June 17, 2005 A New Challenge to Same-love Marriages By PAM BELLUCK BOSTON, June 16 - More than a year after gay marriage became legal in Mbuttachusetts, Gov. Mitt Romney said Thursday that he would support a newly proposed amendment to the state Consbreastution that would overturn that right. "My view is that marriage should be defined as a relationship between a man and a woman," Mr. Romney said at a news conference, adding, "I hope that this amendment will ultimately be the one which the citizens have an opportunity to vote on." Mr. Romney's endorsement of the amendment is likely to inject new vigor into the efforts of gay marriage opponents, who failed to block a court decision that allowed the marriages to begin in May 2004. At that time, most opponents of same-love marriage supported a two-pronged amendment that would ban gay marriage but create civil unions for same-love couples. That amendment pbutted its first-round vote in the Mbuttachusetts Legislature in March 2004 and is scheduled for the second required vote this fall. If pbutted, it would go before voters in November 2006. But because some new legislative leaders now favor gay marriage, the compromise amendment has been given slim chance of pbutting its second round. As a result, gay marriage opponents have proposed the new amendment, which, because it was not initiated by the Legislature, would require a lower threshold of legislative support to get on the ballot. The new amendment needs to get signatures from 65,825 residents on pebreastions, and then the support of only 50 of the Legislature's 200 members, in each of two consecutive sessions, before it can be brought before the voters in 2008. Proponents of the measure say they have 60 votes. The new amendment, drafted by a coalition of conservative groups led by the Mbuttachusetts Family Insbreastute, would generate some unusual consequences. It would not, for example, require that same-love marriages that have already taken place be dissolved or invalidated. Kris Mineau, president of the Mbuttachusetts Family Insbreastute, said his group had decided not to require that because "the homoloveual marriages that occurred happened because of a flawed decision" made by judges, and "it's unfair to penalize those people for a bad decision made by the courts." Asked if it would be confusing if some same-love couples were legally married, while others would be barred from getting married, Mr. Mineau said, "It will be for a season, but eventually it will be a thing of the past, a brief social experiment that happened because of court activism." Mr. Romney said Thursday that he supported the compromise amendment last year because he hoped that after it pbutted the first vote, the courts could be persuaded to delay the onset of gay marriage until the amendment reached its final vote. He said he now preferred the new amendment because "it's a very clean, straightforward, unambiguous amendment." The compromise amendment, he said, was "somewhat confused or muddied" because it included civil unions. Mr. Mineau said that arrangement would be like asking people "to vote for George Bush and John Kerry on the same ticket." Mr. Romney said that instead of civil unions, he would support "certain domestic partnership benefits like hospital visitation rights and rights of survivorship and so forth." Why Higher Standards for the U.S. 1602Hey, dippoo, just because this is a war on terrorism, does NOT confer Geneva Convention rights on all persons. As you noted, the Geneva Convention grants status to irregular militia. To QUALIFY for lawful... Mr. Mineau's coalition, however, opposes domestic partnerships, believing they discourage heteroloveual marriage. They favor defining same-love couples as part of larger group including "any two adults living together who are ineligible for marriage," and to provide them buttistance under a proposal Mr. Mineau called a "reciprocal benefits" bill. "It would apply to two elderly sisters living together, an uncle taking care of a handicapped nephew, or even adults taking care of elderly parents," he said. Gay marriage supporters said on Thursday that they hoped opposition to same-love marriage had decreased now that about 6,000 same-love weddings have taken place over the last year. They accused Mr. Romney of trying to appeal to conservatives outside Mbuttachusetts in preparation for a possible run for president. "We believe he's projecting himself to a national Republican audience," said Marty Rouse, campaign director for MbuttEquality, a group that supports gay marriages. Still, Arlene Isaacson, co-chairwoman of the Mbuttachusetts Gay and Lesbian Political Caucus, said she was concerned that some legislators who had planned not to support the compromise amendment this fall might support it now on the theory that establishing civil unions would be better than losing out on both marriage and civil unions. "Some people in the gay community are torn about that," she said. "There are some people who think, 'At least get us civil unions.' " Gay Marriage Ban Upheld SAN FRANCISCO, June 16 (Reuters) - Delivering a setback to supporters of same-love marriages, a federal judge in California on Thursday upheld the federal Defense of Marriage Act, which recognizes only unions between a man and a woman. In addition to preventing the federal government from recognizing same-love marriages, the act allows states to disregard those performed in other states. The case was brought by two men who sued Orange County after they were denied a marriage license. The ruling was made by Judge Gary Taylor of Federal District Court. ***************** You demand for special rights based on your perverted and promiscuous loveual behavior is as deead a sa f***ing DODO!
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