July 8, 2010

Judge declares US gay-marriage ban is unconstitutional




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Judge declares US gay-marriage ban is unconstitutional

July 8, 2010 06:55 PM
A federal district court judge in Boston today struck down the 1996 federal law that defines marriage as a union exclusively between a man and a woman.
Judge Joseph L. Tauro ruled that the federal Defense of Marriage law violates the Constitutional right of married same-sex couples to equal protection under the law and upends the federal government’s long history of allowing states to set their own marriage laws.
"This court has determined that it is clearly within the authority of the Commonwealth to recognize same-sex marriages among its residents, and to afford those individuals in same-sex marriages any benefits, rights, and privileges to which they are entitled by virtue of their marital status," Tauro wrote. "The federal government, by enacting and enforcing DOMA, plainly encroaches upon the firmly entrenched province of the state."
Tauro drew on history in his ruling, writing that the states have set their own marriage since before the American Revolution and that marriage laws were considered "such an essential element of state power" that the subject was even broached at the time of the framing of the Constitution. Tauro noted that laws barring interracial marriage were once at least as contentious as the current battle over gay marriage.
“But even as the debate concerning interracial marriage waxed and waned throughout history, the federal government consistently yielded to marital status determinations established by the states,” Tauro wrote. “That says something. And this court is convinced that the federal government’s long history of acquiescence in this arena indicates that, indeed, the federal government traditionally regarded marital status determinations as the exclusive province of state government.”
Gay rights activists cheered the ruling, saying it affirmed that same-sex couples are entitled to the same federal spousal benefits and protections as other married couples.
The Boston-based group Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders had, in March 2009, brought one of two suits challenging the law, on behalf of seven married same-sex couples and three widowers from Massachusetts who contended that it violated their federal constitutional right to equal protection.
“Today the court simply affirmed that our country won’t tolerate second-class marriages,” said Mary Bonauto, a lawyer from the group who argued successfully in the 2003 Supreme Judicial Court case that first legalized same-sex marriage in Massachusetts. “This ruling will make a real difference for countless families in Massachusetts.”
Attorney General Martha Coakley, who brought the second suit challenging the law, also applauded the ruling. Her office had argued that the federal law, known as DOMA, violates the Constitution by interfering with the state’s authority to define and regulate the marital status of its residents.
Coakley’s office also contended that DOMA exceeds Congress’s authority because it requires Massachusetts to violate the constitutional rights of its residents by treating married same-sex couples differently from other married couples in order to receive federal funds for various programs.
“Today’s landmark decision is an important step toward achieving equality for all married couples in Massachusetts and assuring that all of our citizens enjoy the same rights and protections under our Constitution,” Coakley said in a statement. “It is unconstitutional for the federal government to discriminate, as it does because of DOMA’s restrictive definition of marriage. It is also unconstitutional for the federal government to decide who is married and to create a system of first- and second-class marriages.”
Opponents of same-sex marriage condemned the ruling. Kris Mineau, president of Massachusetts Family Institute called it “another blatant example of a judge playing legislator.”
“Same-sex marriage activists have tried time and time again to win public approval of their agenda, and they have failed each time,” Mineau said in a statement. “This is why their strategy is to force same-sex ‘marriage’ through judicial fiat, as they did here in Massachusetts and other states.”
He said he was “confident that an appeals court, and ultimately the Supreme Court, will uphold the government’s right to define marriage, strengthening and protecting children and families.”
The law was defended in court by the US Justice Department, even though President Obama supports DOMA’s repeal and has called the law discriminatory. In a hearing with Tauro in May, the Justice Department argued that Congress and President Clinton, who signed the law, had a legitimate interest in preserving marriage as a heterosexual institution.
Today, a Justice Department spokeswoman, Tracy Schmaler, declined to comment on Tauro’s ruling, saying in a statement, “We're reviewing the decision.”
Michael Levenson can be reached at mlevenson@globe.com.

