The question is whether state rights should trump individual rights, and since 1865 the answer to that has been 'no'.
But then I counter that by saying should the Supreme court decision trump that of what the people want? And to that I say "no" as well. The progress that has been made in the US on the gay marriage front has been nothing short of amazing. Throughout my entire time in Washington alone, I've seen people grow, going from being absolutely hesitant about it, to being "okay" with "civil unions/domestic partnerships," to becoming increasingly supportive of Gay marriages. It's been a privilege being in a state that has been on that journey and come to that decision because the people want it.
Washington isn't the only state that has had a journey like that, and some states the journey was even lengthier...but in the end the people decided they wanted something more and became more in favor, winning that argument in other states.
And just as more states are gaining the potential to make that journey themselves, the Supreme Court cheapens the feeling by making it legal in all states.
And again, to that I say it's a great thing that it's finally legal, however the sudden wave of a hand making it essentially a mandatory thing in all states bugs me. Many of these states, as I said, people are still increasingly hesitant and are still learning and growing and were coming to the decisions themselves. Now they're being told that nobody gives a fuck about their opinion, because now they have to accept that it's legal everywhere.
Not to mention, just because it's now legal in the entire nation doesn't mean everyone's going to suddenly nod their heads and agree. Those states that don't agree and didn't get to go through that journey to eventually come to a different conclusion themselves are going to resist, and there's going to be many attempts to repeal and overturn the Supreme Court's decision. And it's also likely that one of those attempts will succeed, and we'll be right back where we were before until someone else tries to go back in and overturn what was just overturned.
People will still discriminate based on sexuality, and mask the reasons like they always do, and sexuality-based remarks will still be passed around like candy, much like racial and gender remarks still are despite the progress we've attempted to push.
Churches can still refuse to marry couples if they choose, and if that choice has been taken away from them, then that'll just upset me since regardless of their reasons, they should always be able to have that choice. And likewise, churches will still be able to remove people from their church or deny them entrance into their buildings.
The only change is that gay marriage isn't "illegal" in the US anymore...but that only applies to cities that actually bother to listen to the government. What about the small towns? What about the tiny towns in the south that never gave two shits about what the government says anyways? You think everyone in those bible thumping cities is going to be okay with the change? What's the government going to do, fly to the middle of nowhere and wag their fingers at a small insignificant little town?
The way I see it is that this changes a lot, but it also changes nothing. You can count on there being monumental backlash to this, and the fact that people, especially those extremist religious types that love sticking their nose into political and human rights affairs, are going to do everything in their power to make the Supreme Court reverse their decision. And hell, this is the US. If they throw the right amount of money around, they could damn well succeed unless the other side has even more.