QUOTE(jenn3539 @ Nov 11 2006, 04:46 PM)

I voted "yes but don't call it marriage". Only because I think churches/places of religious worship should be in charge of the marriage business, and they should be able to decide whether or not they want to allow gay marriages. I would be perfectly happy if my "marriage" was instead called a "civil union", doesn't make a difference to me. My marriage doesn't have religious meaning for me. If those who are religious want to protect the definition of marriage, then by all means, let it be protected. People should be free to choose religious communities that prohibit gay marriage if they want.
Why do you think religious leaders should "be in charge of the marriage business"? Do you believe that marriage is a "business"?
QUOTE(lal_brandow @ Nov 11 2006, 05:39 PM)

marriage is a religious term and that should be the end of it. there is no reason why only gay couples should be able to get a civil union though. i would like one! I am not religious and would even go so far to say I am an atheist. why should I have to get *married*?
i am curious if opposite-sex couples would be able to apply for civil union licenses in states that approve or would we be turned away because we are not same-sex?
How do you figure "marriage" to be a religious term?
From the OED:
[< Anglo-Norman and Old French, Middle French, French mariage (1135 in sense 1, c1165 in sense 3, 1588 in sense 5a, 1643 in sense 2, 1840 in sense 5b, but already in 1534 used to denote a card game) < marier MARRY v. + -age -AGE. The English word has evidently been apprehended from the outset as though a derivative of MARRY v., as suggested by the much earlier attestation in English in sense 2 than in French. Cf. Old Occitan maridatge (13th cent.), Italian maritaggio (13th cent.), Spanish maridaje (early 17th cent.); Portuguese has a different formation, maridança (15th cent.).
With senses 3 and 6 cf. also MARITAGE n.
In current usage, MARRIAGE n. and WEDDING n. are both applied to the marriage ceremony and attendant festivities (sense 2b below), though the present word is generally restricted to more formal registers (except in Scots and Indian English). Note, however, that WEDDING n. is not applied to the state of matrimony (sense 1), so that the two nouns are sometimes used contrastively, e.g.:
1992 D. MADDEN Remembering Light & Stone viii. 79 It was like taking a wedding at face value and confusing it with the marriage to come.
Compounds containing MARRIAGE n. in the sense ‘nuptials’ (e.g. marriage bell, day, dress, etc.) are still attested, though more rarely than corresponding compounds in WEDDING n. Cf. WED v., MARRY v., and note s.v.]
I. Simple uses.
1. a. The condition of being a husband or wife; the relation between persons married to each other; matrimony.
The term is now sometimes used with reference to long-term relationships between partners of the same sex.
b. in marriage: in or into wedlock (now arch.). to give (also conjoin, join, take) in (also to, into) marriage: to give (join, etc.) as husband or wife. but marriage: unmarried (Sc. Obs.).
c. A vow or contract of marriage. Chiefly in to break (also keep) one's marriage. Obs.
d. A particular instance of matrimony between a husband and wife; a matrimonial alliance.
e. With modifying word, as group, communal, etc.: a system understood to exist in some cultures, religious groups, etc., by which each of the men in a small community is regarded as married to each of the women. Cf. plural marriage s.v. PLURAL a.
2. a. The action, or an act, of getting married; the procedure by which two people become husband and wife.
b. A wedding ceremony; wedding festivities. Now chiefly Sc. and S. Asian.
c. In phrases denoting the means or custom by which a spouse is acquired, as marriage by capture, marriage by exchange, marriage by purchase.
3. A dowry (in quot. 1465, that given by a father for his son). Cf. MARITAGE n. 2. Obs.
4. A person viewed as a prospective husband or wife; a (good or bad) match. Also: a spouse (rare). Obs.
5. fig. and in extended use. a. An intimate union; a merging or blending of two things.
b. Cards. In bezique, pinochle, and related games: the holding of a king and queen of the same suit in a hand, which scores points when declared. Cf. MARRY v. 11.
c. (An act of) industrial or commercial union; a merger.
d. An antique assembled from components differing in provenance, date, etc.; the assembling of such an object. Cf. MARRIED a. 2c.
6. Feudal Law. = MARITAGE n. 3. Obs. (hist. in later use).