Gay Marriage lost four times in Maine. Last year it passed. Now they call it “Settled Law”.
If 61% of Californians truly want gay marriage and vote for it at the ballot box, then more power to them. We live in a federal system and that is their choice. My issue with this always has been how the Left tries to use judges and the federal government to force gay marriage on a population that does not want it, which has been pretty much every state up until recently.
Remember, back in the 90’s, when gay marriage seemed like a senseless abstraction?
San Francisco, San Jose, Hollywood, I am not surprised.
The up side, they will not reproduce themselves.
I voted for Prop 8, but wouldn’t another election be the “will of the people” too? While I hate some results, I have no problem with “the will of the people” even if they change their mind later.
Having said that, the propaganda from the Left on this issue must be met with truth and facts.
Forty seven years ago the Hippies declared marriage dead. Old fashioned, only a piece of paper! Living together was enough if you were sincere.
Today marriage is the most important thing two people can engage in, BUT ONLY IF YOU ARE GAY!
Sure 61% just happen to want it while the Supreme Court is deciding, even though they voted against it in a recent election.
Bullcrap.
The issue before the SC is whether the voters have a right to decide. As someone else posted, if California approves it in the next vote that’s up to them.
Where did they do the poll? A bathhouse in San Francisco?
Opinion polling is usually flawed on this issue, for a number of reasons. But we have actual votes we can look at.
Prop. 22, CAs first marriage amendment, passed by 61% in 2000, the same % NC passed theirs by last year, so it is reasonable to think NC is 12 years or so behind CA on the issue. CA’s Prop. 8 passed by 52% in 2008, swinging 9% in 8 years. The thing with this is if our masters in black robes deign to uphold it, they will simply try another popular vote to repeal it. All they need is 50% + 1 vote, seems like some sort of repeal on prop.8 5 years after it originally passed would probably pass now.
That’s the danger, to the state in the modern era, marriage is simply whatever judges, pols, or 51% of voting public think it should be at any one time. And that’s it.
Freegards
SO, if someone “backs” a gay marriage, is that like a threesome?
Based on a Field Poll?
Long term, this issue is going to be a loser for the GOP, I suggest we drop it.
You can flame if you want, but I think culturally, at this point there is nothing you can really do about it. The trends are clear and strong. Its not even about "giving up", its just, already over.
How can it be that 61% of the electorate believes that gay marriage is okay, yet a majority of the electorate voted for prop. 8