They are not going to have it, and you and all the other lefts, gays and atheists and politicians are not going to force it on them.
Guess what, buster?
Loving, who was white, and Mildred Jeter, who is black, found something they felt crossed racial boundaries. They got married in 1958. Their joy was short-lived, however. After returning home to Virginia from their marriage in Washington, they were arrested and jailed under an anti-miscegenation law that prohibited interracial marriages.
Nine years later, the Supreme Court overruled Virginia's law, under which the court ordered them not to reside in Virginia for 25 years.
"Loving v. Virginia didn't just happen overnight. People had to fight for it," said Evan Wolfson, executive director of Freedom to Marry. "Some said it was too soon, that it was against God's will, that it was impractical, that it just wasn't worth it. Fortunately, couples and advocates spoke up and our country changed."
From
Page Not Found - Axcess News.
In 1967, when
Loving came before the Supreme Court, 16 states
still had miscegenation laws on the books.
A third of the country!
These laws regulated sexual relations between the "races" too.
Sound familiar?
I got news for you, buddy.
You, and your kind, ain't got no say in who parades, nor where they parade. And someday,
someday sooner than you think, you, and your kind, ain't gonna have no say in gay marriage neither!