Civil rights to marriage.

Essay by devious_youthCollege, UndergraduateA, October 2005

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Marriage is a personal issue between any two people, and they are also responsible for the outcomes which may affect their future. In "Veto the Future"; the author believes the sanctity of marriage should be upheld only by the two people who enter it. The author references the issue over marriage to Britney Spear's "55-hour Las Vegas affair." It comes to show there are many flaws within the straight couple's sanction of marriage, and proves that gay marriage affairs can perform the same customs and practices as any straight couple. If yet, any better? Gay marriage does not differ from straight marriage; they are both a process in which both people are in the same pursuit for happiness. Both sides are capable of performing the same actions when it comes to marriages: many newlyweds tend to be nervous, worry about their future together, the fear of family not accepting their spouse, and many more common fears--this shows that gay marriages can perform the same institutions as any successful straight-coupled marriage.

Gay marriage has always been a personal issue between two people and should not be interfered by any laws.

Marriage has been a standing law for many years, though many people fear changing it will cause backlashes nationwide. In "For Better or Worse", Governor Schwarzenegger has given the authority to the public to rule over the issue of gay marriage. He stands by the majorities vote in 2000 and strictly enforces the law by preventing any obstacles that attempts to overturn it. The governor is also assisted by President Bush who believes marriage is strictly between two people of the same sex; in 2004 President Bush called to ban same-sex marriage permanently. The president acknowledges many interests groups trying to overturn this "standing law", and to prevent major backlashes,