Elizabeth Oakes

Wedding Examiner
Elizabeth Oakes is the braintrust behind MarriageToGo.Com, a unique marriage licensing and wedding officiation service in Los Angeles, CA. She creates and conducts hundreds of civil and event weddings per year and writes from the trenches about weddings, marriage, and our changing culture.

  

Examiner Feeds

These websites were picked by the Wedding Examiner as useful resources.
- 1 hr 49 mins ago - 2 hrs 28 mins ago - 2 hrs 45 mins ago - 5 hrs ago Ariel Meadow Stallings: Offbeat Bride - 7 hrs ago

Series: Five Ways To Screw Up Your Wedding!

Series: Married At The Movies!

Same-Sex Weddings/Marriage Equality

Wedding-Related Charitable Giving

Cool Wedding Ideas and Top-Notch Stuff

Wedding Ring Favorites

Recommended Reading

National Examiners

Kristen Houghton
Relationship Examiner
Most Recent Post
Holidays, love, and food!
Jamie Van Eaton
Low Carb Examiner
Most Recent Post
Top bacon gifts for Christmas
 
 

(i.e. Los Angeles hiking, Los Angeles parenting)

Showing entries for Category: samesex-weddings


Connecticut new haven for gay marriage

November 16, 10:20 PM
by Elizabeth Oakes, Wedding Examiner
 
 

   CT's first same-sex wedding: Jennifer Vickery and Peg Oliveira 
While Californians anxiously await a ruling from their state Supreme Court deciding whether or not the recent ballot initiative to end same-sex marriage rights will be upheld, gay couples in Connecticut tied the knot this week in the state’s first same-sex ceremonies.

"Today, Connecticut sends a message of hope and inspiration to lesbian and gay people throughout this country who simply want to be treated as equals by their government," said Ben Klein, the lead attorney for Jennifer Vickery and Peg Oliveira. Their success in the CT Supreme Court resulted in the pair being the first couple to wed when the final ruling became effective last Wednesday.

Local wedding businesses have already seen an uptick and the state will also most likely benefit from destination wedding dollars as out-of-state couples travel there to legally wed.  One study showed that California’s same-sex weddings would pump $684 million into the state’s economy over three years ($64 million in tax revenues alone) and create thousands of new jobs; unless the CA Suprreme Court overturns Proposition 8, Connecticut and Massachusetts may be the only ones to reap the abundance that gay wedding dollars will bring.

Unlike California, Connecticut does not have a ballot initiative process; those who wish to oppose the ruling will have to pursue their case either through the legislature or the courts.  Those who claim that the majority of Connecticuters oppose gay marriage and the “democratic process” is being undermined by judicial fiat need to go back and read their history books; the gay struggle for equal rights typifies previous struggles in our democratic society, where the electorate's power is balanced by the courts’ ability to protect the interests of minority groups despite popular sentiment (the “tyranny of the majority," as deTocqueville aptlly put it.)   Indeed, many feel that the loss of marriage equality in California has actually ignited a stronger, more vocal marriage equality movement--as nationwide demonstrations this past weekend indicate--and it is certain that all branches of government will be deliberating on this flashpoint issue in the near future.

Here in California gay marriage is still in limbo, though word is that a ruling on Prop 8 is expected soon.  In the meantime, we’d like to extend our heartfelt congratulations to those same-sex couples who are tying the knot out there in CT, and our equally sincere thanks to the gay and straight allies who support them all over the country.  We invite those who do not share these sentiments to watch or read MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann’s commentary on the gay marriage issue, which may provide some food for thought.  

In the meantime, we here in California harbor hope that marriage equality will be restored and our own state Supreme Court will--once again--stand up for fairness, civil rights, and the majority of love.

Until next time, and sweet and long life to you all.

 



Elizabeth Oakes welcomes your feedback at weddingexaminer@gmail.com.

 


Topics: same-sex weddings , Weddings In Culture , Marriage , Weddings and the Law , Gay Marriage
   Subscribe   Feed
 
 

Comments

Name:  
Email Address:  
Comments:  

More from Wedding Examiner

A sad day for gays in California, Arizona, and Florida

November 5, 10:25 PM
....but not in Connecticut where same-sex marriages will begin next week, and  Massachusetts now marries same-sex couples from out-of-state just like California used to, so gay weddings can continue for anyone who can scratch up the airfare. The... Read More
Topics: same-sex weddings , Weddings In Culture , Marriage , Weddings and the Law , Gay Marriage , Elections 2008

Fear and loathing in California's same-sex marriage war

November 2, 8:43 PM
The rhetoric around marriage equality in California is heating up, money pouring in, dueling press releases unleashed every day--all business-as-usual, politically.But then the ProtectMarriage campaign--the coalition of right-wing religious groups including... Read More
Topics: same-sex weddings , Weddings In Culture , Marriage , Weddings and the Law , Gay Marriage , Elections 2008

An invitation for William Shatner: his first wedding etiquette class

October 27, 11:41 PM
Ah, there you are Mr. Shatner!  Welcome to wedding etiquette class!  A little late, perhaps, but better late than never, yes?  Please do sit down--oh, you prefer the big swivelly chair?  That’s fine--go ahead and make yourself... Read More
Topics: same-sex weddings , wedding planning , Weddings In Culture , Wedding Customs and Traditions , Geek Weddings , Gay Marriage

California's same-sex weddings: not always gay?

July 7, 7:31 AM
We’ve had almost three weeks of same-sex weddings here in California and we haven’t yet been destroyed by swarms of earthquakes, locusts, or tsunamis (though it’s true, there are raging wildfires all over the state--then again, one... Read More
Topics: same-sex weddings , Weddings In Culture