Yes, 5,000 years of history where women were nothing more than property to be exchanged for power and money. The idea of marriage for love is a fairy new advent that expedited the downfall of traditional marriage that you so love.
Things change. We no longer walk, from village to village, we no longer use horses to travel long distances, our cars no longer have cranks. We have pluming and electricity. The US no longer sanctions the ownership of humans.
Marriage has changed and will continue to change. I married my wife at a B&B in S Texas with a JP. That was probably quite rare 40 or 50 years ago. My parents got married by a JP and were married for 57 years till my mom passed away.
This is all immaterial to the issue at hand which is the law. The 14th amendment states quite clearly that laws must apply equally to all. Marriage endured the changes over the past 5,000 years and there is nothing to support the silly notion that allowing same sex marriage will change the sanctity (sorry, I still have a hard time keeping a straight face with that word) of marriage.
Your crying about the demise of marriage is the same tired argument that was used when inter-racial marriages were allowed, blacks and women were allowed in the military, women were allowed to be in law enforcement, basically every change that made the white male property owner share their sand box with the other children.
And again with the animals. Do you have an animal fetish we are not aware of? Ewes and moose (and all animals) do not have the legal right to consent. Why do you always resort to animal statements? Is your argument that weak?
How in your world does a medical exemption equal prejudice?
prejudice
prej·u·dice
[prej-uh-dis[/size]
] Show IPA noun, [/size]verb,[/size]prej·u·diced, prej·u·dic·ing.
noun[/size]
1.
an unfavorable opinion or feeling formed beforehand or withoutknowledge, thought, or
reason.
2.
any preconceived opinion or feeling, either favorable orunfavorable.
3.
unreasonable feelings, opinions, or attitudes, especially of ahostile
nature, regarding a
racial, religious, or national group.
4.
such attitudes considered collectively:
The war against prejudiceis never-ending.
5.
damage or injury; detriment:
a law that operated to the prejudiceof the majority.