A kid in school can't legally pray, even silently.
The 10 commandments can't be displayed in apublic courthouse.
But... a military chaplain can opt to conduct a gay marriage?
While I think questioning why Americans aren't allowed to worship their deity of choice in public is a worthy cause to fight, I don't see the correlation with the ability to marry two people in love.

It seems to me that the proper place for gay marriage (if any chaplain ever elects to conduct one) is not within a military setting, and in the interest of "separation of church and state" (and the Supreme Court has ruled that the gay perspective is a faith-based belief system and therefore likewise as much a religious belief system as Christianity) holding a gay wedding should be excluded from a federal institution like the military, the same way Christian prayer and scriptures are banned from schools and courtrooms.
In that vein of thought, let's take it one step further: Let's ban marriage....of any kind! That way, there's no question about the military/government's role in personal decisions made by responsible adults.
If, y'know, there's a real interest in holding an equal and fair standard for all beliefs. And not just ramming a gay/liberal agenda down everyone's throats.
Yes, yes...it's always a "gay/liberal agenda" thing with you, isn't it? The "fair standards for all beliefs" that you champion would have to include the gays, Liberals, and Muslims. Along with their agenda to have equal rights as everyone else, and not just White-Christian-centrics. Food for thought.
