
But it is the cherry-picking of case law here that is also disturbing. The interpretation of Constitutional statutes is purposefully spineless on the court's part. The Court took a record period of time working on (delaying?) their decision and yet in the end their defense seems pitiful. This is from their decision:
"Looking beyond the fact that any inquiry into the ability or willingness of a couple actually to bear a child during marriage would violate the fundamental right to marital privacy recognized in Griswold, 381 U.S. at 484-86, 493, 85 S. Ct. at 1681, 14 L. Ed. 2d 510, the fundamental right to marriage and its ensuing benefits are conferred on opposite-sex couples not because of a distinction between whether various opposite-sex couples actually procreate, but rather because of the possibility of procreation."
But then one ought look at the case then of Griswold v. Connecticut
I'm hardly a constitutional scholar, but this is "interesting", and if you read the Equality Maryland FAQs on the Deane and Polyak v. Conaway decision
Then there is the actual opinions document of the judges on that case (Griswold v. Connecticut) that bears review.
The overall gist/point of the Griswold v. CT case is that CT had a law that out-lawed the use of contraceptives. The Court ruled it was unconstitutional since it violated the privacy of a married couple’s life – But what it is “cherry picked” here is that this was a case where married couples were choosing NOT to pro-create.
Wombs and Penises Need Only Apply

From a pure demographics point of view one could run with this... for a very short distance. So many other things are really in play here that makes this logic patently absurd (so shouldn't heterosexuals not be allowed to get divorced then? Isn't that a threat to the 'state'? And then the logic stands too that some ought be denied to heterosexual marriages when and given the possibility exists (and remember procreation possibility is the crux upon which this ruling stands) they will, or could, choose to enforceably ensure procreation could not happen by choosing to use contraceptives, for example.
Of course, this is absurd - and exactly the reason Griswold v. CT struck down the CT law in the first place. No one can control "procreation" possibilities in the bedroom, least of all the state intervening in the "bedroom" as such. And so what if LGBT get married... what threat is that to "procreating heteros" in the first place?! And given science etc. of the day gay and lesbian couples can procreate without marriage anyhow, as can straight couples - the whole point it moot. This is NOT an issue of sanctity of marriage. It is NOT an issue of promoting procreation (I can't even believe I'm wasting letters typing such an idiotic defense). This is an issue of CIVIL access to equal rights. Not one church can marry a person in the State of Maryland without a license from the State first. And no one would make them. The whole "sanctity" of heterosexual procreation possibility protection is ridiculous beyond the fray.

If the Court's decision was about making civil society persist then the rights to liberty must be extended to all. Not just those who might have a child one day. Inserting "Tab A" into "Slot B" does not civility make. To interpret it as such is to suggest biology rules the social world. Are we not eons away from such a medieval view. Clearly on the Maryland judicial bench the answer is "no".