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Last week Eloise McInerney and Tony Allwright debated the question "Should the State sanction gay marriage?" Here is an edited…

Last week Eloise McInerneyand Tony Allwrightdebated the question "Should the State sanction gay marriage?" Here is an edited selection of your comments:

My grandfather was born in Ireland. He would be rolling over in his grave over this. Will the Emerald Isle transition to the Lavender Isle? Homosexual behaviour is diseased and threatens the common good. There is no such thing as a "committed" sodomite relationship.
Mary Ann Kreitzer, United States

As a Catholic priest, I fully support the co-equality of every human being made as we are in the image and likeness of God. To treat as equal before the law of the land the love between same-gender adults is a work of justice that cries to Heaven for implementation. Surely it is past time that the Irish State did as our ancestors envisaged all those years ago and "treat all our children equally."
Bernard J Lynch, United Kingdom

Tony Allwright asserts that if same-sex marriage were introduced, there would be nothing stopping people marrying each other for tax breaks. Bizarrely, he doesn't follow that thought through and realise that such fraudulence is entirely possible with heterosexual marriage.
Michael Pidgeon, Ireland

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Homosexuality is unnatural behaviour and is opposed by the major religions. I live and let live and don't force my opinion, but gay adoption and marriage is a step too far. The child's innocence would be morally corrupted and two dads will never replace a mother's unique role and, like it or not, that child will be victim to intolerable cruelty throughout his school years through no fault of his/her own.
Joe, Ireland

Note to "Joe" who won't give his full name: the "intolerable cruelty" you claim children of gay marriages would suffer would very likely be inflicted by people like you.
Ciarán Reilly, Ireland

My parents brought me up to believe that marriage was a union of two people who love each other. Does it matter that these two people are the same sex?
Pat Mahood, Ireland

Tony Allwright writes that "It is true, however, that availability of gay marriage might help reduce promiscuity among gays". I for one vow that as soon as I can marry my lady, I will stop preying on innocent straight women.
Annie, Ireland

The right to marry is a human and civil right. Denying that right to lesbians and gay men is a fundamental denial of our rights as human beings and as citizens. It is profoundly discriminatory, and unegalitarian.
Ailbhe Smyth, Ireland

Well it's just a simple issue of minority discrimination which should be solved as soon as possible. All arguments against gay marriage apply essentially to straight marriage as well. People who love each other and want to be together should be treated in the same way, disregarding the question of their sexuality. I strongly hope that Ireland will sanction gay marriage soon.
Vladimir Dotsenko, Ireland

The definition of marriage is a partnership between one man and one woman, so until you take the decision to call something which isn't by the term of something which is, the question, thankfully, is merely rhetorical!
Susan Philips, Ireland

We have had same-sex marriage here for years, and despite what some claim, civilisation has not ground to a halt, children of same-sex couples have not been socially crippled, and we still have freedom of religion.
Kaitlyn Burris, Canada

As someone who did make use of the civil partnership regulations in the North, I see no reason why my friends 10 miles up the road can't avail of a similar and preferably better facility of complete equality in the form of a marriage. As far as my partner and myself are concerned we are "married" to each other even if technically it's called a civil partnership. Now is the time for change!
C, Newry, Ireland