ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos

AP U.S. Government 2.3 Civil Rights and Liberties 14 Views


Share It!


Description:

AP U.S. Government 2.3 Civil Rights and Liberties. Classifications based on sexual orientation receive...what?

Language:
English Language

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]

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]

Up Next

AP U.S. Government 1.1 Institutions of National Government
280 Views

AP U.S. Government 1.1 Institutions of National Government. What was the scale of representation in the House of Representatives when the Constitut...

Related Videos

AP U.S. Government 2.2 Public Policy
39 Views

AP U.S. Government 2.2 Public Policy. What did the Budget Impoundment Control Act do?

AP U.S. Government 1.3 Political Beliefs and Behaviors
5 Views

AP U.S. Government 1.3 Political Beliefs and Behaviors. What sort of poll would you commission to monitor popularity over three months?

AP U.S. History Exam 2.45
703 Views

AP U.S. History Exam 2.45. The journey shown on the map was an example of...what?

AP U.S. History Exam 2.26
362 Views

AP U.S. History Exam 2.26. This speech reinforced a shift in the focus of the war that Lincoln established by...what?