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REWARD: Conviction of Anybody Using Cats & Dogs as Bait for Sharks


€1,000 (Euros)

For the first successful conviction of a fisherman using a dog or cat as shark bait and €200 for each conviction thereafter

dog with hook through noseDogs and cats are also involved in an assault on nature, this time as victims and as bait. On the French island of La Reunion in the Indian Ocean, fishermen have been using live dogs and cats as bait for sharks.
This practice is specifically outlawed by French law but the law, as in many places throughout the world, is ignored by fishing communities who apparently believe they are above the law.
The dogs and cats have hooks passed through their snouts or through the tendons in their legs and the hooks are attached to lines and rods. The hapless animals are then tossed into the water where their struggles attract sharks.
Sea Shepherd Conservation Society has sent a message to the police in La Reunion offering a reward of €1,000 (Euros) for the first successful conviction of a fisherman using a dog or cat as bait and €200 for each conviction thereafter.

The following letter was sent to the Chief of Police on La Reunion Island:
To: The Police
La Reunion Island
The international Sea Shepherd Conservation Society is offering a reward of 200 Euros to any police officer who successfully enforces the law prohibiting the use of dogs and cats as bait for the catching of sharks.
The Society is offering a reward of 1,000 Euros for the first conviction and 200 Euros for each conviction thereafter.
The reward will be paid upon the successful conviction of any person found guilty of using dogs or cats as bait in shark fishing as defined by the laws of France that specifically outlaw this practice.
Sea Shepherd Conservation Society wishes to advise all police captains that they may submit the names of officers who have arrested suspects for using dogs or cats as shark bait and that the reward will be paid directly to the officer or officers upon a successful conviction.
 small dog with hook in foot and leg small dog with hook in foot
La Sea Shepherd Conservation Society Internationale offrira une récompense de 200 Euros à tout officier de police qui renforcera de manière efficace la loi interdisant l' utilisation de chiens en tant qu' appât pour attrapper les requins.
La Sea Shepherd Conservation Society offrira une récompense de 1000 Euros pour la première inculpation et 200 Euros pour chaque suivante.
La récompense sera versée au terme de chaque inculpation réussie de toute personne reconnue coupable d'utilisation de chiens en tant qu'appât pour pêcher des requins. Comme il est clairement specifié par les lois de la France, cette pratique est absolument interdite.
La Sea Shepherd Conservation Society tient à informer tous les capitaines de police qu'il pourra s'avérer necessaire de fournir les noms des officiers
ayant arrêté les suspects responsables de l'utilisation de chiens en tant qu'appât à requins. La récompense sera versée directement à ou aux officiers responsables de l'inculpation réussie des dits suspects.
Sincèrement,
Captain Paul Watson
President
Sea Shepherd Conservation Society


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Anti-Gay Paranoia or Just Good Advice?


Anti-Gay Paranoia or Just Good Advice?

Anti-Gay Paranoia or Just Good Advice?
The Department of Defense is administering a survey where they hope to get the input of 400,000 servicemembers when it comes to the issue of repealing ‘Don’t Ask Don’t Tell’.  Sounds like a good idea right?  Out of those 400,000 there are bound to be more than a few gay ones right?  Perhaps this is an anonymous chance for those currently serving to let their voices be heard on the issue.  Perhaps not?
According to a report on Yahoo News, the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network is advising gay military members to not take the survey.
The Servicemembers Legal Defense Network said Thursday that troops could be accidentally exposed by answering the survey and that the Defense Department has not agreed to grant immunity should that happen.
However, the Pentagon is trying to assure servicemembers the survey is strictly confidential as it’s being administered by a third party not otherwise associated with the Pentagon.
According to the same report, Pentagon spokesperson Cynthia Smith stated:
“They [gay and lesbian service members] cannot be outed.”
Smith also said the questions included in the survey do not ask the respondent whether or not they are gay or lesbian, but rather about the participants overall military experience, their experience serving with those believed to be gay or lesbian and their overall thoughts on how repealing ‘Don’t Ask Don’t Tell’ may affect the overall functioning of the armed services.
However, SLDN has suspicions the information may leak.  According to Aubrey Sarvis, SLDN’s director:
“At this time SLDN cannot recommend that lesbian, gay, or bisexual service members participate in any survey being administered by the Department of Defense, the Pentagon Working Group, or any third-party contractors.”
So what are your thoughts, is it a ploy to ‘out’ soldiers or will the participants maintain anonymity? I suppose without a copy of the survey, it would difficult to know for sure.

