Against Amendment one Nc
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On May 8th, voters at the polls for the presidential Republican primary will see a referendum on their ballot for an amendment to the North Carolina constitution. You will have the option to vote for or against this amendment, and the text will read, “Constitutional amendment to provide that marriage between one man and one woman is the only domestic legal union that shall be valid or recognized by this state.” I implore you to disregard prejudice and partisanship and vote against Amendment One.
I would like to make one thing absolutely clear: you do not have to support same sex marriage to vote against this amendment. Same sex marriage is already illegal in North Carolina, but Amendment One will ban civil unions and take away domestic partnership benefits offered by several local governments in North Carolina, including Durham and Chapel Hill. According to the Huffington Post and Equality NC, the amendment could create “legal chaos” that could take away health coverage from children of unmarried parents, whether gay or straight, and threaten visitation and child custody rights for unmarried couples and the right of one unmarried partner to make emergency medical and financial decisions for the other.
Amendment One also spells bad news for women; in Ohio, a similar amendment with a limited definition of “legal union” was used in court to argue that unmarried women were no longer protected by domestic violence statutes, endangering women and children until the Ohio Supreme Court threw out that defense three years after the amendment was passed.
In the cases of childrens health care and domestic violence, your views on gay marriage should not decide whether rights are taken away from children and women who undoubtedly deserve them.
Amendment One is essentially a giant red flag for businesses looking to move to North Carolina. Businesses with progressive anti-discrimination policies and a diverse demographic of employees could very well be off-put by this law and take their money to another states economy. Facebook co-founder and North Carolinian Chris Hughes stated, “The amendment would effectively show that his state does not welcome the diverse workforce that any state needs to compete in the international marketplacethe next Facebook, Apple, or Google could be created by another North Carolinian, so be mindful of how you treat them and their families.”
Finally, if you are religiously opposed to gay marriage, consider this. Another first amendment–the First Amendment to the United States Constitution–guarantees that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” Denying people legal rights based on your religious belief is a mockery of the principles upon which this country was founded. Besides, Christian