I love your posts. |
She does not “hate people because of whom they love.” That is another distortion the left tries to throw into this argument every time. She has gay friends and other gay clients. She believes (as many of us do) that matrimonial vows are ordained by God and that by definition, there is no such thing as gay marriage This has nothing to do with your constant dog whistle of personal “hate.” |
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she does hate
only a hateful person manufactures a case and at the behest of billionaires who also hate, take it to a compliant supreme court on the face of it, it is hate, and no justification waters that down |
Well then she should move to another country, because in the USA, marriage is a legal, not religious construct. |
So? I’m sure she accepts that, as do I. Forcing her to celebrate and endorse it is where rational people draw the line. |
So a Christian can refuse to create a cake celebrating Diwali. Got it. |
Sure, why not? If you don’t want the business you don’t want the business |
And white bigots can refuse to create or perform services for anything that “celebrates and endorses” Juneteenth. |
And if you live in an area where the only wedding venues are run by people who don’t believe in your religion and so won’t rent their facilities out for your wedding ceremony because they believe it will be contributing to idol worship, then you are stuck. |
SO WHAT?? Go somewhere else. Have a destination wedding. Move out of the area that clearly does not align with your values. Quit whining and playing victim. If you’re old enough to get married, grow up and realize that the world doesn’t owe you an endorsement |
That is correct, yes |
I'm not sure that is correct with this ruling. White supremacy isn't a religion. So they can't argue that their religion prevents them from baking Juneteenth cakes. |
You can’t force anyone to provide any service they don’t want to provide. That’s called slavery. We did away with that here a few years ago |
Yeah, I don't think that is what this ruling said. It said you can't force people to do things *that violate their religion.* That caveat is important because it suggests that sometimes people are expected to do things that they prefer not to. |
“So what”. Those of you supporting this ruling, this is the company you keep. Own it. |