Amendment One passed in North Carolina, and I feel sick seeing people I know supporting it. I wonder if I'm more likely to see support
for bans in Utah, but there are still tons of people that I see just as
outraged as I am.
I don't think that a lot of people realize that same-sex marriage
actually doesn't pose a direct threat to nuclear families. (We're
talking about legal marriage here, not necessarily religious marriage. Different
religions have different views on homosexuality, and I'm fine with
that.) People don't "make" other people gay*. Gay people aren't less
loving than straight people; their children won't be more likely to
lead unhappy lives. Heterosexual marriages won't become less
important or less protected.
I do understand that it will seem like there are more gay people once
they are actually given constitutional rights (like all Americans are
supposed to have), probably because they'll actually be legally protected.
I
equate this to another old issue.
Should interracial marriages be outlawed? The majority of people now
would say, easily, "no." Yet, at one point, it was seen as threatening
to family values, threatening to children, threatening to the beliefs of
men and women who traditionally were in relationships with the same
race.
Just as we see all races as being
humans worthy of constitutional rights, are not gay people as human as
heterosexuals? I don't ask for support from anyone who isn't willing to
give it on their own. But I do ask, from everyone, to not deprive
fellow Americans of their civil rights.
One more step towards equality of people comes when all of the other states, including my own, remove bans on same-sex marriage and laws that allow discrimination of homosexuals.
*by "gay" I mean LGBTQ
This is probably going to go the same way as Prop 8. Ruled as unconstitutional ^_^
ReplyDeleteHopefully. But then there are the other 30+ states that already have laws against homosexual marriages... I can only hope for those to disappear soon soon soon.
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