Or both?
I was talking to a woman about the possibility of Australians having to vote on whether to allow gay marriage. The woman proudly said she would vote against marriage equality. I was taken aback because I know this woman is non-religious and I don't think there is many reasons beyond religious one to oppose marriage equality. When I queried why she would vote against it she informed me she was against all marriage. I then asked her what steps was she taking to outlaw straight marriage if that was her true objection. She just shrugged her shoulders. So do you think she is a hypocrite/homophobe?
While we are on the subject I posted these two pictures on a Facebook colouring page only to have them removed for being inappropriate. One woman said they were disturbing.
This picture is highly inappropriate. They should be putting up bookshelves, instead of letting their books languish in packing boxes for one second longer than necessary. And while I found the bear a bit odd, it's less that the bear can read (after all, my favorite webcomic is about a group of stuffed animals who play D&D when their owners aren't around), than how the bear's glasses stay on.
Seriously... there's not a thing wrong with either picture, and FB is staffed by idiots.
It seems a bit odd that your country would have a vote on it. Here in Canada we just woke up one morning to find that the legislation had been tabled in the House, it passed all three readings, the Senate passed it, and the Governor-General (on behalf of Her Majesty) signed it into law.
(Well okay, it didn't happen quite that way for anyone following the news, but the essence is that there was no public referendum)
This was in 2005, when Paul Martin was Prime Minister. Yes, he had an uphill argument with some people - his Conservative/Reform/Alliance Party opponents in Parliament, and a bunch of bishops/archbishops (don't recall exactly who) who threatened him with excommunication from the Catholic church.
Martin told the church that he considered his religion to be a private matter that he never brought to the House with him, and that he had a duty to ALL the citizens of Canada. That's a concept that seems to escape politicians who want to overturn this legislation - some of them really, really wanted to do that while Stephen Harper was the PM. I will give Harper credit for enough intelligence to know that it would have been political suicide for his party to try it, though.
To answer your original question: Yes, and yes. I think she is both a homophobe and a hypocrite. Nobody is going to force her to get married to anyone if she doesn't want to (she should be grateful to have been born now instead of several hundred years ago, when she probably wouldn't have had any choice; for most women it was either marriage or the convent or the brothel).
And no heterosexual marriages will suddenly become undone if gay marriage becomes legal. Peoples' wedding documents didn't spontaneously combust, their wedding photos didn't break or get torn up, their rings didn't turn to plastic, and their children weren't suddenly rendered illegitimate (or whatever the modern term is nowadays).
Canada survived this, and despite that twit in Kentucky's best efforts, the US will survive it, and so will Australia.