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a person's "race" is something they acquire by the accident of their birth, while opinions vary as to how someone becomes gay. Being gay is also neither favored by most of the established religions, nor by natural selection. I think the questions of whether being gay is a choice, and whether being gay is immoral, are the questions that make it different from "race" or gender.
Personally I think these questions are beside the point, and that the government should not legislate on questions of morality per se. Thus, whether bisexuality is moral or not is a personal decision, and people should decide for themselves whether it is something they should pursue.
But our government has a long history of legislation preventing one person from being subject to another person's morality: conscientious objection, for instance, and freedom of religion, and separation of church and state. All of these are examples of treating each citizen as if their personal beliefs deserve equal respect--so long as they don't involve actively trying to destroy the public peace. Suicide disrupts the public peace, and is unlawful. Believing that you are God and therefore have the right to choose to kill someone destroys the public peace, and therefore is unlawful. I don't see that being openly gay or living in a gay marriage disrupts the public peace in any way, so I don't see why it should be unlawful. Denying someone civil rights on the basis of their personal beliefs, however, clearly disrupts the public peace, and should be unlawful.
A religious fundamentalist, whether Christian or Muslim or Jewish or otherwise, does not accept the view that there is more than one view of the world that deserves to be respected; that is the essence of fundamentalism. Thus, they have no problem with legislating morality--so long as it is their morality. Religious fundamentalism is contrary to the liberal philosophy that underlies our democracy (Rawls and others have called it "pluralism", I believe), as expressed in the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the amendments to the Constitution. It can therefore be said to be un-American, in the most meaningful sense of the word.
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