I asked about this on another thread, but no one answered -- Did the Indiana bakers face any governmental penalties for refusing to bake a gay wedding cake? Were they arrested? Were they fined? As far as I can tell, the only penalty they suffered was lots of people posting online about what jerks they are, and one lonely protester outside their shop. If that's correct, how were the bakers prevented from "living life freely"? They made a choice to deny services to someone, and they were mocked in response. Isn't that a justifiable position on both sides? |
You seem confused. The original previous poster obviously believes what used to happen in the past is wrong and, in fact, almost every alive today believes it is wrong. That is not living in the past, but living in the present. There are other folks -- you may be among them -- who use the Bible today in a manner similar to how it was used in the past. Unlike those who now believe that past Biblical justifications for slavery were wrong, these folks don't understand that today's Biblical justifications of homosexuality are also becoming archaic. It is those folks -- and again, you may well be among them -- that are stuck in the past. |
"Documented as wrong"? |
They do. They just expect you to respect their rights as a citizen and customer. |
How was the Bible used to justify slavery? Here you go:
http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2011/04/12/how-the-bible-was-used-to-justify-slavery-abolitionism/ |
Indeed. Maybe one day we will all go on public assistance. |
I am not. I am as good at spitting out senseless garbage as the next guy. Being on the receiving end is something else entirely, isn't it? |
I wasn't on the receiving end. But, is it too much to ask that your garbage make sense? Anyone alive today who believes slavery is justified due to the Bible is living in the past. Anyone alive today who believes homosexuality is wrong due to the Bible is just a step behind them. |
Jeff, I'm way too tired for semantics. What's your take on this?
http://shoebat.com/2014/12/12/christian-man-asks-thirteen-gay-bakeries-bake-pro-traditional-marriage-cake-denied-service-watch-shocking-video/ |
That article is too convoluted to read. It is difficult to make heads and tails of things. If I understand correctly, the pro-gay marriage slogan incident took place in Ireland. Also, if I understood correctly, the author called US-based bakeries. Ireland's laws don't apply to the US and, therefore, I think this is a bit of apples and oranges. I am not sure that a lawsuit targeting a baker for refusing to put a specific slogan on a cake would be successful in this US. In that case, a baker could successfully refuse to put either pro-gay or anti-gay slogans on cakes. The author, as is often the case, is confused about the meaning of "free speech". Free speech is an individual's freedom to speak, not the freedom to force others to speak. The other issue is the failure to distinguish between the refusal to provide a service because it is not a service you want to provide and a refusal to provide a service because of a characteristic of the customer. For instance, I don't think anyone would expect to be able to compel a Jewish deli to serve ham sandwiches. However, in many places, the same Jewish deli could be sued for refusing to serve members of groups protected by anti-discrimination laws. Therefore, if a baker refuses to sell cakes with anti-gay slogans, I believe he is on firm ground. However, if the same baker refused to sell a cake to an anti-gay customer, I would find his ground to be much less firm, though legally he still might be able to get away with it because I am not aware of laws prohibiting discrimination against anti-gay people. |
The house we purchased in rural Mississippi five years ago came with a clause that said the house could never be sold to an "oriental", "an Indian", or a "negro". Seriously. I still have a copy of the paperwork. Obviously that completely unenforceable now. But when the house was built in 1932, it was part of the neighborhood by-laws. OP, you need to do some research. The mormon church (and several other Christian denominations) taught that AAs were cursed by God until the late 70s. It was against the law in many states for a white person to marry an AA. |
Would you be okay with someone refusing to participate in an interracial wedding? In a wedding where a divorced person was remarrying without the church's permission? |
Making a cake is such a religious activity! You sound like the restaurant owners who didn't want to serve black people back in the day. |
Such an incisive argument! You make the choices between baking a cake for a gay wedding and going on public assistance. You expect us to take you seriously when you're getting so melodramatic? |
It's happening: https://carm.org/christian-fined-refuse-photograph-same-sex-wedding http://www.christianpost.com/news/christian-grandma-florist-fined-1001-ordered-to-work-gay-weddings-but-refuses-says-she-wont-betray-jesus-state-threatens-to-take-her-home-business-away-136613/ |