I liked it. He's not saying anything new, but still, some people seem do need to be reminded, again and again and again, don't they?
Actually, something else I'd like to add. I've noticed some talk about homosexuality being "unnatural". It's an interesting point of discussion. If you want to look at it from a purely objective standpoint, there are arguments for both sides of the argument.
There are arguments that people are born gay. OK, well, you can't really get more "unnatural" than that, so maybe another argument is that it's something of a defect in nature, like being left-handed or having heterochromia, or whatever else people are born with that some dub "unnatural". It's difficult to claim that nature is perfect, because it certainly is not. Defects, abnormalities, whatever you want to call them, happen all the time in nature. In my opinion, that's an amazing thing.
There's another argument that homosexuality happens as a result of upbringing. By that I mean, something unfortunate happens in their upbringing that affects them mentally, and some or all of that affect is that you become gay. In that sense you could say that it is unnatural, and the result of some event or events that probably should not have happened. To that my argument would be that these things happen, and it's unfortunate, but punishing people for being the way that they are, for things that they couldn't control that happened in their past? That strikes me as very low.
The thing is, though, that the "unnaturalness" of homosexuality should not even be an issue. Whatever the reason for people being gay, the fact is that they are gay, but they are also, y'know, PEOPLE, and deserve to have exactly the same rights as anyone else. This applies to all minority groups. Whatever the circumstances of your minority status (your "defect", your "abnormality", whatever it is) you deserve the same rights and privileges as anybody else.
That's my two cents.