Is heterophobia reasonable?
Most glaringly, the court revives the old canard about marriage being essentially and historically about parenting (even as the majority concede that parenthood are overbroad and imprecise as a corollary of gender-opposite marriage, since on the one hand there are many same-sex couples with children, while there are opposite-sex couples that cannot and/or do not choose to have children.) It then hazards the justification that since opposite-sex couples, unlike same-sex couples, can have children spontaneously and unreflectively, the state may have an interest in providing them marriage rights, in the best interests of the children they produce. (As the dissent points out, how they can be encouraged to marry by denying other couples similar rights, and denying their children the social and economic benefits of marriage, is not clear). Aside from the incongruous (and offensive spectacle of the Court offering a compliment to Gay and Lesbian couples by saying that the state could reasonably suppose them sufficiently stable and responsible parents not to need the support of marriage, even as straights are immoral and feckless, the decision recalls the old story about the Southern white legislator who shame-facedly explained to a Black constituent that he believed that white schools should receive greater state funding than their Jim Crow counterparts in order to further civilization, whereupon the African American cynically expressed his whole-hearted agreement—whites, he said, were clearly in far greater need of civilizing than were Blacks.