- Joined
- Feb 6, 2010
- Messages
- 110,853
- Reaction score
- 64,815
- Gender
- Male
- Political Leaning
- Undisclosed
When an individual's first amendment rights are violated, yes, I am ok with that.
She didn't persecute anyone. There was no court decision. There was no freedom lost. She just chose not to serve them. They were perfectly capable of having their ceremony without her. The cake/flowers/photographs were not essential.
But let's say it was a priest. Would you be ok with forcing a priest to perform a wedding outside his/her beliefs?
Well, I did kick off a rap artist for smoking marijuana, so most liberals would say I kicked him off for being black. But your attempt at reductio ad absurdum is not unnoticed. You can't show that flying an aircraft with someone in the back is going to violate the pilot's rights. Unless there is a same sex marriage to be performed in the back, at which point I would say that yes, a pilot could refuse to participate.
There is a big difference between an individual choosing to not participate and the government forcing individuals to participate. In the former, no rights are violated. In the later someone's rights are violated through threat of force.
Now you're picking and choosing what counts as a violation of someone's rights regarding business practices. It's not a violation of my rights to have a person on board my aircraft - the sole function of my business - against my religious beliefs. But it is a violation of my rights to be required to bake a cake for someone against my religious beliefs? Apparently, only same-sex marriage issues count as violating religious practices. You are basically saying only your religious beliefs count in this context, and not mine.
You can't show me that baking a cake for someone violates the baker's rights any more than you can show me that carrying a passenger violates mine.