Pretty much as expected:
California high court upholds same-sex marriage ban. With the caveat that the people who got married while it was legal will remain married. So there's a bright side to it. But it's a pity that the judges couldn't bring themselves to say that the marriage ban is discriminatory and, well, wrong.
I am heartened, however, by
Dan Savage's observations on the issue in his blog.In 2000 California voters approved a law banning same-sex marriage. It was a ballot initiative, like Prop 8, but just a law, not a constitutional amendment. And it was that law, Prop 22, that the CA Supremes struck down in 2008, in their historic ruling legalizing same-sex marriage. And voters in 2000 approved Prop 22 in by a nearly 22-point margin. And eight years later the same voters would approved Prop 8 by four points. That's an 18-point shift in favor of marriage equality in just eight years. That's extraordinary progress. A loss is still a loss, and a loss sucks, but the trend is so strongly in our favor that we cannot lose hope. The anti-gay bigots know that they're losing this debate, and it's why they're so hot to amend state constitutions now, while they still can, while they can still count on the votes of the old, the bigoted, and the easily manipulated. But they are losing and they know it.
So there's that.