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AP U.S. Government 2.3 Civil Rights and Liberties 14 Views
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Description:
AP U.S. Government 2.3 Civil Rights and Liberties. Classifications based on sexual orientation receive...what?
Transcript
- 00:04
And here's your shmoop du jour brought to you by scrutiny on
- 00:06
the bounty the new movie about a guy carefully examining a roll of paper [A man examines a roll of paper on a boat]
- 00:10
towels it's already getting Oscar talk really...Classifications based on sexual
- 00:16
orientation receive what and here are the potential answers [mumbling]
- 00:21
Well who knew there were so many levels of scrutiny we're still only on [Man playing video game]
Full Transcript
- 00:27
level 1 but just because our mom won't let us play after lights out...Alright
- 00:31
let's take a stab at this thing first of all under our good old friend the
- 00:35
Fourteenth Amendment every person is entitled to equal protection under the
- 00:39
law which basically means that we can't apply the same laws differently for
- 00:43
different people yep, that's a rough one for bigots everywhere however equal [People protesting outside government building]
- 00:48
protection can be not so equal depending on which class we belong to for example
- 00:54
laws that discriminate based on race receives the highest level of scrutiny
- 00:58
since race is considered a suspect class that's because Fourteenth Amendment was
- 01:03
originally passed to protect freed slaves from discrimination under the law [Man rejecting a black man for a hotel room]
- 01:06
so laws dealing with race are a big deal but what about classifications based on
- 01:11
sexual orientation well this became one of the hottest topics in the judicial
- 01:16
world in the 2010 we're talking Death Valley hot after a wave of cases ruling [Man surfboarding in the sea]
- 01:21
same-sex marriage bans to be unconstitutional courts across the
- 01:25
country were forced to look at the Fourteenth Amendment in a new way for [The Fourteenth Amendment in a chair wearing cucumber eye patches]
- 01:29
example in 2012 the United States vs Windsor the Second Circuit Court of
- 01:33
Appeals argued that parts of the Defense of Marriage Act were unconstitutional
- 01:37
since it treated homosexual married couples different from heterosexual [Mand and woman kissing at a wedding]
- 01:41
married couples in its ruling the circuit court argued that sexual
- 01:45
orientation should in fact be a quasi suspect class meaning that laws [Two female figures on a wedding cake and a man climbing on the cake]
- 01:51
discriminating based on sexual orientation would receive an
- 01:55
intermediate level of scrutiny while the supreme court agreed with circuit
- 01:58
court's ruling about the laws unfair treatment they didn't weigh in on
- 02:02
whether or not sexual orientation belongs to any kind of suspect class so
- 02:06
what's all this boil down to well if sexual orientation isn't considered a
- 02:10
suspect class then classifications based on
- 02:13
sexual orientation must receive a the lowest level of scrutiny of course now
- 02:19
that the Supreme Court has ruled that Constitution guarantees a right to [A judges bangs their gavel]
- 02:22
same-sex marriage there's a chance that sexual orientation could finally earn a
- 02:26
seat at the front or at least in the middle of the suspect class pull up a
- 02:30
chair there's always room for one more [Woman standing at the front of a classroom]
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