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Cristiano Ronaldo is the Great Gay Hope


Cristiano Ronaldo is the Great Gay Hope

Cristiano Ronaldo is the Great Gay Hope
Many good looking, younger and apparently single male athletes and celebrities often go through the rumor mill as speculation about the possibility (or hope) they’re gay circulates like smoke in a glass room.  Soccer super-stud Cristiano Ronaldo is no exception to this rule, but as Celebrity Smack points out:
this pic, and that damn fine, pretty boy Cristiano is with, might tip your gay-dar just a bit.
We don’t have any proof he is gay, but he does support gay marriage and I’m sure he’d have plenty standing in line if he were to come out!
Read more at: Celebrity Smack!

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After Gov. Linda Lingle's Civil Unions Veto, Gay Groups Sue



After Gov. Linda Lingle's Civil Unions Veto, Gay Groups Sue

BY CARLOS SANTOSCOY 
PUBLISHED: JULY 08, 2010


Lambda Legal and the American Civil Liberties Union of Hawaii (ACLU)
shelved plans to sue the state in January after lawmakers revived –
and eventually approved – the civil unions bill. But with Lingle's veto,
the groups say they will proceed with their challenge.
“This was a sad surrender to political expediency that does not support
 business or family interests, but damages them,” Jennifer C. Pizer,
national marriage project director for Lambda Legal, said in a release.
“In caving in to a well-orchestrated disinformation campaign mounted
 by the bill's opponents, Governor Lingle has abandoned thousands of
Hawaii families who have needed this bill's protections for many years.”
Lambda Legal won a 1993 Hawaii Supreme Court case that struck down
a law that limited marriage to heterosexual couples. But in approving the
nation's first constitutional amendment that defines marriage as a
heterosexual union, voters overturned the decision in 1998.
The amendment leaves the door open for other forms of legal recognition
for gay and lesbian couples such as civil unions or domestic partnerships.
Eight years ago, while campaigning for governor, Lingle said she would not
 veto a bill that creates domestic partnerships for gay couples.
The Hawaii Legislature has considered a civil unions bill every year since 2001.
“We're obviously disappointed that Governor Lingle has, once again, used her power to deny the people of Hawaii their civil rights,” Laurie Temple, staff
attorney for the ACLU, said. “Luckily for the people of Hawaii, however, our constitution prevents discrimination based on sexual orientation. If the
governor won't honor her oath to uphold the constitution, the courts will.”

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Pentagon Begins Surveying Troops On DADT Policy


Pentagon Begins Surveying Troops On DADT Policy

BY CARLOS SANTOSCOY 
The Defense Department announced Wednesday that 400,000 servicemembers are being surveyed on its “Don't Ask, Don't Tell” policy.
The survey is part of the military's comprehensive review of the policy that bans gay troops from serving openly in the military.
The review was ordered by Defense Secretary Robert Gates and is expected to be completed by December 1. Army General Carter F. Ham, commander of the U.S. Army Europe, and Jen Johnson, the Pentagon's top lawyer, head the review panel.
“The voice of the servicemembers is still vitally important,” Ham told the military'sAmerican Forces Press Service.
The assessment will continue even as Congress debates whether to repeal the law. House members voted in favor of repeal in May, while senators are expected to take up the issue this month. The legislation, however, gives the military and President Obama final say on the specifics of repeal.
“This is draft legislation, it is not yet enacted into law,” Ham added, “and there are several hurdles yet to come.”
Half of the surveys were sent to active-duty personnel, and half were sent to reserve troops. Another 150,000 surveys will be mailed to military spouses shortly. Participants are directed to a secure website where they are asked to answer roughly 90 questions, including whether or not the ban should be lifted.
Ham also announced an online tool that allows gay and lesbian troops to anonymously comment on the policy.
“It is vitally important that servicemembers continue to be open and frank and totally honest with us in their feedback,” Ham said. “That certainly has been the case to date, whether it's been a large-group session or a small group or the online inbox.”

