SAN FRANCISCO – A year after the state Supreme Court entertained arguments on extending marriage to gay couples, many of the same lawyers will be back before the same justices this week arguing why California's voter-appproved ban on same-sex marriage should stand or fall.

The passage of Proposition 8 last November changed the state constitution to prohibit gay marriage and trumped the high court's decision as few months earlier to legalize it. But the ballot measure was appealed and the justices on Thursday are getting the final word on whether marriage is an institution that must accommodate two women or two men.

The debate will be framed by not only the gay and lesbian couples who see their struggle as the modern equivalent of prohibitions on interracial marriage, but the 7 million citizens who rejected that comparison in an $83 million election.

The stakes are high — for the 18,000 couples who married while same-sex weddings were legal, for gay marriage opponents who object on religious grounds and for others who are deeply divided on the issue. And whatever the court decides is likely to have ramifications not only for millions of Californians but also for other states grappling over gay marriage. More here.

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The stakes are more than just 18,000 couples or for other states considering a similar bill: Discrimation based upon religious tenets - don't be fooled by anyone who says that this isn't a religious issue - has trickle down effects that impact the size of the local talent pool as well as the pool of talent willing to relocate to an area.

It's not as if California is doing well at attracting companies and/or building new business...
Excellent point(s) Steve - once again - you "get" it!

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