Friday, April 29, 2011

Barber: "Practitioner[s] of the Homosexual Lifestyle" Can't Judge Marriage Cases

As we saw two days ago, the supporters of Prop 8 are seeking to vacate Judge Walker's pro-equality ruling in Perry v. Schwarzenegger. Their contention is that since Walker is in a same-sex relationship, he cannot be impartial about ruling on the constitutionality of California's ban on same-sex marriage.

In their motion, Protect Marriage's legal team insists:

"It is important to emphasize at the outset that we are not suggesting that a gay or lesbian judge could not sit on this case."

Well, Team "Protect Marriage" might want to let anti-gay activist Matt Barber, Associate Dean of Liberty University School of Law, in on that little tidbit. Writing at conservative Christian Lifesite News, Barber lets it all hang out:

"Back in February of 2010 it became rumored that retired Federal Judge Vaughn Walker – who presided over the case at the District level – was a practitioner of the homosexual lifestyle. It was further reported that he had a longtime male lover. Judge Walker refused to confirm or deny the rumors. At the time I was one of the few people to publicly call for his recusal. It’s inexplicable that attorneys defending Prop 8 didn’t make such a motion.

With Judge Walker’s recent admission that he does in fact practice homosexuality, the case for recusal has been proven. His ruling on the Prop 8 case should be immediately vacated as he possessed both an incontrovertible and disqualifying conflict of interest....

A heterosexual judge is precisely what Federal law requries under such circumstances."


While Protect Marriage tap dances around the idea that a gay judge can't be impartial (you know, lest their side look like bigots), Barber just comes right out and says it: Only a heterosexual can judge this case.

One is led to wonder if Barber, who's also the Vice President of Liberty Counsel Action, doesn't understand the oh-so-nuanced-and-not-at-all-bigoted argument that ProtectMarriage is trying to make. You know, the one where it's not the judge's homosexuality that's the problem, it's his homosexual tendency of being in a homosexual relationship that's the problem.

Or, maybe Barber's just not as concerned as some "marriage defenders" about not looking like a bigot.

Either way, whooops.

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