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Mexico's Catholic Church: Gay Marriage Worse Than Drug Trafficking






BY ON TOP MAGAZINE STAFF 
PUBLISHED: AUGUST 17, 2010

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Mexico has called gay marriage
 worse than drug trafficking, Mexico daily El Universal reported.
Lawmakers in Mexico City approved a gay marriage law in December
over the strong objections of the church. City officials announced two
 weeks ago that 320 gay and lesbian couples have married since
the law went into effect in March.
The country's conservative government challenged the law,
arguing that it was detrimental to children.
But in three decisive back-to-back decisions, the country's Supreme
 Court sided with the city. A week after declaring the law to be
 constitutional, the court ruled that states must recognize the gay
 marriages performed in the capital.
On Monday, the court upheld the right of gay couples married in
 Mexico City to adopt children. Nine out of eleven justices agreed
 that outlawing gay couples from adoption would be discriminatory.
The court “did not take into account the common good of the child
and considered the child like a dog or cat, without respect for its
 dignity,”
the church said.
The church called for the ouster of the government of Mexico City
Mayor
Marcelo Ebrard.
“He and his government have created laws destructive to the family,
 the
laws do worse damage than drug trafficking,” Hugo Valdemar,
 spokesman
 for the Archdiocese, said. “Marcelo Ebrard and his party, the PRD,
are determined to destroy us.”
Over 26,000 Mexicans have died in drug trafficking-related
incidents over the past six years.
Last Sunday, the cardinal of Guadalajara, Juan Sandoval Iniguez,
accused Ebrard of bribing the court to rule in the city's favor.
Speaking in Aguascalientes, Iniguez said the court would not
reach such an “absurd” conclusion unless it was motivated by
 a large sum of money.
“I do not know of any of you who would like to be adopted by
 a pair of lesbians or a pair of fags,” he said. “I think not.”
In response, Ebrard, 50, asked the church to prove its claim

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