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Answering DADT Survey A Bad Idea For Gay Troops






Answering DADT Survey A Bad Idea For Gay Troops, SLDN Says

BY CARLOS SANTOSCOY 
PUBLISHED: JULY 08, 2010

The nation's largest group lobbying for repeal of “Don't Ask, Don't Tell” is advising gay troops not to answer a Pentagon survey on the policy.
The Servicemembers Legal Defense Network (SLDN) warned Thursday that gay and lesbian personnel could be accidentally outed by answering the survey, which could lead to a discharge.
“There is no guarantee of privacy,” the group said, “and [the] DoD has not agreed to provide immunity to service members whose privacy may be inadvertently violated or who inadvertently outs himself or herself.”
The Department of Defense announced Wednesday that 400,000 servicemembers will receive the survey that directs participants to a secure website where they are asked to answer roughly 90 questions, including whether or not the policy that bans openly gay service should be lifted.
Half of the surveys were sent to active-duty personnel, and half were sent to reserve troops. Another 150,000 surveys will be mailed to military spouses before the end of the month.
The survey is part of the military's comprehensive review of “Don't Ask, Don't Tell,” the law approved by Congress and signed by President Bill Clinton in 1993.
The review was ordered by Defense Secretary Robert Gates and is expected to be completed by December 1. Army General Carter F. Ham, commander of the U.S. Army Europe, and Jen Johnson, the Pentagon's top lawyer, head the review panel.
Under a deal brokered between gay rights groups and lawmakers, the assessment will continue even as Congress debates whether to repeal the law. Republicans have voiced concern over repealing the law before the review is complete. House members voted in favor of repeal in May, while senators are expected to take up the issue this month. The legislation – under the terms of the deal – gives the military and President Barack Obama final say on the specifics of repeal and would not be implemented until after the military completes its review.
In announcing the Pentagon had begun surveying troops on the policy, Ham said it is “vitally important that servicemembers continue to be open and frank and totally honest with us in their feedback.”
But SLDN Executive Director Aubrey Sarvis cautioned gay troops on completing the survey, saying they should “only do so in a manner that does not reveal sexual orientation.”

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Breaking Hate News: This morning, the Body of a Woman was Found in Loiza., PR. Who Suffered Multiple Gunshot Wounds


Breaking News
July 7, 2010
The New York City Anti-Violence Project condemns ongoing murders of transgender and gender non-conforming people in Puerto Rico
 
The New York City Anti-Violence Project (AVP) is angered and saddened by a series of horrific murders of transgender and gender non-conforming people in Puerto Rico.  This morning, the body of a woman was found in the Embankment area of Loiza.  She had suffered multiple gunshot wounds and her body was dumped beside a car. 
 
AVP is monitoring the details of this heinous crime as they emerge and working in coalition with community leaders, local politicians and organizations to address this violence.  This murder is the third of its kind that we know of in the past year against transgender and gender non-conforming people and the other victims include Ángel “Angie” González Oquendo, a woman named Ashley from Corozal, and Jorge Steven López Mercado a resident of Caguas. 
 
AVP encourages anyone who has experienced or been affected by an assault or threats of violence to contact our 24-hour bilingual (English/Spanish) hotline at 212-714-1141 and speak with a trained counselor if you are seeking support.  All services are free and confidential. 
 

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Facebook Makes Headway Around the World



