Beth, I don't think you were saying that you were "only" going to vote for Kucinich because he supports gay marriage but I have a feeling a lot of people will not vote for Ron Paul because he is pro-life and a lot of people will vote for Kucinich because he supports gay marriage without looking at any of the other issues. I think that's wrong and in my opinion it's worse than not voting at all. It's seems selfish to place one issue above every other issue facing our nation and it's the reason we have terrible leaders. If abortion were removed from the political landscape people wouldn't be voting for the ones they are.
I don't know, they are both very important issues that affect a lot of people in different ways, both dealing with basic human rights. But, it's frustrating to me when people vote on one issue. A good chunk of voters do it.
Oh I have a lot of issues that I look at (death penalty, health care, international policy, reproductive rights, etc.) I just think it's important when a candidate has balls enough to speak out on an issue like gay marriage, instead playing it safe by hemming and hawing their way around it (for example, Clinton and Obama both support the idea of domestic partnership, but won't take the plunge and say that they support gay marriage--which in my opinion belittles the gay community). I understand that religiously they may be against it, but inflicting your religious views on the entire country---especially if it seriously affects the life decision-making ability of 10 percent of that country--is severely counterproductive to the growth of tolerance and understanding in America.
Your point is well taken however, and I heartily agree.
Also, I still don't know if I'm voting for Kucinich, I was just pointing out that he was the only semi-front running candidate who is actually stepping up in favor of gay marriage, and I think that's pretty cool.