Summary

Syracuse City Court Judge Felicia Pitts Davis refused to officiate a same-sex wedding, citing religious beliefs.

Another judge, Mary Anne Doherty, performed the ceremony.

Pitts Davis’ actions, considered discriminatory under New York judicial ethics and the Marriage Equality Act, are under review by the State Commission on Judicial Conduct

  • @[email protected]
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    1087 days ago

    It’s so weird to see when I see members of one marginalized group further marginalizing another marginalized group rather than having solidarity.

    2 women who marched for racial justice now will get to deliver it as Syracuse City Court judges

    Shadia Tadros, 39, a first-generation Arab-American, and Felicia Pitts Davis, 52, a Black woman with parents from the Deep South, say they are arriving with a mandate: The status quo is over.

    In the year of marches to address systemic racism in the justice system, they stand with the peaceful protesters. They marched, too.

    Tadros and Davis — who point out they are different people with different backgrounds — share some goals on how they want to change the justice system.

    • ⓝⓞ🅞🅝🅔
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      137 days ago

      It’s less weird than you might imagine. Bigotry is interesting that way, especially when religion and worldview comes into play. Most religious folks that are anti-lgbt will decry other forms of bigotry.

      Humans are consistently inconsistent this way. 😏

    • @Buffalox
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      7 days ago

      Absolutely.
      Is she doing it because she is Christian, because then she should also know the Bible endorses slavery.
      It’s insane that people still hold any value to that old piece of shit book. Also remember to stone your neighbors if they are gathering wood on a Saturday.

      • Miles O'Brien
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        837 days ago

        The Bible endorses abortion

        Let’s not pretend most Christians have even read the Bible, let alone understand or follow it.

        • @Buffalox
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          7 days ago

          Yes absolutely, that’s the most crazy part. A method of abortion where the woman is at high risk of dying!
          But that only “proves” she was guilty of adultery!

          Christians are insane IMO.

            • @Buffalox
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              177 days ago

              I’m not sure what you mean “on a technicality” instead of merely “It is true”.

              • @atx_aquarian
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                127 days ago

                I’d say “technically” because there’s no such thing as magical water and because this is only a ceremony to give an appearance of leaving it up to divinity, not a way for people to actually have an abortion. This doesn’t look to me like it helps pro-choice arguments at all since anyone arguing the other side is going to be able to say, “See, it’s in God’s hands.”

                • @Buffalox
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                  7 days ago

                  Wow, so a biblical description to specifically cause an abortion in case of adultery, is not an argument for pro choice among Christians?
                  Just wow???

                  • @atx_aquarian
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                    87 days ago

                    The thing is it’s not a “hey, need an abortion? just do this.” Look at what it’s saying: if you drink the bitter water and God judges you guilty, it will cause an abortion, and that’s how we’ll know whether you’re guilty or not.

                    Religious POV: No human has any choice in the matter. Drink the water, God decides. Zero choice.

                    Non-religious POV: I see a few possible explanations.

                    One is the person administering the “bitter water” might actually have some concoction that worked, but if it did work, that would signal to the community that the would-be mother was guilty under their harsh law. Not good for her, not really a choice.

                    Another possibility is that it’s a ritual designed to let people move past perceived adultery. Drinking the magic water shows your faith and innocence because you would have believed you were poisoning your baby if you knew you were guilty. In reality, maybe not, but that’s what the ritual presents on the surface. You drink the magic water, everyone feels better that God either didn’t judge you guilty or forgave you, everyone goes on with life. Everyone’s happy except if the mother was so desperate she would rather have been punished by the law than have that baby. Still no real choice.

          • Miles O'Brien
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            187 days ago

            Numbers 5 21 here the priest is to put the woman under this curse—“may the Lord cause you to become a curse[d] among your people when he makes your womb miscarry and your abdomen swell. 22 May this water that brings a curse enter your body so that your abdomen swells or your womb miscarries.”

            “‘Then the woman is to say, “Amen. So be it.”

            It’s in response to a woman being unfaithful to her husband.

            Of course, in reality the concoction does nothing, but the point of the Bible passage is literally an abortion.

          • @[email protected]
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            77 days ago

            Hosea 13:16 The people of Samaria must bear their guilt, because they have rebelled against their God. They will fall by the sword; their little ones will be dashed to the ground, their pregnant women ripped open.”