ayub yahya yang jelas betul-betul gila itu terus aja 
ngomong asal ngaco seperti dibawah ini..


--- In [email protected], ayub <ayubyahya@...> wrote:
>
> sementara yang lain debat teroris
> elu sibuk promosi gay...
> 
> dasar hombreng..!!
> 
> 
> 
> ________________________________
>  From: Bukan Pedanda <bukan.pedanda@...>
> 
> 
>   
> 
> ayub yahya itu jelas betul-betul gila.
> 
> Omongannnya ngado melulu, seperti dibawah ini..
> 
> --- In [email protected], ayub <ayubyahya@> wrote:
> >
> > 
> > 
> > pig.. maksudnya apa nih ??? ngga ada komen
> > 
> > proposal buat ngelamar item ??
> > 
> > who care !?
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > ________________________________
> >  From: Bukan Pedanda <bukan.pedanda@>
> > 
> > 
> >   
> > 
> >  
> > 
> > World 
> > 17 April 2013 Last updated at 13:14 GMT 
> > Gay marriage around the world
> > Since the Netherlands became the first country to allow same-sex marriage 
> > 12 years ago, many countries have followed suit. 
> > New Zealand is the latest and supporters of 
> > gay marriage hope it will soon become legal in Britain, France and 
> > Uruguay, where parliaments have been debating the issue.
> > But where in the world can same-sex couples already get married?
> > Just after midnight on 1 April 2001, four couples - Anne-Marie Thus and 
> > Helene Faasen, and three male couples - were married
> > by the mayor of Amsterdam, Job Cohen, in the first legal gay marriage 
> > ceremony in the world.
> > "We are so ordinary, if you saw us on the street you'd just walk 
> > right past us," said Ms Thus of the fuss over the televised City Hall 
> > ceremony.
> > "The only thing that's going to take some getting used to is calling her my 
> > spouse."
> > Denmark was the first country to introduce civil partnerships
> > for same-sex couples, in 1989, but it stopped short of allowing church 
> > weddings.
> > Countries including Norway, Sweden and Iceland followed suit in 
> > allowing partnerships offering many - but not all - of the rights and
> > obligations of marriage.
> > But it was left to the Netherlands to lead the way in allowing gay 
> > marriage, which included granting same-sex couples the right to adopt 
> > children.
> > It was a move welcomed by international gay rights groups as a huge step 
> > forward.Vatican intervention 
> > A few weeks after neighbours Belgium followed the Netherlands'
> > example in June 2003, the Vatican - in an attempt to stop further 
> > legislation - launched a global campaign against gay marriage.
> > In a strongly-worded 12-page document, Pope John Paul II's chief 
> > theological adviser, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger - who would go on to 
> > become Pope Benedict XVI - warned that homosexual unions were immoral, 
> > unnatural and harmful.
> > Two years later, despite a 600,000-strong petition organised by a 
> > Catholic group and a rally in Madrid opposing it, same-sex marriage
> > was introduced in Spain.
> > Emilio Menendez and his American partner of 30 years, Carlos 
> > Baturin German, became the first gay couple to tie the knot in Spain, at
> > a ceremony in Tres Cantos, outside Madrid, on 11 July 2005.
> > Days later, Canada - where same-sex marriage had already been
> > permitted in most provinces since 2003 - became the fourth country to 
> > introduce national legislation.
> > With the US slow to follow - a federal law still prevents US 
> > recognition of gay marriage and many states have enacted outright bans -
> > thousands of gay Americans have visited Canada to get married since 
> > 2003.
> > Same-sex marriage is now allowed in nine American states as well as the 
> > District of Columbia. Court ruling 
> > South Africa, in November 2006, became the first African country to bring 
> > in marriage for gay couples - despite homosexuality remaining 
> > taboo in large parts of the continent.
> > That followed a 2004 Supreme Court of Appeal ruling - brought
> > by lesbian couple Marie Fourie and Cecilia Bonthuys - that existing 
> > marriage laws discriminated against same-sex couples.
> > In January 2009, Norway became the sixth country to introduce gay marriage 
> > followed, in May of the the same
> > year, by Sweden, while a further three countries followed suit in 2010.
> > Divorced mothers Teresa Pires and Helena Paixao became the first 
> > gay couple to marry in Portugal, in June 2010 - a month after the law 
> > they had campaigned for came into effect - and hailed it as a "great
> > victory, a dream come true".
> > The socialist government in the mainly Catholic country faced
> > fierce opposition from campaigners who ultimately failed to get enough 
> > support for a referendum.
> > Later that month, Iceland's Prime Minister Johanna Sigurdardottir married 
> > her partner, writer Jonina Leosdottir, on the day
> > the country's gay marriage law came into force.Britain to follow? 
> > In July 2010, meanwhile, Argentina became the first country in Latin 
> > America to legalise gay marriage.
> > Up until then, Mexico City had been the only place in the region where 
> > same-sex marriage was allowed.
> > And in June last year, Denmark became the 11th country to approve 
> > same-sex marriage - 23 years after it became the first country in the 
> > world to recognise gay civil partnerships.
> > More recently, both houses of Congress in Uruguay backed same-sex 
> > marriage and President Jose Mujica, who supports the bill, is expected 
> > to sign it into law within weeks.
> > In Britain, MPs voted in February in favour of legislation allowing gay 
> > marriage and it now goes to the upper chamber, the House of
> > Lords, where many within the governing Conservative Party are strongly 
> > opposed. 
> > A gay marriage bill in France was passed by the Senate in a lively 
> > debate last week, and it is now being considered by the National 
> > Assembly. It is thought the Socialist government's proposal could become
> > law soon. 
> > However, opinion remains divided, with tens of thousands taking to the 
> > streets of Paris in March to oppose the measure. 
> > 
> > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> >
> 
> 
>  
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>




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