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:eyes: In Saskatchewan, the conservative Saskatchewan Party government is currently asking for a court opinion on whether they can pass legislation allowing marriage commissioners to refuse to perform marriages that go against their religious beliefs. Whatever the government's official line is, this is about same-sex marriage.
One of the arguments against this proposed legislation is that marriage commissioners are public servants, and therefore should be required to serve everyone equally. (Churches still have the right to choose who they want to do weddings for.) Firefighters and police officers don't have the legal right to refuse to protect you because they don't approve of your "lifestyle". And if you work in an ER, you can't decide "I'm not saving that guy's life because he's gay."
There's also the question of where to draw the line. Someone might have religious objections to performing marriage for divorced people, mixed race couples, or people who lived together or had kids before marrying.
I don't see the big deal about same-sex marriage. The term "gay lifestyle" tends to be associated with promiscuity, right? So if some gay couples are in committed enough relationships that they want to get married, don't freaking complain!
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