found that two-thirds of unmarried same-sex couples would tie the knot if they could."
Hey, wait a minute. Just the other day, I read this:
One in five same-sex couples say they are married, census figures showSame-sex couples more willing to reveal relationships in census, figures show
By Carol Morello, Published: September 27
One in five of the nation’s 646,000 same-sex couples consider themselves married, according to census figures released Tuesday showing a sharp rise in the number of gay people willing to identify themselves as couples.
....
Peter Sprigg, a senior fellow for policy studies at the Family Research Council, said the census figures show that the number of gay couples seeking to get married is small. He pointed to a census analysis that 42 percent of same-sex couples living in states where gay marriage is legal actually wed. In comparison, there are 54 million heterosexual married couples and 8 million couples who live together but are not wed.
"Even where it’s legalized, most same-sex couples living together do not choose to marry,” Sprigg said. “To my mind, this calls into question whether most homosexuals even want to participate in the institution of marriage.”
You can see the problem. It cannot simultaneously be true that "research presented as evidence in the trial found that two-thirds of unmarried same-sex couples would tie the knot if they could," and that "Even where it’s legalized, most same-sex couples living together do not choose to marry.” It's either one, or it's the other.
So which statement was a lie? Was the statement to the court a lie, or was the statement to the
Washington Post reporter a lie?