Here in Texas the tax laws have gone round and round on school funding...no foreclosures involved. The law is written so that rich districts have to send money to poorer districts. Because school funding is by property tax, a district in west Texas with only grazing land has a much lower tax base than a city/suburban area with businesses, and homes. My school district has over 10,000 high school students. Its tax base includes Dell corporate HQ, State Farm HQ, an outlet mall, plus all the other small and large businesses, homes etc. There is no way an agricultural district can compete with that. We don't get to keep all our tax money, even though our rate is maxed out...money gets sent to smaller, poorer districts, often who still have rates under maximum. Poorer districts need money, but districts like ours do too. Texas, a small government state, constantly ends up in court over funding issues for schools and prisons.
As for marriage...the government has a responsibility to treat them the same...if you are married in one state, you should be married in all. I think the legal and religious aspects of marriage should be separate. Then when you marry in the legal sense, you are conferred all those rights, regardless of sexual orientation. Your religious ceremony would be a completely different matter; something between you and your church. I know many of you hate hearing about a European model, but in France, and other European countries, no marriage is legal unless it is preformed by a civil authority. You register your marriage at the courthouse, then go on to your religious ceremony. Your marriage is not official if you skip this part. You can be married in the eyes of the Church, but if it unregistered, it is not legal. In most of Scandinavia the laws are equally applied to all couples.
Again, marriage is between consenting adults. Animals and inanimate objects cannot say "I do" so they don't. Children are not adults, so they can't marry either.