Facebook Makes Headway Around the World


Minh Uong/The New York Times
Ruth Fremson/The New York Times
Facebook’s homepage at an Internet cafe in New Delhi. A year ago, Orkut was the dominant social site in India, but Facebook has caught up.
Antoine Antoniol/Bloomberg News
Mark Zuckerberg, chief of Facebook.
Facebook, the social network service that started in a Harvard dorm room just six years ago, is growing at a dizzying rate around the globe, surging to nearly 500 million users, from 200 million users just 15 months ago.
It is pulling even with Orkut in India, where only a year ago, Orkut was more than twice as large as Facebook. In the last year, Facebook has grown eightfold, to eight million users, in Brazil, where Orkut has 28 million.
In country after country, Facebook is cementing itself as the leader and often displacing other social networks, much as it outflanked MySpace in the United States. In Britain, for example, Facebook made the formerly popular Bebo all but irrelevant, forcing AOL to sell the site at a huge loss two years after it bought it for $850 million. In Germany, Facebook surpassed StudiVZ, which until February was the dominant social network there.
With his typical self-confidence, Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s 26-year-old chief executive, recently said it was “almost guaranteed” that the company would reach a billion users.
Though he did not say when it would reach that mark, the prediction was not greeted with the skepticism that had met his previous boasts of fast growth.
“They have been more innovative than any other social network, and they are going to continue to grow,” said Jeremiah Owyang, an analyst with the Altimeter Group. “Facebook wants to be ubiquitous, and they are being successful for now.”
The rapid ascent of Facebook has no company more worried than Google, which sees the social networking giant as a threat on multiple fronts. Much of the activity on Facebook is invisible to Google’s search engine, which makes it less useful over time. What’s more, the billions of links posted by users on Facebook have turned the social network into an important driver of users to sites across the Web. That has been Google’s role.
Google has tried time and again to break into social networking not only with Orkut, but also with user profiles, with an industrywide initiative called OpenSocial, and, most recently, with Buzz, a social network that mixes elements of Facebook and Twitter with Gmail. But none of those initiatives have made a dent in Facebook.
Google is said to be trying again with a secret project for a service called Google Me, according to several reports. Google declined to comment for this article.
Google makes its money from advertising, and even here, Facebook poses a challenge.
“There is nothing more threatening to Google than a company that has 500 million subscribers and knows a lot about them and places targeted advertisements in front of them,” said Todd Dagres, a partner at Spark Capital, a venture firm that has invested in Twitter and other social networking companies. “For every second that people are on Facebook and for every ad that Facebook puts in front of their face, it is one less second they are on Google and one less ad that Google puts in front of their face.”
With nearly two-thirds of all Internet users in the United States signed up on Facebook, the company has focused on international expansion.
Just over two years ago, Facebook was available only in English. Still, nearly half of its users were outside the United States, and its presence was particularly strong in Britain, Australia and other English-speaking countries.
The task of expanding the site overseas fell on Javier Olivan, a 33-year-old Spaniard who joined Facebook three years ago, when the site had 30 million users. Mr. Olivan led an innovative effort by Facebook to have its users translate the site into more than 80 languages. Other Web sites and technology companies, notably Mozilla, the maker of Firefox, had used volunteers to translate their sites or programs.
But with 300,000 words on Facebook’s site — not counting material posted by users — the task was immense. Facebook not only encouraged users to translate parts of the site, but also let other users fine-tune those translations or pick among multiple translations. Nearly 300,000 users participated.
“Nobody had done it at the scale that we were doing it,” Mr. Olivan said.
The effort paid off. Now about 70 percent of Facebook’s users are outside the United States. And while the number of users in the United States doubled in the last year, to 123 million, according to comScore, the number more than tripled in Mexico, to 11 million, and it more than quadrupled in Germany, to 19 million.
With every new translation, Facebook pushed into a new country or region, and its spread often mirrored the ties between nations or the movement of people across borders. After becoming popular in Italy, for example, Facebook spread to the Italian-speaking portions of Switzerland. But in German-speaking areas of Switzerland, adoption of Facebook lagged. When Facebook began to gain momentum in Brazil, the activity was most intense in southern parts of the country that border on neighboring Argentina, where Facebook was already popular.
“It’s a mapping of the real world,” Mr. Olivan said.
Facebook is not popular everywhere. The Web site is largely blocked in China. And with fewer than a million users each in Japan, South Korea and Russia, it lags far behind home-grown social networks in those major markets.
Mr. Olivan, who leads a team of just 12 people, hopes to change that. Facebook recently sent some of its best engineers to a new office in Tokyo, where they are working to fine-tune searches so they work with all three Japanese scripts. In South Korea, as well as in Japan, where users post to their social networks on mobile phones more than on PCs, the company is working with network operators to ensure distribution of its service.
Industry insiders say that, most of all, Facebook is benefiting from a cycle where success breeds more success. In particular, its growing revenue, estimated at $1 billion annually, allows the company to invest in improving its product and keep competitors at bay.
“I think that Facebook is winning for two reasons,” said Bing Gordon, a partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and a board member of Zynga, the maker of popular Facebook games like FarmVille and Mafia Wars. Mr. Gordon said that Facebook had hired some of the best engineers in Silicon Valley, and he said that the company’s strategy to create a platform for other software developers had played a critical role.
“They have opened up a platform, and they have the best apps on that platform,” Mr. Gordon said.
With Facebook’s social networking lead growing, it is not clear whether Google, or any other company, will succeed in derailing its march forward.
Says Danny Sullivan, the editor of Search Engine Land, an industry blog, “Google can’t even get to the first base of social networks, which is people interacting with each other, much less to second or third base, which is people interacting with each other through games and applications.”

