Introduction
According to Californian Supreme Court marriage is an individual fundamental right that gives an individual opportunity to share his or her life with the person of choice. People who have entered into this union are recognized and protected as a family and must posses equal rights and responsibilities. The law then governs everything on the land and therefore no individual should be allowed to stereotype any one subject to sexual orientation.
The United Nations Human Rights Commission had declared that women and men of any civilization, race and religion have the right to marry a spouse of his or her choice with an intention to form a family (AndrewSullian,http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2008/09/my-big-fat-straight-wedding/306931/, 2008). In this case a family is fundamentally a natural recognized group in the society due to be respected and protected by the state and the society at large. Andrew is right that a person is free to marry out of his or her own consent.
It well-meaning to agree with Andrew that the sexual aspects of homosexuals have developed positively and it should be advocated as a civic right. However, the statement that the right to marry is elementary and is comparable to the right of a child to study in an integrated school could not be to fully acceptable as children are not allowed to integrate with reasons of their differential in external characteristics like color. Also a gays and straights cannot be identified by their external characteristics. In addition to this it is universal that the right to choose a marriage partner is civic and not elementary as he advocated, since the society comes first in context of civic rights (AndrewSullian,http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2008/09/my-big-fat-straight-wedding/306931/, 2008). In summary, every individual has the right to marry at his or her will and the law and the general society should put efforts in place to protect the homosexuals from any sexual orientation based violence and discrimination.
Works Cited
(AndrewSullian,http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2008/09/my-big-fat-straight-wedding/306931/, 2008).
Koppelman, Andrew, and Tobias B. Wolff. A Right to Discriminate?: How the Case of Boy Scouts of America V. James Dale Warped the Law of Free Association. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009. Print.