And things haven't changed much. People are acting like it's a radically different world, but....Shockingly, apparently, things really haven't changed that much. In fact, looking at the states that want to afford the religious freedom to discriminate against gays, I have trouble arguing much has changed for the better. It looks like we've made two steps forward and two steps back. Every new state that legalises gay marriage seems met with another state that comes up with a way to condemn gays. Every ruling like Doma leads to new legislation to try and come up with a more Constitutional way to block gays. Every act by the President is met with tantrums.Ninmecu said:[just half a decade ago it was still considered fairly normal to bash gays.
So pardon me for not doing a cartwheel.
You just undercut your own argument. If they are inseparable, then there is no real point of saying "keep one out of the other."this is business, not politics. Though-I realize the two are inseparably and deeply entrenched in one another.
There have been multiple rulings in the US that declare it a basic/fundamental right. Now, I don't have the evidence on hand, so I'd have to look. If you really need this info, let me know. I will find it again. But in that light:Strazdas said:Please provide proof of marriage being "basic right" that cannot be questioned before continuing.
Yes, he did.He did not deny anyones "equal rights".
Since it's unconstitutional, I have trouble seeing the "legal" argument here.demanding people loose their jobs because of their personal belief is worse than donating money to support your belief in a legal way. Which law or which job makes no difference.