From Change.org:
A group of students at Stanford have organized a boycott of marriage until everyone can get married, and they are poised to take their movement nation-wide.
The premise behind the National Marriage Boycott is simple: don’t get married until everyone – straight folks and LGBTQ folks – have the same rights to civil marriage. It’s a campaign that started at Stanford, but it’s growing fast. This year organizers want to take the campaign to every state, and engage college campuses and young adults across the country to work for marriage equality for gay and lesbian couples.
Young adults take the pledge not to marry until everyone can marry. They then can purchase an Equality Ring. The prime object is repeal of the Defense of Marriage Act, which forbids the federal government from recognizing same-sex marriages. As more states legalize same-sex marriage, this becomes less tenable.
Well, the National Marriage Boycott has made the finals in a contest for $10,000, which would make incorporation as a non-profit organization possible, so that they can go national.
In return for signing the pledge, folks also have the option of purchasing an equality ring to wear as a public show of support for the idea of civil marriage for all. Organizers hope these rings can serve as conversation starters for equality, as well as mobilize even more young people – straight and queer – to say "No" to the idea of marriage until everyone has access to it.
Now that sounds like a campaign worthy of $10,000. Here’s where you can vote on Ideablob for the National Marriage Boycott. To win they’ll need all the support from LGBT folks and straight allies that they can get. Help spread the word; and make sure to vote before August 31.
You can read the whole article, with links to vote, here.