States vary in the laws that they chose to have or not to have. In the majority of states: Alabama, Arizona, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Maine, Minnesota, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and West Virginia (human rights campaign). "Conservative religious groups condemned the 2003 U.S. Supreme court decision as immoral, and by early in the twenty-first century, 37 states and the federal government had passed a "Defense of Marriage Act", which defined marriage as between "a man and a woman," and barred recognition of same-sex marriage from other states (Thomas, 43). Only one state allows same-sex marriage, and there is a reason for that! Not just anyone can get married. "You cannot marry if you 're already married, you cannot marry a close relative, an adult cannot marry a child, you cannot marry your pet, and you cannot marry someone of the same sex" (Stanton, 3). No human society has ever let the same sex marry. There are several things you have to consider when you let a same-sex couple get married, are they going to have children? What are they going to
Cited: hea, John, John Wilson. " 'Gay Marriage ' and homosexuality: some medical comments" Lifesite (February, 2005). Stanton, Glenn T. "Is Marriage in Jeopardy?" Focus on the Family (2003). 1 Nov. 2005 "Statewide Marriage Laws" Chart. Human Rights Campaign April 2005. 1 Nov. 2005 "Statistics" Alternatives to Marriage. 2004. 2 Nov. 2005 Thomas, Evan. "The War Over Gay Marriage" Newsweek, July 7, 2003:39-45. 1 Nov. 2003. Thompson, William E., Joseph V. Hickey. Society in Focus. United States: Pearson Education Inc., 2002.