cogadh: 6 states have specifically voted on gay marriage and passed it out of the 8 states that have even considered it (to date, there is a ninth pending this November). The remaining 42 states have never voted on gay marriage, but an additional 9 of them do allow same-sex civil unions. On top of that, several states that had gay marriage bans have been ruled unconstitutional, most notably Texas. Then you have states like California that, through the machinations of the Mormon Church, did ban marriages within California, but does recognize gay marriages performed outside of California as legal unions (also true of New York and Washington DC).
You make blanket statements about the country and the people as whole without really understanding the details of the situation. Yes, there are laws on the books that prevent gay marriages, but all of those laws are being challenged in more cases than not, they are being overturned, either by the vote of the people or by the ruling of the court. You assume that because there are laws that, by their letter, appear to ban gay marriage that we, for the most part, are against the subject, when in fact, most of these laws and state constitutions were written decades if not centuries before the idea of gay marriage even existed. They are not written to specifically ban gay marriage, they just weren't written to take into account gay marriage, hence why they are now being changed.
Yes, there will always be people here that are against things like gay marriage, just as there are in every country, but you cannot assume that just because some of us are like that, all of us or even most of us are like that.
I just find it funny that a country founded on the principals of freedom and civil liberties took two centuries to finally cave in to the idea that maybe these things should apply to women and other ethnicities as well. Now America is slowly coming to terms with the idea that homosexuals may also deserve equal treatment. How does a country with such principals at its very core lag so far behind most of the developed world in implementing them?
Anyway, I'm not making blanket statements so much as I'm highlighting the fact that the perception of Americans interfering with the marriage rights of others does hold water.
My 'blanket statement' was merely intended to show you that the tyranny of the majority approach is inherently flawed.