Government should forbid same sex marriages for academic track students

An Argument Against Gay Marriage: An Interview with Rick Santorum

The debate over homosexual marriage in the United States is a contentious one, and advocates on both sides endure to work rigid to make their voices heard. To explore the case against gay marriage, the Pew Forum has turned to Rick Santorum, a former U.S. senator from Pennsylvania and now a senior fellow at the Ethics and General Policy Center. Sen. Santorum is also the author of the book It Takes a Family: Conservatism and the Common Good, in which he makes the case for promoting families anchored by a married mother and father.

A counterargument explaining the case for gay marriage is made by Jonathan Rauch, a senior journalist at The National Journal.

Featuring:Rick Santorum, Senior Fellow, Ethics and Public Policy Center; Former U.S. Senator

Interviewer:David Masci, Senior Study Fellow, Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life

In this Q&A:Why oppose same-sex attracted marriage?

The &#;go-slow&#; approach

Child welfare

Christian values


Question & Answer

Gay rights advocates and others tell that

An Argument For Same-Sex Marriage: An Interview with Jonathan Rauch

The debate over queer marriage in the Combined States is a contentious one, and advocates on both sides continue to work hard to craft their voices heard. To explore the case for gay marriage, the Pew Forum has turned to Jonathan Rauch, a columnist at The National Journal and guest scholar at The Brookings Institution. Rauch, who is openly same-sex attracted, also authored the publication Gay Marriage: Why It Is Good for Gays, Good for Straights, and Good for America.

A counterargument explaining the case against same-sex marriage is made by Rick Santorum, a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center and a former U.S. senator.

Featuring: Jonathan Rauch, Senior Writer, TheNational Journal

Interviewer:David Masci, Senior Research Fellow, Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life

In this Q&A:Why same-sex marriage?

Opposition from social conservatives

Is there a slippery slope?

Strategies for legalization


Why is marriage &#; I&#;m sorry, why is lgbtq+ marriage good for America?

Well, you got the q

  • Public health implications of same-sexmarriage.

    PubMed

    Buffie, William C

    Significantly compromised health care delivery and adverse health outcomes are successfully documented for the sapphic, gay, bisexual, and trans (LGBT) community in the United States compared with the population at massive. LGBT individuals subject to societal prejudice in a heterosexist world also bear from the phenomenon acknowledged as "minority stress," with its attendant negative mental and physical health effects. Reports in the medical and social science literature suggest that legal and social recognition of same-sexmarriage has had positive effects on the health status of this at-risk society. Improved outcomes are to be expected because of the improved access to health care conferred by marriage benefits under federal or state law and as a result of attenuating the effects of institutionalized stigma on a sexual minority group.

  • Public Health Implications of Same-SexMarriage

    PubMed Central

    Significantly compromised health care delivery and adverse health outcomes are well documented for the les

    What the Same Sex Marriage Bill Does and Doesn't Do

    The U.S. Senate passed landmark legislation this week enshrining protections for equal sex and interracial marriages in federal law in a bipartisan vote that marked a dramatic turnaround on a once highly divisive issue.

    The Senate deed marks a major hurdle for the legislation, which President Biden has said he will autograph into law pending a vote in the House of Representatives.

    Leonore F. Carpenter, a Rutgers Rule School professor who has served as an LGBTQA rights attorney, explains what the Respect for Marriage Act accomplishes, and what is does not.

    What exactly does the Respect for Marriage Act undertake to protect same-sex marriage?

    The Operate does a few important things.

    First, it repeals the federal Defense of Marriage Act. That regulation was passed in , and it prohibited the federal government from recognizing same-sex marriages that had been validly entered into under a state’s law. It also gave the green delicate to states to refuse to recognize same-sex marriages from other states.

    Next, it prohibits states from refusing to