To be frank, Free Talk Live pushes the bounds of my support with the Shrine of Female Listeners and the policy of moving calls from women to the front of the queue.
As a general rule, I do not wish to support, financially or in spirit, organizations that discriminate in such ways. Far more egregious than Free Talk Live, however, is the United States Government's policies on the recognition of things like the power of attorney. If a man and a woman are married, even in a common law marriage (in what states recognize them, anyway), and one of them is incapacitated, the other is able to make decisions regarding what sort of treatment, if any, they are to receive; likewise, if one dies, the other is considered to have claim on their property (even if the deceased had a will specifying that their spouse was to receive little or nothing!). If two men or two men, or any combination of three people or more, were in the same position, such authority would not be recognized.
While it would be extraordinarily nice if everyone were as clever and informed as we are, and stopped involving the government in their relationships, this would not be a state issue at all. However, until such time as their legal involvements are equal to those of "traditional" marriages, gays absolutely have legitimate complaints. This is yet another reason my blood boils and my teeth grind whenever I decide that it is, at least for the moment, less horrible to sacrifice my money in the taxes the government demands from me than to suffer the consequences of not paying them off.