CitizenLink.com – Dec. 1, 2009
Washington, D.C., Council Approves Gay Marriage
By Nima Reza
The District of Columbia City Council today overwhelmingly approved a bill to legalize same-sex marriage. The council approved the Religious Freedom and Civil Marriage Equality Amendment Act of 2009 by a vote of 11-2. A second and final vote on the act is scheduled for Dec. 15. If it passes, it would be up for congressional review. D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty has promised to sign the legislation.
There are many problems with the bill:
* Christian adoption agencies would be potentially forced to place children with same-sex couples.
* Christian counselors may be forced to help homosexual couples strengthen their relationship.
* Photographers may be required to offer their services to gay weddings even if they morally object to the practice.
“In these, and many other ways,” Alan Wisdom, vice president of the Institute on Religion & Democracy, said, “the religious freedom of Christians and other people with traditional views about marriage, are very much trampled by this bill.”
© 2009 Focus on the Family Action, Inc.




December 1, 2009
Pro-homosexual politicians celebrate slippery-slope tactics, including “condom distribution” and “needle exchange,” that has brought them to the fake marriage agenda. These politicians have no regard for the health and security of homosexuals, as FRC points out below, because the only thing they can see before their glazed self-serving eyes is their own political agenda.
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Tony Perkins’ Washington Update – December 1, 2009
D.C. Council Proposes “Marriage”
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FRC’s Pierre Bynum and Peter Sprigg joined my friend, Bishop Harry Jackson, at the D.C. City Council meeting this morning, at which the Council voted overwhelmingly (11-2) to allow homosexual unions, inching the District closer to issuing same-sex “marriage” licenses by next year. Some Council members proudly recounted the various steps, from repeal of sodomy laws to adoption of domestic partnerships, which led to this day – unintentionally confirming “slippery slope” arguments against incremental “homosexual rights” legislation. Councilman Jack Evans even cited “condom distribution” and “needle exchange” among these pioneering policies – ironically demonstrating the very health risks which make homosexual conduct something to be discouraged, not celebrated. Final passage of the bill is scheduled for December 15, and Mayor Adrian Fenty has pledged to sign it. The legislation would then head to Congress, where House members would have 30 days to overturn it. While Congress considers its options, the coalition at Stand4MarriageDC is attacking the bill from another angle – the courtroom. Bishop Harry Jackson and his team have filed suit against the D.C. Board of Elections for blocking a ballot initiative on marriage.
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Considering the objections of the Catholic Church, the City Council will have to decide how much it’s willing to sacrifice to advance the homosexual community’s agenda. Unless the Council makes significant changes to the bill by adding religious exemptions, the Catholic Archdiocese of D.C. has said it will no longer contract with the city for certain services – particularly if its charities would be forced to extend employee benefits to same-sex “spouses.” Catholic Charities currently operates more than 60 programs for D.C.’s underprivileged. That translates to 68,000 people served each year – a third of which are homeless! As Ryan Messmore pointed out in a great op-ed in yesterday’s Examiner, Catholic Charities would be put in the position of violating the law or its faith. Still, none of this seems to matter to the City Council, which is more than willing to hurt anyone in its morally-relative path – including D.C.’s neediest.