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In the nearly 10 years since a very different Supreme Court than the one that sits today declared same-sex marriage a constitutional right, such unions have become, if not commonplace, at least no longer exotic in American society.
There are more than 700,000 same-sex marriages in the U.S. today; in some states, they comprise more than 1% of all marriages. The topic has been largely defanged as a political and cultural controversy, with public support for same-sex marriage now topping 70% nationally.
None of which should instill a false sense of security regarding this particular right — not in the shadow of a current Supreme Court that has shown a willingness to disregard both public opinion and its own precedent in pursuit of brazenly ideological goals.
The latest reminder of just how ominous the situation is comes from conservative Justice Samuel Alito, commenting on a case out of Missouri involving a same-sex couple. In essence, Alito reiterates that, even now, he believes same-sex marriage should not have constitutional protection.
Hold onto your wedding rings, folks.
In Finney v. Missouri Department of Corrections, a female corrections employee in a same-sex relationship sued the state over harassment she endured from a coworker who was her partner’s ex-husband. The harassment, including rumor-mongering in the workplace, was focused on her status as a lesbian, making the issue of her same-sex relationship directly relevant to the case.