<<So yet again, Tee is reinforcing the point that it's not the "equal rights under the law" angle he wants to focus on, it's the stigma of not being accepted as perfectly normal reasonable sexual choices. >>
Well, I guess what you're missing is this: when the stigma is applied by the late Rev. Jerry Falwell or by Fox News, it's no harm, no foul; when it's applied by the U.S. government, it is unconstitutional because they're not supposed to be making those kind of distinctions.
You are really making the same comment that could have been made of segregated schools if they were in fact identical to one another; but the Supreme Court dealt with that - - when the stigma is applied by the state, then it's unconstitutional. Even if the actual separate facilities provided had been exact clones of one another.
<<And one of the best ways to deal with that is to make everyone else see it as normal . . . >>
That's wrong, too. How can the government, merely by legalizing gay marriage, make a crazed bigot suddenly believe that homosexuality has become normal and wholesome? You are attributing far too much power to the U.S. government. The gay population doesn't even have the right to be regarded as normal in the general population; the general population will regard gays as it regards them and there is no law present or future that can alter that POV. But the gay population DOES have the right to be OFFICIALLY regarded as the exact same class of person as heteros by the state.
<< . . . regardless of their religions beliefs, by obligating the term marriage be applied.>>
That's wrong, too. Just because the state allows the marriage to proceed, this does not mean that any religious leader or group has to accept it. A gay married couple would still be denounced by the crazies from their pulpits, regardless of the fact that the government allows them to marry: Adam and Steve are livin' in sin. They's no way they could be married in the eyes of God. They goin straight to Hail. God says it. I believe it. That settles it!
<<So for Tee, it's never been about legal rights, it's about telling others how they're to view something, in this case, homosexuality, as he sees fit.>>
It's about the legal right to get married. It's for the abolition of any statute that defines marriage in a way that two gays can't get married to each other and acquire married status. Not civil union status but married status. OF COURSE that's abut legal rights. You have confused the benefits of legal rights with the legal rights themselves - - you say, IF they have civil union, it's the same for them as if married, the same matrimonial property rights, the same immunity from the testimony of a spouse, etc. So the benefits that flow from the matrimonial relationship can be obtained in equal measure from the civil union relationship. But Brad has the right to marry Angelina and Adam does NOT have the right to marry Steve. So you have UNEQUAL RIGHTS. One right for Brad, no such right for Steve. You happen to have it totally wrong: not only IS it about legal rights, it is ONLY about legal rights.
And of course it is not telling anyone how to view something - - anyone who wants to believe gay marriage in general or in particular is a sham, a fraud and a travesty is free to continue believing that. Only the government will not be making that distinction any longer. Same with the Civil Rights Act - - it permits equal rights for all, but it does not tell ANYBODY, Hey from now on think of the Negro as a human being, not as a sub-human animal. You can think of the black any way you like and the government can't do jack-shit about it, but the GOVERNMENT cannot officially assign them to COLORED drinking fountains only.
Glad we got that cleared up