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Overreacting to Obama’s ‘evolution’

President has neither proposed nor promised any legislation, but that hasn’t stopped America from going nuts

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Not to mention Virginia, Ohio, Pennsylvania and several other states Obama needs to be re-elected.  Some 31 states have rejected gay marriage at the ballot box, and doubtless more will follow if given the chance. So when 67 percent of voters asked in a recent CBS News/New York Times poll say they think Obama changed his stance “mostly for political reasons,” I’m inclined to say “Really? I thought the man could count.”

Of course not everybody’s as obsessed with the issue, as, say, Rick Santorum, who has expressed fears that letting Uncle Ted make an honest man of his special friend Arnold would lead to men marrying dogs. It’s certainly not necessary to credit the 52 percent of Republicans who say Obama’s new position makes them less likely to vote for him. As if.

Nor do I believe that very many African-American voters will support Mitt Romney because of some Bronze Age dictate their preacher drags out of Deuteronomy. So there’s no telling how the issue will play come November, although my instinct is to say that for once, former GOP presidential candidate Gary Bauer could be right.

“I think the president this past week took six or seven states he carried in 2008, and put them in play with this one ill-conceived position that he’s taken,” Bauer said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

This makes it all the more puzzling why proponents, emphatically including the White House, have failed to frame gay marriage primarily as an issue of equal justice under law.

Marriage can be two things in our society: a religious ceremony and a legal contract between two people to share their lives. Nobody thinks churches can or should be made to recognize unions contrary to their teachings — although you’d be amazed how many people are confused on this point.

Neither, however, do Catholic churches, for example, get (or seek) to invalidate Jewish weddings on theological grounds.

So why should they get to determine how Uncle Ted and Arnold choose to live their lives? How is that their business?

Or yours?

“It’s time to say what is at stake here,” writes Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick: “true equality, full citizenship for everyone, basic human dignity and, yes, a fundamental right.”

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