ATrain wrote:Yacht Rock wrote:ATrain wrote:when you try to enforce your view on others, then its a problem.
Isn't that what voting and government is about? People vote on a viewpoint or they can choose not to vote on a viewpoint. In this case, they did. How is that a problem?
Because its denying civil rights to a certain class of people, on the basis of religion no less. People voted to have slavery, for segregation, not having interracial marriage, not allowing women the right to vote, etc...
I understand that we are devolving into a different argument but I don't see it as a religious argument at all. I see it first as the fact that the human race is built on the relationship between men and women and that, whatever you believe, this fact cannot be denied.
In the end, at least from my experience from the many years I have lived in California, people weren't looking for rights. They were looking for equality. I see this as two different things. From my perspective, I am not going to make a statement at the ballot box that a relationship between a man and a man is equal to the relationship of a man and a woman because they are not.
As far as rights are concerned. I don't mind if someone is in a same sex relationships and want a union that gives them benefits, etc. Personally, I think government should get out of the marriage business altogether. That's a different argument.