
Barack Obama Talks About Gay Marriage and
Immorality
Barack Obama appeared on CNN's Situation Room
yesterday where he talked to Wolf Blitzer about his view on gay marriage
and about what happened following the Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman
General Peter Pace's remarks that homosexuality is "immoral."
Just
after the incident both Hillary Clinton and Obama were criticized for
not immediately coming out against the General's remarks.
"I'm not sure that the story got out there properly. I mean, what
happened was I was leaving a firefighters' union meeting and trying to
get in my car and did not respond to a reporter's query at that point. I
wasn't responding to reporters period because I was trying to make a
vote. Subsequently I made it very clear. I don't think that gays and
lesbians are any more moral or immoral than heterosexuals and that I
think it is very important for us to reexamine the 'don't ask, don't
tell' policy because it's costing us millions of dollars in replacing
troops that by all accounts are actually doing a good job but are simply
being kicked out of the military because of their sexual orientation,"
Obama said about the Pace situation.
On gay marriage, Obama said, "Well, I think that marriage has a
religious connotation in this society, in our culture, that makes it
very difficult to disentangle from the civil aspects of marriage. And as
a consequence it would be extraordinarily difficult and distracting to
try to build a consensus around marriage for gays and lesbians. What we
can do is form civil unions that provide all the civil rights that
marriage entails to same sex couples. And that is something that I have
consistently been in favor of. And I think that the vast majority of
Americans don't want to see gay and lesbian couples discriminated
against, when it comes to hospital visitations and so on."
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