Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Who knew equal medical treatment is part of the radical gay agenda?

"This decision may have a big impact on California's Proposition 8, the initiative to protect traditional marriage, as voters begin to recognize the radical agenda of our opposition," Robert Tyler, general counsel for Advocates for Faith and Freedom, a conservative non-profit law firm supporting the doctors, said in a prepared statement.


More beefing about same-sex marriage?

Nope.

It's doctors who only want to grant fertility treatment to married women. The California Supreme Court disagreed- unanimously.

Before any readers gets the urge to go all judicial activist about the decision, read it. It's in plain English and the reasoning is both clear and narrowly applied to the facts of the case at hand.

It would, however, be interesting to see a case like this go to trial, in order to ask the doctors if they favor marriage equality as a remedy to their religious objection to treating unmarried women.

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