What comes next? Are we better off today than we were decades ago?
We ear this language more often; Do not judge, and you will not be judged. Love your neighbors as you Love yourself, we all know the passage and with kindness, and good attitude, we can all practiced to bring people together, but in society, and because we live in society, we have to play by certain rules, and with the power of understanding each others, your right should and must stop where my right begin or we will start hurting each other lovely neighbor right. In this case, the right for gays and lesbian people to be married could be okay if it were more private rather than public....
What will be our tomorrow when Zoophilian; Yes a say Zoophilians will ask for their right in the name of Love, to do, and to have? What will be our position in this case? Could we be indifferent and argue with them? What we be our argumentation when they started using the same statement gay used to make their cases? I can not wait to see the Supreme Court ruling......
We can be all powerful and FREE to do everything as long as our individual freedom does not put our Countries, our people and our believed in restriction. \
Just think about it and no matter how educated, smart and scientists, we are or became, we still ask the question who made us and for what purpose? Until then, we have to be careful of the way to conduct our SOCIETY.
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Ruth Bader Ginsburg's history as a champion of gay rights said "I think that as more and more people came out and said that this is who I am, the rest of us recognized that they are one of us"
It’s official: gay marriage is now a Constitutional right everywhere in America, thanks to the Supreme Court’s landmark ruling in theObergefell v. Hodges case on Friday. While there was a majority decision of 5-4, there is one justice who has stood out above the rest as a steadfast and fierce supporter of marriage equality, and you might know her as the Notorious RBG. Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s support of gay marriage has been crucial, from her personal opinion of the American public’s shifting attitude to April’s oral arguments and, ultimately, the historical decision that says anyone in any state can marry the person they love. Justices Anthony Kennedy, Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor, and Elena Kagan joined Ginsburg in agreeing that gay couples should be free to marry in all 50 states.