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Marrage right info..long

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Don't be a smart a$$

This CONSERVATIVE ALERT is a special message from

RightMarch.com for Gary Troyer:



ALERT: Despite hundreds of thousands of phone calls,

faxes and emails, and millions of petition signatures,

the Federal Marriage Amendment failed to even get a

vote on the floor of the U. S. Senate last week.



But we have another option to protect traditional

marriage in America... AND protect the constitutional

concept of federalism, where the national government

does NOT intrude into areas that are states' rights.

And it would only require a majority vote in Congress,

NOT the 2/3 majority required for a Constitutional

amendment.



Rep. John Hostettler (R-IN) has introduced legislation

designed to limit the ability of federal courts to

redefine marriage. His bill is H. R. 3313, the "Marriage

Protection Act", which would remove jurisdiction from

certain federal courts over questions pertaining to

the 1996 "Defense of Marriage Act", better known as

"DOMA".



"We are witnessing a concerted, nationwide assault on

marriage," Hostettler said. "As a result, Americans are

asking what can be done to protect this institution

from being manipulated by unprincipled federal courts. "



Recognizing that marriage is not just some social

experiment to be reinvented and redefined by a handful

of unelected ideologues of the federal judiciary,

Hostettler introduced the "Marriage Protection Act" to

limit the federal courts' ability to set a national

precedent that undermines marriage as we know it.



Employing authority granted to Congress by the U. S.

Constitution (Article IV, Section 1), DOMA protects

marriage by stating that no state is required to give

"full faith and credit" to a marriage license issued

by another state, if that relationship is between two

people of the same sex. DOMA also defines the terms

"marriage" and "spouse" for purposes of federal law

and federal benefits as terms only applying to

relationships between people of the opposite sex.



"DOMA is good law and passed in 1996 with broad support,"

said Hostettler. "But marriage opponents know they can

easily find activist judges willing to overturn it and

create a 'right' to homosexual marriage. My bill will

keep the federal courts from taking marriage policy

away from the states where it has always resided. "



The "Marriage Protection Act" addresses that possibility

by removing the Supreme Court's appellate jurisdiction,

as well as inferior federal courts' original and

appellate jurisdiction, over DOMA's full faith and credit

provision. It also removes appellate jurisdiction from

the Supreme Court and inferior federal courts over DOMA's

marriage definition provision.



Rep. Hostettler's bill will accomplish what the FMA would

not have -- protecting traditional marriage AND

constitutional federalism. We need to PUSH HARD for this

bill -- NOW.



TAKE ACTION: This bill could come up for a vote in House

of Representatives as early as TODAY (Wednesday). We need

to take IMMEDIATE action.



For too long the courts have gone unchecked when they

exceeded their constitutional boundaries. We've forgotten

that our Constitution established a government of "We the

People" -- and the people, through their elected officials,

have the final say in Constitutional questions.



Go to our website below NOW to contact your Representative

for FREE, and tell him or her to vote YES on H. R. 3313,

the "Marriage Protection Act":



http://www.rightmarch.com/072104.htm



NOTE: If federal courts were to strike down the federal

Defense of Marriage Act, then the citizens of states such

as Michigan, California, Virginia, North Carolina, Texas

and Florida who have their own statutes to define marriage

as between one man and one woman would have to recognize

the marriage licenses issued to homosexual couples by

other states that require that practice. The people of

these states should be able to defend and preserve the

institution of marriage.



Limiting federal court jurisdiction is neither a partisan

issue nor a rare occurrence. For example, Senate Minority

Leader Daschle inserted language in legislation enacted

during the last Congress that denied all federal courts

jurisdiction over the procedures governing timber projects

in order to expedite forest clearing. If limiting the

jurisdiction of the federal courts is good enough to

protect trees, shouldn't it be good enough to protect a

state's marriage policy? Be sure to forward this Alert to

everyone you know who wants to voice THEIR opinion to

Congress on the protection of marriage -- AND the

Constitution -- in America. Thank you!
 
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