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Contributor
Ray
Haynes
Mr.
Haynes is an Assembly member representing Riverside and
Temecula.
He serves on the Appropriations and Budget Committees. [go to
Assembly Member Haynes
website at California Assembly][go to Haynes index]
US
Court May Rule: Dolphins Are Fish, Too
Hijacked by an out of control judiciary
[Ray Haynes] 2/17/04
With the Massachusetts Supreme Court's recent ruling that there
is a constitutional right for persons of the same sex to marry,
and the City of San Francisco now openly defying California's
prohibition on same sex marriage, the Judiciary has clearly become
the chosen battleground for homosexual activists trying to gain
a right that the majority of voters clearly oppose. Here in California,
home of the nutty Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and their increasingly
bizarre opinions and rulings, no ruling would surprise me at
this point. And as long as Judicial nominees who would be willing
to enforce the rule of law continue to be bottled up by Democratic
filibusters in the US Senate, rulings by our federal courts will
increasingly resemble the following satirical news story from
the potential near future:
SAN FRANCISCO---In an earth-shaking decision today, the 9th
Circuit US Court of Appeals has expanded the definition of fish
to include dolphins, whales and abalone.
Stepping into an issue that many had thought was long ago settled
and more properly the jurisdiction of science rather than the
courts, the judges today courageously moved to replace narrow,
traditional definitions of what constitutes a fish with a more
progressive, inclusive one.
Traditionally,
science books have arbitrarily made distinctions between fish,
mollusks
and sea-dwelling mammals, despite the
fact that all of them clearly live in the ocean and spend most
of their time underwater. The arguments made by the majority
in their opinion were compelling: “Calling whales and dolphins
mammals has been too confusing for too long for too many people.
We received scores of letters and testimony from schoolchildren
who had been marked down on tests, and poorly educated adults
who had been corrected by others when they had innocently referred
to dolphins as fish, rather than mammals. We were asked to consider
the fact that they do look a lot like fish and do spend a considerable
amount of their life underwater.”
The court
heard testimony from various advocacy groups who demonstrated
through very
well produced and persuasive multi-media
presentations that dolphins and whales are indeed fish-shaped.
By showing clips from movies such as “Flipper”, “Free
Willy”, and “Orca”, they also proved beyond
a reasonable doubt that they swim pretty much like fish, too.
When a panel of public interest biologists confirmed that dolphins
and whales live their entire lives in the water—just like
fish—what had seemed like a very difficult case for the
court initially, suddenly became quite obvious: “Dolphins
are fish!”
The addition
of abalone to the fish classification came as a surprise to
many courtroom
observers. Not a part of the original
lawsuit, an abalone advocacy group had made a late argument for
the inclusion of abalone in the definition of fish. Making the
fairly obvious point that abalone also live underwater, require
a fishing license to take, are already considered shellfish by
many, and are “good eatin’”, the American Abalone
Association’s appeal was granted and added to the original
complaint without further study. When asked about the lack of
review, a spokesperson for the court said, “we’d
really spent enough time on the fish question and we decided
as long as we were expanding the definition of fish already,
there was really no harm in making it even more inclusive.”
Predictably,
old-school marine biologists protested the decision. One scientist
representing
the traditionalist school of marine
biology at the University of Notre Dame (a Catholic institution)
argued, “They can’t do that! Dolphins and whales
are mammals! They’re warm-blooded, they give live birth,
they nurse their young, they have no gills—they simply
are not fish! And abalone? Are you kidding me? They don’t
even have a spine or a defined brain! They have shells instead
of fins—they don’t even swim! Simply calling a mollusk
a fish doesn’t make it so!”
Actually,
according to a spokesperson for the court, it does. “If
we want to call a dolphin a fish, then it’s a fish and
there is nothing you can do about it. What are you going to do---vote
the judges off the court? Pass a Constitutional Amendment? Maybe
you can sue us! Ha, ha, ha, ha...”
In the next few weeks the court is also expected to rule on
whether the definition of circles must always exclude squares,
whether the law of gravity is unconstitutional, and whether the
institution of marriage can legally be limited to just one man
and one woman.
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