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I do not support nor do I oppose "gay marriage". I see it as a 14th amendment issue- Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
If two individuals wish to enter into a marriage contract they should not be denied the right due to their gender. Marriage is nothing more than a legal contract. If you have religious objections to to same sex people entering into a legal contract see the first amendment.
If two individuals wish to enter into a marriage contract they should not be denied the right due to their gender. Marriage is nothing more than a legal contract. If you have religious objections to to same sex people entering into a legal contract see the first amendment.
Exactly. People confuse Marriage and Weddings. Weddings are performed by churches. Marriages are sanctioned by the state.
We are not governed by church, thankfully. Churches should have little bearing on public policy.
The "pro 'gay marriage' crowd like to claim that Americans are coming around to accept homosexuality and gay "marriage" in the 21st Century (which seems to have for them some almost magical meaning).
But is this really true?
"There are currently nineteen states that have legalized same-sex marriage, of those nineteen just three have done so as a result of the popular vote of the people (Maine, 2012; Maryland, 2013; Washington, 2012.) On this topic at least, the desire of the voting public is secondary to the desire of the judicial ruling class. And it is a very small class indeed. Our nation’s direction as it relates to gay-marriage is being determined not by the tabulation of hundreds of thousands if not millions of votes per state. No, it is being determined by men like Richard Young."
"Mr. Young is a U.S. District Court Judge in Indiana who struck down the state’s constitutional definition of marriage (as voted upon by the majority if residents of the state) as being between one man and one woman."
Contentious issues like this need to go thru the public square, so to speak.
The people need to decide this issue, to embrace gay marriage as a community, instead of having it imposed upon them by a few black robed judges? The gay community keeps telling us how much overwhelming support there is for gay marriage, so why can't the courts stay out of it and let this societal transformation evolve naturally on its own?
Because it's an immoral union and an abomination to God.
Live your life as you believe is just. But let others live as they believe is just, subject to the constitutional laws of the United States.
The Constitution has no language concerning marriage. But it does have language guaranteeing equal rights and the right to pursue happiness.
You want your own version of Sharia law.
On the topic of this thread, I believe American opinion on gay marriage is evolving quickly. A lot of people opposed in the past, have moved to "don't care" and they are wrestling with whether it makes sense to oppose gay marriage. Some conservatives with a libertarian outlook see no reason for the government, especially the federal government, to have a role in marriage at all.
Live your life as you believe is just. But let others live as they believe is just, subject to the constitutional laws of the United States.
The Constitution has no language concerning marriage. But it does have language guaranteeing equal rights and the right to pursue happiness.
You want your own version of Sharia law.
On the topic of this thread, I believe American opinion on gay marriage is evolving quickly. A lot of people opposed in the past, have moved to "don't care" and they are wrestling with whether it makes sense to oppose gay marriage. Some conservatives with a libertarian outlook see no reason for the government, especially the federal government, to have a role in marriage at all.
^^^^ This!
I was born in the 80s. and I am still in my 20s. Yes, I am a conservative with a libertarian outlook. I am all for gay marriage and equal gay right. These people pay tax just like everybody else does, they are entitled to equal rights.
Should we treat them BETTER simply because they are gays and lesbians? No of course not.
Should we treat them with human decency, respect and give them the equal right? Of course we should.
I'm pretty sure people who are extremely one way or the other are a minority. Most liberals I know simply say they don't see why it should be a big issue, and most conservatives I know tend to view marriage as none of their business anyway. I'd say most are fairly indifferent or only a little in favor or against. I wouldn't say there a majority that is overwhelmingly anything. Maybe I'm wrong though; that's just from my observation.
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