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Money ‘can’t buy you total happiness’ or Can It?



Money ‘can’t buy you total happiness’

Money really can buy you happiness – or at least one form of it, according to a new study.
Money ‘can’t buy you total happiness’
A worldwide survey of happiness of over 100,000 people has shown that there
 is a link between feelings of security and income but not between money and fun.
 It found that life satisfaction rises with personal and national income.
But positive feelings, like having fun and enjoyment, are much more strongly
associated with other factors, such as feeling respected, being independent,
 having friends and working at a fulfilling job.
According to the study, life satisfaction increases with personal and national
income while positive feelings, like having fun and enjoyment, are much
more strongly linked to other factors, such as feeling respected, being
 independent, having friends and working at a fulfilling job.
"The public always wonders: Does money make you happy?"
telegraph.co.uk quoted Ed Diener, a psychologist at the University of
Illinois as saying.
"This study shows that it all depends on how you define happiness,
because if you look at life satisfaction, how you evaluate your life as a whole,
you see a pretty strong correlation around the world between income and happiness."
Money ‘can’t buy you total happiness’
"On the other hand it's pretty shocking how small the correlation is with
positive feelings and enjoying yourself," Diener added.
The findings, from an analysis of data gathered in the first Gallup World Poll,
appear in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
According to Diener, this is the first "happiness" study in the world to
differentiate between life satisfaction, the philosophical belief that your life is
going well, and the day-to-day positive or negative feelings that one experiences.
"Everybody has been looking at just life satisfaction and income," he said.
"And while it is true that getting richer will make you more satisfied with your life,
it may not have the big impact we thought on enjoying life," he added.
Source: Agencies


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Spain to Get Church for Same-Sex Marriages


Spain to get church for same-sex marriages

Spain, which has become a world leader in gay rights in recent years, is to get its first gay Christian church to celebrate marriages between same-sex couples, a news report said Sunday.

The US-based Metropolitan Community Churches (MCC) is to open a congregation in Madrid in October, the daily El Mundo said.

On its website, MCC said it was founded California in 1968 as "the world?s first church group with a primary, positive ministry to gays, lesbians, bisexual and transgender persons."
It now claims 43,000 members in 300 congregations in 22 countries.

El Mundo said a lesbian couple, both Spaniards living in Canada, have come to Madrid to register an MCC congregation with the justice ministry which they expect to open in October.

"We are the first (gay) church in Spain," one of the pair, Raquel Benitez, told the paper.

"There are Christian groups that want to establish some type of (gay) religious organisation but they have neither the importance nor the international support that MCC has.
"We want to fill a gap that exists, a spiritual gap for homosexuals, for transsexuals and for any person that does not have a feel for other religions."

Homosexuality was only legalised in Roman Catholic Spain in 1979, shortly after the death of dictator Francisco Franco whose regime shipped off gays to institutions that some activists have likened to concentration camps.

The Socialist government of Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero has sought to promote gays rights as part of a liberal social agenda.

In 2005 it passed a law to allow same-sex marriages, making Spain only the third member of the European Union, after Belgium and the Netherlands, to do so.

Since then, thousands of gay marriages have been performed in the country.

But the measure has drawn the ire of the Roman Catholic Church in Spain and a section of the conservative opposition Popular Party.

AFP...

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