Greater Than, a recently launched campaign seeking to overturn marriage equality nationwide, is facing backlash from pro-LGBTQ activists for using a quote from former President Barack Obama in a way critics say falsely implies he supports the effort.
The campaign’s website displays Obama’s image alongside several prominent opponents of same-sex marriage, including the late Charlie Kirk, Allie Beth Stuckey, and Seth Dillon.
The photos appear beneath two lines reading, “Children’s Rights Aren’t Up for Debate” and “Be a voice that refuses to stay silent — stand up for kids.”
Below Obama’s photo is a 2010 quote from the former president stating, “We know that children benefit not just from loving mothers and loving fathers, but from strong and loving marriages as well.” According to Right Wing Watch, a project of the liberal advocacy group People for the American Way, the quote comes from a 2010 event promoting responsible fatherhood.
The Greater Than campaign seeks to portray same-sex couples — and those who support marriage equality — as selfish and driven by personal feelings or a desire for societal validation, framing its arguments as prioritizing children over adults.
The website features what appears to be an AI-generated image of a Black teenage boy who looks sad and troubled, while two white men — depicted as the boy’s same-sex parents — hold hands in a bathroom, seemingly unconcerned with the child’s feelings.
Critics of the Greater Than campaign have speculated that the use of such imagery, combined with Obama’s quote taken out of context, is intended to appeal to Black community members — a group that, according to public polling, has historically been less supportive of same-sex marriage and was among the last demographic groups to broadly embrace it.
Obama expressed support for same-sex marriage during his 1996 campaign for the Illinois State Senate, telling The Windy City Times that he supported legalizing it and would fight efforts to ban it. When he later ran for the U.S. Senate in 2004, and during his 2008 presidential campaign, he backed away from that position, instead supporting civil unions.
In 2012, Obama said he had “evolved” on the issue and became the first sitting president to support same-sex marriage. Two justices appointed by Obama — Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan — were part of the majority that ruled in favor of both marriage equality decisions in 2013 and 2015.
“If you’re wondering how credible this new anti-gay marriage organization is, look no further than their home page, which literally tries to present Barack Obama(!) as a gay marriage opponent. This is just embarrassing,” wrote one X user in response to the Greater Than campaign. “Obama’s quote was not about gay marriage, and every gay marriage supporter would agree that loving mothers and loving fathers are both important. We just think that two loving mothers or two loving fathers can also make great parents — which is Obama’s view, too.”
Metro Weekly has reached out to the Office of former President Barack Obama for comment regarding the use of his likeness in the campaign.
In what has become a familiar pattern, the Trump administration once again took aim at the LGBTQ community by removing a Pride flag from a flagpole at the Stonewall National Monument.
The historic site, designated a national monument by former President Barack Obama in 2016, spans 7.7 acres and encompasses the Stonewall Inn, Christopher Park, and several nearby streets and sidewalks. Portions of the site are also protected as both a New York City landmark and a New York state historical site.
The removal of the rainbow-colored Pride flag follows federal guidance issued by the U.S. Department of the Interior barring the display of so-called "non-agency" flags within the National Park System. The memo, issued last month, states that "only the U.S. flag and other congressionally or departmentally authorized flags are flown on NPS-managed flagpoles, with limited exceptions."
A Ugandan court has dropped a case against the first man in the country to be prosecuted for "aggravated homosexuality," a charge that carries the death penalty under Uganda’s Anti-Homosexuality Act.
The defendant, who was 20 years old at the time of his arrest on August 15, 2023, was allegedly discovered by police around midnight with a 41-year-old man at Soroti Sports Ground in eastern Uganda. Both men were arrested, taken to Soroti Central Police Station, and accused of engaging in "unlawful sexual intercourse," an allegation the 20-year-old denied. Police claimed they caught the two men half-naked.
USA Hockey has quietly adopted a new policy barring transgender athletes from participating in single-sex programs that do not align with their assigned sex at birth.
On November 15, 2025, the organization approved a participant eligibility policy requiring that in any programs restricted by sex -- including adult recreational "beer" leagues -- athletes may only compete against others of the same biological sex, according to The Athletic.
Under the policy, transgender men who have undergone hormone therapy are barred from competing in both men’s leagues and women’s leagues at the high school or adult levels.
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