life is nice when you're talking in an echo chamber.
And nobody would know that more than you!

In CA we have a Supreme Court decision that determined that denying gays the right to marry was a violation of the equal protection clause of the state constitution.
That was based on how the constitution read PRIOR to Nov. 4, as the CA Court clearly indicated.
The same court decided that the Prop 8 was an ammendment and not a revision of the state constitution (that's is all the most recent decision was about).
File that under the "tell us something we don't know" category. I've been saying that for the better part of a week.
The result we have two specific sub-classes of separate but equal. We have 18,000 legal gay marriages and we have a much larger group of gays who no longer have the same right.
How does the saying go again? "Poor planning on your part doesn't constitute an emergency on mine", with the roles of "your" and "mine" being that of the CA court and US Supreme Court, respectively.
We also have a state constitution that contradicts itself.
Indeed. But, the proper way to remedy that is to VOID those 18,000 gay "marriages", NOT overhaul the entire country's marriage laws.
We also have 5 states that have legal gay marriage.
Actually, we only have three. Vermont's law doesn't kick into gear until September. And, Maine is still in the air. If the people get about 56,000 signatures to activate the "People's Veto" option, the gay "marriage" law gets suspended. If the veto passes, the law goes bye-bye.
The whole thing is a complete mess and will only be sorted out on the Federal level.
Again, the court can (and may) simply do what it's done beforehand: Defer to the "Baker v. Nelson" ruling. Or, it will rule on the case directly, uphold Prop. 8, and force CA to kill the 18,000 gay "marriage" licenses.
As law experts have indicated, the Supreme Court doesn't tends not to buck popular opinion or the trends of the state. For those who cite
Loving v. Virginia remember that, by the time the Court ruled on tha case, nearly 2/3 of the states had alreay rescinded their miscegenation laws.
That's why many gay activists insist on a state-by-state strategy. At present, only 4-5 states have recognized gay "marriage"; the rest do not, with 30 of them having state amendments.