One certainly has the prerogative to think that way, but it is illegal in some countries to discriminate against any group of people because of their gender, race, background, creed, ethnicity or sexual orientation.
Opposing gay rights would be synonymous with opposing human rights. This is not morally acceptable, but people definitely have the right to hate others.
Natural rights are rights that EVERYONE IS BORN WITH and that CANNOT be taken away, no matter what! They include LIFE, LIBERTY, AND PROPERTY.
Some of the issues that the Religious Right rejected were women's liberation, homosexuality, and abortion.
They do support gay rights :)
If you are asking if gay rights are of Christian origin, the answer is no. In fact, one of the main reasons gay people are fighting for equality is because of Christianity.
The difference is that most of the opposition to gay rights believes being gay is a choice (and a bad one at that). No one in the racial civil rights era believed being Black was a choice.
He supports it: "I do believe in the rights of gay people to be married. I don't believe that you can say 'change' with one hand and say, 'But yeah, change only for a certain few.'"
gay partners in Alabama have no rights as a couple, but may have some rights as a parent if they legally adopted their children or if the children are biological to one partner.
There is only one goal: equality
There's no such thing as a gay law. But if you are referring to the laws that support discrimination against gay people, they are changing. In the few decades since 1969 (when gay rights first hit mainstream attention), gay people have made many significant advances, including:The right to serve in the military without hidingThe right to marry in 14 states (as of 2013)The right to adopt children in several statesThe right to walk down the street without getting physically assaulted (we are still working on this one)
Barrack Obama is in support of Gay Rights and Gay Marriage. He admitted this and for The Sun Newspaper and also in a video for The It's Get Better Project. Barrack says that he believes everyone is equal and two men or women who love each other have the right to equality and marriage; no one should deny them love.
Your right one.
Yes, the one to the right is, but not the left one.