The problem with arguing the specifics of the case is that it will just cause more and more parents to worry about gay marriage.
That's a nonsequitur.
No, that's why gay marriage opponents have been calling attention to this case for years. They want parents to oppose gay marriage.
The first warning flag in most married people's minds is that a parent who moves several states over to get away from an ex often indicates a very profound problem with the ex's behavior.
And that's the reason the first sentence is a nonsequitur. (You specialize in that don't you?) The reason it's a nonsequitur is twofold:
1. The birth mother's problem with the behavior of her other legal mother is due to her feelings about homosexuality viz a viz her religious convictions.
So, your first statement is a nonsequitur precisely because (as you often due I've noticed), glossed over that important detail.
Um, no. You are aware that "non sequitur" isn't just an episode of Star Trek, aren't you? It actually has a definition.
No parent or spouse would ever believe that someone would move many states over to get away from their ex because they didn't agree with their ex on purely philosophical, religious, or political grounds. When was the last time you heard anyone say, "I moved from Oregon to Kansas because my ex supported Obama and didn't believe in infant Baptism." It doesn't happen. Rational parents and spouses know it doesn't happen. People physically flee to other states when they're afraid of an ex, freaked out by an ex, or desperately, desperately don't ever want to encounter the ex again. That's going to be a natural assumption of a parent who hears this story.
By the way, when they obtained their civil union, they went to VT, but they spent most of their time living in Virginia - so this picture you want to paint of a child being ripped from her home in VT to a place several states away, really doesn't hold that much water.
The other couple is still living in Vermont. Why is that?
The birth mother merely went to her primary state of residence; that's hardly unusual.
Does the part about fleeing to Central America in disguise kind of give you a clue, even a tiny little clue, that she didn't want Jenkins anywhere near her daughter?
No, the reason GLAAD has picked this particular case is that it's the one Fischer is using as a springboard for his wider position on kidnapping. We are merely responding to people as they speak. That's it.
So GLAAD was running Jenkin's defense in this case because they knew what Fischer was going to say years later? Do they have a time machine?
No matter how much you talk about this case and emphasize your points, straight parents are still going to hear it the same way - their way.
A. That's just psychobabble.
B. It's also an indictment of straight people, as if there's a heterosexual hive mind like the gay hive mind that does triage on the basis of sexual orientation.
But, hey, you have gay friends, so you're cool.
No, it's how people think. If this was a case of a lesbian birth mother and primary care giver whose partner left to become a Mennonite and had little or no contact with the lesbian's biological daughter for years, then married a man and used a Texas court to try and take custody of the child, causing the lesbian to flee to Central America under the protection of gay activists, who would you think had been wronged?
In this case, the anti-marriage advocates get to stir the pot even more, I'm sure angrily claiming that gay couples who can't have children of their own are trying to seize custody of Christians' biological children, using gay marriage laws in a gay-marriage state to do it, forcing Christians to flee the country and making Mennonite missionaries afraid to even return to the US.