I didn't mean to imply that the AFA had asked AOL to ban the URL, or anything like that. But if I wanted to forward the URL to all my (hypothetical) AOL-using gay friends, I couldn't, either. Well, not without some ingenuity... personally, I'd try www [dot] marriagepoll [dot] com.
From "Per our Unsolic," I would guess the ban was based on someone -- on whichever side -- spamming the address. AOL got complaints, AOL blocked the address. Sounds like one more reason for AOL users to switch to their friendly local ISPs... but I see no reason to assume any anti-Christian bias.
The poll's worthless, anyhow. The general public isn't responding to this thing -- the only people responding are the people who hear about it. The AFA obviously thought that was going to be their website's demographic. As it turns out, it's their website's demographic... plus a whole bunch of gay-rights supporters.
And as much as it delights me to see the AFA's -- excuse me, "America's," as they put it -- poll on gay marriage end up in support of it, I know that it doesn't really prove anything. Well, except that there are several hundred thousand people who want gay marriage... but that's no surprise. It still doesn't say anything about the general public, and they're the ones who will ultimately decide if we can have it.