Azzy
ᚳᚣᚾᛖᚹᚢᛚᚠ (He/Him)
Please don't put words in my mouth. I did not say that "the buck stops here" or that it is "a bridge too far". What I did say in a previous post is that "The D&D game can accommodate a vast range of settings, from optimistic wish-fulfillment ones with modern progressive sexual mores through mythic-historical ones with less enlightened values to exotic and truly fantastical ones where the customs are just plain different. That's okay, and more than okay -- it's wonderful." Gay marriage doesn't make for a bad setting. What it does is make for a specific setting. D&D shouldn't assume it any more than D&D should assume any cultural institutions.
No, it doesn't make for a specific setting—it's something that can be in most any setting with minimal to no fuss. Also, D&D does already assume cultural institutions. Like women being more than property—and being capable of being independent and openly influential, whether as adventurers or rulers. Also, D&D assumes upward social mobility—where lowly commoners aren't limited to being serfs indentured to local lords, but may freely travel, become knights, or gain titles of nobility. All of the published D&D settings assumes that acceptance of different human ethnicities is the norm (with racists and supremacists—like the Scarlet Brotherhood in Greyhawk—being the exception).
Given all that, I'm just confused why same-sex marriage in D&D warrants such fuss. We've already passed the point where D&D assumes social & cultural anachronisms, and this is an issue that doesn't force any change to existing settings—the Dalelands of the Forgotten Realms don't noticeably change if we assume same-sex marriage is a-okay there. The village of Hommlet in the World of Greyhawk doesn't implode if we assume that Rufus and Berne get married and adopt children and still tithe to the Church of St. Cuthbert.
If you don't want it in your campaign setting, or parts of your campaign setting—that's all you. However, it's silly to pretend that if WotC occasionally includes some same-sex couples as NPCs in their books, that this somehow requires a specific setting or that it's more anachronistic than other assumptions that D&D makes. Personally, such an inclusion just seems like a non-issue.