Oops sorry guys!!!
I just realized that the link doesn't work (apparently yahoo doesn't want
people directly linking to their individual news articles).  Here is the
article copied and pasted:


Polls: Young Back Same-Sex Weddings More
Mon Mar 22, 3:54 PM ET  Add Top Stories - AP to My Yahoo!


By MARTHA IRVINE, AP National Writer

CHICAGO - Blake Wilkinson was puzzled when he saw the young 20-something
mixed among a group of graying anti-gay marriage protesters.

"It struck me � it just seemed she was out of place," says Wilkinson, a
22-year-old junior at DePaul University, who was standing on the opposite
side of a downtown Chicago street to demand marriage licenses for same-sex
couples from the county clerk.

As a young, gay man, Wilkinson is well aware that the majority of Americans
are against giving same-sex couples the right to marry. "But generally,
they're, well ..." he says pausing, "older."

Polls show there's some truth to Wilkinson's impression.

While the majority of Americans oppose legalizing same-sex marriage, people
younger than 30 have consistently been more supportive of it than their
elders.

For instance, a poll taken last month for the National Annenberg Election
Survey at the University of Pennsylvania showed that just over half of
people ages 18 to 29 would oppose a law in their states that would allow
lesbians and gay men to marry a same-sex partner. That compares with 61
percent of 30- to 44-year-olds; two-thirds of 45- to 64-year-olds; and 81
percent of those 65 and older.

The poll also found that fewer than half of those younger than 30 supported
a federal constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage.

Experts say the difference in attitudes can largely be tracked to young
people's exposure to homosexuality in everyday life.

They grew up with gay activists protesting to get AIDS (news - web sites)
patients access to the latest drugs � and as government officials debated
the issue of "don't ask, don't tell" in the military. Celebrities such as
Melissa Etheridge and Ellen DeGeneres came out, and many TV shows have
incorporated gay characters and themes.

"Young people have a different idea of what is normal," says Frank
Furstenberg, a University of Pennsylvania sociologist and senior research
scholar at the Council on Contemporary Families.

It's a notion that concerns conservatives, some of whom are working to
counter what they see as society's drift toward "normalizing" homosexuality.
Meanwhile, the trend fascinates Furstenberg and other academics. They wonder
what the world will be like for lesbian and gay couples a couple decades
from now.

"These young people will one day become policy-makers, CEOs, religious
leaders, parents and teachers," says Caitlin Ryan, a clinical social worker
at San Francisco State University who studies gay, lesbian and bisexual
youth and their families.

For now, the younger generation is clearly split.

Matt Haltzman, a high school freshman in Barrington, R.I., says he doesn't
think gay activists "need to be creating laws or creating a big ordeal." He
says he firmly believes what he's learned in his Jewish religion classes:
"Marriage is between a man and a woman."

But other young people say that knowing someone who is gay or lesbian has
caused them to rethink their views. "We should be promoting love, while it
lasts � and preventing hate," says Tara Laskowski, a 26-year-old graduate
student at George Mason University in Fairfax, Va.

Others wish politicians would turn their focus elsewhere.

"First, I want to feel that when I graduate next year, I will be able to
find a decent, good-paying job," says Gabe LeDonne, a junior at Wilkes
University in Wilkes-Barre, Pa. He's been discussing such issues in a
nonpartisan, campaign 2004 focus group and says same-sex marriage was among
the easiest matters to agree upon.

"The group didn't see much difference between this and the discrimination of
blacks through the 1960s in the name of 'separate but equal,'" the
22-year-old says.

Those against same-sex marriage, however, think such young people are making
a mistake.

"They are buying into it at higher rates than older generations, many of
whom are married and understand from experience why it's important to have a
mother and a father," says 25-year-old Scott Davis (news - external web
site), youth director for Exodus International, a Florida-based group that
promotes "freedom from homosexuality through the power of Jesus Christ."

Michele Ammons, spokeswoman for the Christian Coalition, finds hope in the
fact that some younger generations, particularly teens, are showing an
interest in more conservative religious values. She points to the fact that
many are flocking to see the Mel Gibson movie "The Passion of the Christ."

"I think this is a very smart generation that is going back to traditional
values because so many of them haven't had that," she says.

Yet Anne Ledford, a student at Centre College in Danville, Ky., says it was
her "very conservative" church upbringing that prompted her to accept the
idea of marriage for same-sex couples.

"It's ironic now because my family does not, in any way, condone gays or gay
marriage," the 22-year-old senior says. "Yet it was my parents and their
church that taught me to love people different than me."

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Behalf Of Jose Rodriguez
Sent: Monday, March 22, 2004 8:08 PM
To: Jennifer Mari Ramos; Jose H. Rodriguez; Lilly J Molina; luis ramos;
Mark Ackerman; Mark J. Ackerman; Mark Pastor Ackerman;
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; Pastor Mark; Rangernet; [EMAIL PROTECTED];
Sonia Gomez-Ramos; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [RR] I guess this shouldn't surprise me
Importance: High


It's really sad to see how a new generations perception of homosexuallity
has been currupted.
Read this article to see what I'm talking about:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=514&e=5&u=/ap/20040322/ap_on
_re_us/gay_marriage_youth_2

What do you guys think????


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