As more conservative and Republican voices come out in support of gay rights and gay marriage, the LGBT rights community–presumably populated primarily by liberals–is wrestling with just how to welcome these new advocates from the right, or in some cases, whether to at all.
When GLAAD spokesman Rich Ferraro discovered that Kimberly Guilfoyle and Jamie Colby, two Fox News hosts who are presumably supporters of the organization, showed up at GLAAD’s Media Awards event, he was far from enthused. “If Kimberly and Jamie expect to attend future GLAAD events, they will first need to sit down with us to discuss Fox News’ embarrassing, biased and misinformed coverage of LGBT issues,” he said.
After a wave of negative responses to GLAAD’s decidedly exclusionary and intolerant position, Ferraro later apologized.
Fortunately, not all the responses to conservative support of gay marriage have been as absurdly parochial and impulsive as GLAAD’s. Sally Kohn in Salon, for one, makes a thoughtful and important distinction between the various conservative arguments for gay marriage, and seems to suggest that not all are valid.
While she accepts the more libertarian impulses for defending gay marriage (the government shouldn’t be involved in our private lives), the overtly conservative belief that marriage is a stabilizing and productive social construct that should be encouraged is one she rejects outright. She writes:









