@tom_g Also, the great thing about progressive states like Massachusetts (where I live) is that people who don’t want to marry someone of the same sex don’t have to. That goes without being said. However, if you are not comfortable or agree with same-sex marriages you might want to go where you will not see them. If you don’t want to be on a walk with your kids and see two men making out on a park bench with PDA, even though you don’t have to be gay to live there, you would be exposed and that is why some would choose to go where they did not have to deal with it.
@zenvelo*But since California approved Proposition 8, I don’t see a lot of anti-same sex marriage people moving here.* Prop 8 is somehow not settle yet. California has enough toxic stuff to keep newbies out, the stifling environmental stuff, inept leadership, etc.
@JLeslie As far as gay marriage, if eventually there is some sort of federal law or ruling making it egal, then even the states who are against it will have to conform, much like they had to let the black kids into the schools, and let the black men sit at the lunch counter. The Black kid gets rough up in the bathroom and the Black man has peas flicked at him behind his back. Being allowed doesn’t equal acceptance.
@Trillian Christianity has a mistaken view against same sex attraction, mostly due to a mis-translation and compounded by an inability and/or unwillingness to question and research further. If one takes that off face value, if you were no of God, or any religion, you could not or would not have any aversion behind gays. I would think that some who don’t care for gay living, or to be around, it care just as less for being around anything that has to do with God.