It's one goal, not the only one.
And if you don't think you're entitled to the same marriage rights as the straight guy next door, then that's REALLY bad.
I don't believe I do, or any of us do.
We have the same
rights, but "marriage" is not a right -- it is, historically, a religious matter, that was co-opted by the state (go back and read posts 77 & 78). While the culture was essentially homogenenous, that worked fine: the cultural definition of marriage was the Judeo-Christian one, and having it written into law didn't bother anything.
But for better or worse, we have moved beyond a Judeo-Christian culture, but it is still that religious definition of marriage that is written into law. At this point, since the religion no longer dominates the culture, that has become a matter of violation of the Constitution. For the many who do not agree with the J-C definition, the situation is
de facto religious persecution.
So is the solution to change the definition of marriage, and ram that down everyone's throats? That would be foolish, akin to bombing mosques because some Muslims hate us and want to impose their views on us: the only result would be to guarantee the "war" a permanent life, feeding on itself generation after generation, as every new batch of Sunday School children gets taught that only
they have "real" marriage, that anything else is blasphemous... and everyone else would have to fight back.
Why give the ReligioPublicans fuel for the fire? Marriage has traditionally been seen as a religious matter, and most Americans still see it that way. So let them have it -- but let's fight to get the religious persecution out of the law, and replace it with "civil union" (or "interpersonal bond", or whatever). A church marriage would then be, under the law, just one form of recognized civil union -- and whatever anyone else wished to do would be civil union as well.
From the perspective of the ReligioPublicans, and a lot of other Americans, the demand for "gay marriage" comes as not only an insulting intrusion into deeply-held convictions, but as a conspiracy to commit grand larceny: they see gays as trying to steal (and bend, fold, and mutilate) something precious. The reaction is predictable, and the effort, even if successful, will guarantee that the bitter fighting will go on for generations. Both tactically and strategically, this approach to having rights recognized is unsound.
We have the deeply-held conviction that we should be treated the same before the law as any other citizens -- but that does not require "gay marriage". It is also a conviction the ReligioPublicans hold, when they calm down and think. So rather than try to insult and anger them, we should be the statesmen, pointing to that common ground, and offering a solution that will let them have "marriage" all to themselves, by levelling the field with government recognition of all interpersonal unions.