I honestly think that if you have a private chapel or whatnot, you can decide whether to let gay couples get married there. If they're against it and you're a gay couple, why would you want to go get married at a place that doesn't like you anyhow? Take your business to the people who don't mind.
They shouldn't have had to settle, but people deciding not to associate with them afterwards? Well, that's the other side of the coin, you reap what you sow.
We've made bigger strides on homosexual equality than I thought we'd see in decades, I can see where the sense of whiplash came from. In 10 years it went from a distinct minority of Americans to a full majority. But that's the way the cookie crumbles.
Evangelics were always sold a bag of bad goods by the Republicans. At a state level they might push evangelical policies but at the national level they were always just a given constituency they could ignore aside from lip service. And they've always had this weird persecution complex, even when they were outright running the show for years. It's strange.
They shouldn't have had to settle, but people deciding not to associate with them afterwards? Well, that's the other side of the coin, you reap what you sow.
We've made bigger strides on homosexual equality than I thought we'd see in decades, I can see where the sense of whiplash came from. In 10 years it went from a distinct minority of Americans to a full majority. But that's the way the cookie crumbles.
Evangelics were always sold a bag of bad goods by the Republicans. At a state level they might push evangelical policies but at the national level they were always just a given constituency they could ignore aside from lip service. And they've always had this weird persecution complex, even when they were outright running the show for years. It's strange.