CBS4 Miami
Gay Civil Rights Protests Throughout South
Florida
"National Day of Protest" Of Gay
Marriage Bans
By JOAN MURRAY
November 15, 2008
MIAMI (CBS4) ―
The backlash against states on Election Day which supported
amendments that propose limits on same-sex marriage roils the gay community and
supporters as protests took to the streets Saturday, from Miami Beach to San
Francisco.
Hundreds of protesters turned out Saturday in Fort Lauderdale
and Miami Beach, calling for Amendment 2 to be repealed.
The Amendment,
passed on November 4, bans gay marriage in Florida. The amendment passed with
more than 62 percent support. Sixty percent support was required for the
amendment to become part of the Florida Constitution. Similar legislation was
passed in California, Arkansas, and Arizona; there were similar protests
nationwide.
In Florida, the passage of the amendment would allow the
definition of marriage to be construed as the union of one man and one woman,
and would not recognize any other legal pairing. Though Florida already has such
a state law, supporters say the law could be overturned, as it was recently in
Connecticut, or be changed by the state legislature.
"I have gay friends
and relatives and I want them to have the life they want," Miami protester David
Huck told CBS 4 News. Huck says he has a daughter who is a lesbian.
Angie
Villanueva, who also carried a sign in Miami Beach, said "It's very important
gay people not be treated as second class citizens."
"We're not ready to
get married but we want to be able to when we want to," explained two women who
participated in the massive Fort Lauderdale rally.
Dozens of protesters
carried a rainbow banner throughout the streets of the city to underscore the
plight of gay men and women.
"We've got to get this amendment repealed,"
said Tom Johnson of Hollywood. "Shame on number 2."
People against the
constitutional change contend that the proposal will ban legal recognition and
benefits for all unmarried couples, whether straight or gay. It could also
adversely affect the state's large senior population, many of whom form domestic
partnerships rather than remarry and risk losing benefits from previous
marriages.
Pointing to the 2000 Census figures, some argue that Amendment
2 could affect 360,000 Florida residents, about 90 percent of whom are
heterosexual.
Depending on
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