Do the states that prohibit marriage between first cousins recognize the marriage of cousins when performed in a state that does allow this?
For example (and states used for example are based on my quickie check of the marriage cousin laws), if cousins legally married in say, Texas, were to move to Iowa, would their marriage be recognized as legal?
The amendment requires the State of California to recognize only marriages between one man and one woman. Existing gay/same-sex marriages may continue to exist in some metaphysical way, but would have no legal effect in California – unless someone has a sneaky way to read that amendment that’s not obvious in the language.
I wonder if that last poll showing Arizona in play woke the sleeping giant? I don’t like the result, but I also know the issue would have been back in 2010. As happy as I am tonight, I also know there will be a backlash. Tonight is the Dems payback for 1994.
This really could be a bittersweet day. I’m absolutely incredulous (in a GREAT way) that Obama won, but if Prop 8 passes it will definitely make me sad. As an historian, the whole idea of the “sanctity” of marriage is laughable at best. I basically view anti-gay marriage along the same lines as being anti-mixed race marriage (which they said would destroy the fundamentals of our country’s morality, sound familiar?) or being against women voting (which they said would destroy the fundamentals of our country’s morality, seeing a pattern?) It would pain me quite deeply to see my beloved state fall to bigotry.