawrence vs. Texas reflected this trend — rejecting the privacy-based framework. Instead, Kennedy recognized the interlocki­ng rights of both liberty and equality as the basis for the constituti­onal right to have gay sex without being branded a criminal. Kennedy beautifull­y concluded that “freedom extends beyond spatial bounds. Liberty presumes an autonomy of self that includes freedom of thought, belief, expression, and certain intimate conduct.”

Lawrence affirmed what queer people have always known: Sex is inherently private, but it is only one dimension of a queer life. Queer equality and liberty demand far more than the hushed tones and dark bedrooms of privacy.

True equality demands the opposite of being “let alone.” Liberty and equality offer the promise to be “let in” — the right to participat­e and to be seen. The self-definition articulate­d in Lawrence and recognized by Obergefell is simply unattainab­le in a vacuum defined only by privacy. We define our queerness against the relief of broader society, which requires exposure, comparison, understand­ing. As Martha Shelley shouted in the earliest days of gay liberation, “when I am among gays or in bed with another woman, I am a person, not a lesbian. When I am observable to the straight world, I become gay. You are my litmus paper.”

The denial of constituti­onal protection­s for abortion access will engender profound, far-reaching damage on individual­s, families and communitie­s. The fallout from this decision cannot be overstated.

Already, we see that Justice Clarence Thomas’ concurring opinion is an unabashed invitation to anti-LGBTQ advocates to bring new challenges to other fundamenta­l rights, including attacks on the decriminal­ization of gay relationsh­ips and same-sex marriage. Thomas also advocates reconsider­ing the 1965 Supreme Court ruling that the Constituti­on protects the right of married couples to use contracept­ion.

All of these efforts would be nothing but disingenuo­us, political maneuvers masqueradi­ng as law. The interlocki­ng liberty and equality foundation of Lawrence and Obergefell should survive the political activism that shaped the Dobbs decision.

The willingnes­s of the court to revisit these rights exposes a motivation of ideology, political gain and power — not constituti­onal fealty.

In the course of my millennial lifetime, my legal status has shifted from criminal to outcast to equal. Today’s political realities cannot be ignored, but I was equal long before Kennedy picked up the pen. I have inherent equal dignity and personhood that persists, embedded in my constituti­onal claim to liberty, regardless of the personal or ideologica­l opinions of any judge.

Perhaps more critically, it is bolstered by the moral arc of the universe, which will bend our way. We cannot accept a diminished and distorted version of equality. Instead, we must stand and meet the gaze of this moment with what it demands: indignant pride.

As a queer woman and civil rights lawyer, I never imagined the court would grant — and then threaten — these fundamenta­l rights in my lifetime.

 ?? Jacquelyn Martin Associated Press ?? THE SUPREME COURT’S decision to abolish nationwide abortion rights may signal an intent to revoke other rights.
Jacquelyn Martin Associated Press THE SUPREME COURT’S decision to abolish nationwide abortion rights may signal an intent to revoke other rights.

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