AP. “Arkansas, Mississippi, Gay Marriage Bans Overturned.” Time.Com (2014): N.PAG. Academic research completed. Network. March 5, 2015. This article is about how gay marriage flips in Arkansas and Mississippi. Gay marriage was banned in both Arkansas and Mississippi for a time. In 2004, Arkansas and Mississippi passed voter-approved constitutional amendments. The constitutional amendments defined marriage as between one man and one woman. There is no bias in this article. The journalist presented facts and figures to support all aspects of the issue. He completely supports his information. This article was written for the general public, just to acknowledge to readers what was happening. The argument AP makes is about the amendments, and Chesler's main point in this article is that same-sex marriage does not affect the child involved. It actually improves the child. Chesler said it gave him the stability, support and love he needed. She ultimately states, “The shame I felt and the stigma I experienced were unnecessary.” This article does not contain any bias. The author presents facts about his own life. You can identify the who, what, when, where, why and how in Chesler's article. Ariel Chesler is a lawyer and writer from New York. He is the son of feminist author and psychologist Phyllis Chesler. He wrote this article for the general public, so let them know that same-sex marriage does not harm children. In Kevin Eckstrom's article he explains five reasons why gay marriage is winning, and in Chesler's article he talks about how he was ashamed of growing up with two women. In both articles the authors spoke about gay marriage in a positive way, the gam pros said: "Alabama is on the doorstep again, but I still love my home." Time.Com (2015): N.PAG. Academic research completed. Network. March 18, 2015. Wolfe-Sisson's article talks about a homosexual couple who got married in Alabama. They love where they stay, but Alabama always seems to stand in the way of equality. This article is not prejudicial. Tori Wolfe-Sisson is a community organizer for the Alabama Human Rights Campaign. This article was written to inform the general public. Tori Wolfe-Sisson made history by becoming the first same-sex couple to marry in Montgomery, Alabama. He wrote this article to tell his story. This article does not contain any bias. Alabama courts are trying to thwart same-sex marriages. In Sam Frizell's article, same-sex marriage is finally legal in Florida. Wolfe-Sisson's article is about a couple who got married in Alabama. In Wolfe-Sisson's article the Alabama courts always interfere in the couple's relationship. Both articles deal with a gay couple
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