Oct 16, 2012
Thirty-two states have put same-sex marriage to the ballot since 1998, and thirty-two times voters have refused to redefine marriage. Same-sex marriage supporters hope that will change this November, when marriage is on the ballot in four states: Maine, Maryland, Washington and Minnesota.
An October 15 AP report shows same-sex marriage leading slightly at the polls in Maine, Maryland and Washington – but similar leads in other states have evaporated at the ballot box. It’s a matter, as Baltimore’s Archbishop William Lori told an interfaith gathering recently, “of getting souls to the polls.”
It’s also a question of voter education. No one wants to be unfair to fellow citizens or unloving to homosexual friends and family members. No one wants to impose religious doctrines on people of other faiths, either. That makes a lot of people shy from defending marriage in public.
But promoting man-woman marriage is in everyone’s interest – even homosexuals’. Here’s why.