I don’t see much merit in amending the state Constitution to ban same-sex marriage, as the state Senate voted 30 to 10 yesterday to do, but after reading Tyler Whitney’s account in this morning’s Richmond Times-Dispatch, I’m almost ready to endorse the darn thing out of pure contrariness.
Said Sen. Mamie Locke, D-Hampton: “It is xenophobia that led to the rise of Nazism in Germany and fascism in Italy. It is homophobia that brings us to this place in time today.”
Said Janet D. Howell, D-Reston: The Nazis ordered the Jews in concentration camps to wear yellow patches and gays to wear pink patches. “In Virginia today, we do not require pink triangles. We stigmatize and marginalize people in other ways, as we go down a path that we don’t know where it will end.”
In other words, passing an amendment that would deny gays the right to marry — a right that they’ve never possessed in any culture since the dawn of time — is the moral equivalent of fascism and Nazism, and only a short slide down the slippery slope to tossing gays into concentration camps. I’m sorry, that’s not an argument. It’s name calling.
Far more persuasive was Sen. Richard L. Saslaw, D-Fairfax: If senators were really interested in protecting marriage, they’d address the high rate of divorce. “It’s not what gay people are doing to marriage, it’s us.”

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