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By Matthew Spalding
A 2003 decision by four Massachusetts Supreme Court judges requiring the state to recognize same-sex unions as "marriage" forced a national debate on this fundamental institution of society. The Massachusetts decision goes against the cumulative weight of human history, the beliefs of all major world religions, Western legal precedent, and the long-held views of most Americans supporting the natural order of marriage as one man and one woman. This act of legislating from the bench has been met with calls for legislative action at the state and federal levels, including an amendment to the U.S. Constitution that would define marriage as the union of one man and one woman.|
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