Supremes to get into cake business

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MajGenl.Meade
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Supremes to get into cake business

Post by MajGenl.Meade »

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Freedom of conscience vs. rights????
For Christianity, by identifying truth with faith, must teach-and, properly understood, does teach-that any interference with the truth is immoral. A Christian with faith has nothing to fear from the facts

wesw
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by wesw »

nah, I don t think that those things are necessarily opposing each other in the case.

I think that as long as we have the freedom to have gay bakers everything will be oooooo kayyyyyyy.....

:ok

butchers and bakers AND candlestick makers are free to rub a dub dub, and all is well in the Land of Pleasant Living.......

Big RR
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by Big RR »

I suppose you'd also allow white owned luncheonettes not to serve blacks because we could have black luncheonette owners who could serve their own kind?

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Bicycle Bill
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by Bicycle Bill »

Big RR wrote:I suppose you'd also allow white owned luncheonettes not to serve blacks because we could have black luncheonette owners who could serve their own kind?
You know, I remember seeing signs in various places that used to read something like "We reserve the right to refuse service to anyone".  And this was well after the days of segregated lunch counters, toilets, water fountains, and sections of movie theaters and buses.
Whatever happened to that concept?  Or does that mean that no matter how drunk, stoned, loud, rowdy, obscene, unhygienic, inappropriately dressed, or whatever a person may be, a store owner, restaurateur, or shopkeeper has to serve them or risk being sued?
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-"BB"-
Yes, I suppose I could agree with you ... but then we'd both be wrong, wouldn't we?

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Scooter
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by Scooter »

I am not surprised in the slightest that you attempt to equate refusing to serve someone because they are gay to refusing to serve someone because they are drunk, stoned or smell bad.
"The dildo of consequence rarely comes lubed." -- Eileen Rose

Big RR
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by Big RR »

BB, if you have a legitimate reason to refuse someone service (because they are causing a disturbance, etc.), then a s a business owner you can. However, you cannot discriminate against someone based on skin color, ethnicity, sexual orientation, etc. if you are running a business open to the general public.

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Scooter
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by Scooter »

Correction - in most states you can refuse with impunity to serve someone (or hire someone, or rent housing to them) based on their sexual orientation, because most states do not afford protection against discrimination based on sexual orientation in employment, housing, public accommodations, etc. What so called "religious liberty" laws will do in those jurisdictions that do have such protections, is to render them meaningless, because anyone can claim a religious basis for their hatred of gay people and so discriminate against them irrespective of laws which say they can't.
"The dildo of consequence rarely comes lubed." -- Eileen Rose

wesw
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by wesw »

no RR, your supposition would be incorrect....

but if the mechanic had a body shop and someone wanted to paint "kill whitey" on their car I would think that it would be fine to refuse that paint job.

I don t think that a baker should refuse service to gay people either, but he should allowed to refuse to promote gay marriage if he wishes.

refusing to promote an idea is different than refusing service to a person.

no?

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Scooter
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by Scooter »

The "idea" is marriage in either case. By refusing a cake to a same-sex couple but not an opposite-sex couple, you are discriminating against the person, not the idea.

And by using a cake that says "kill whitey" as an analogy to a cake for a same-sex couple, you are certainly showing your true colours.
"The dildo of consequence rarely comes lubed." -- Eileen Rose

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Scooter
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by Scooter »

How about this as a more apt analogy - a baker will produce a wedding cake for a white couple, but not for an interracial couple, because he believes that interracial marriage is a sin against whatever image of God he has created for himself. Would you be so quick to argue that he is refusing to promote the "idea" of interracial marriage, or would you believe that he was discriminating against the persons involved?
"The dildo of consequence rarely comes lubed." -- Eileen Rose

Big RR
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by Big RR »

Or a devout RC baker will not bake cakes for any weddings other than those performed in the RC church because he dies not believe any other marriages are true marriages in the eyes of god (one of the catechism questions when I helped my RC friends prepare for confirmation in the 60s). Or someone refuses to bake cakes for jewish or moslem weddings. Or civil weddings.

Your job is to bake cakes and sell them, not to impose your view or morality on your customers.

And what about the doctor who refuses to treat the fill in the blank

wesw
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by wesw »

I heard on tv earlier that the SC had ruled that a tattoo artist was allowed to refuse to create a tattoo that he disagreed with.....

wesw
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by wesw »

....anyway, I stand by the assertion, and analogy that I presented.

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Scooter
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by Scooter »

wesw wrote:I heard on tv earlier that the SC had ruled that a tattoo artist was allowed to refuse to create a tattoo that he disagreed with.....
And how is that analogous in any manner to the case at hand?
wesw wrote:....anyway, I can't find anyway to defend the analogy I previously made, because it is garbage. And I am unable to answer the analogies made by others, because I would make myself look like more of a fool than I already am, if I tried.
FTFY
"The dildo of consequence rarely comes lubed." -- Eileen Rose

Burning Petard
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by Burning Petard »

I think there is a significant difference in just why one refuses to deliver a product or service to a potential customer. Some classes are carefully defined and protected. I have heard lots of claims about a 'gay agenda' . Very rarely is it explained just what that agenda is. But one item is to get 'gayness' in its expanded meaning that now includes a whole assortment of letters that I cannot keep up with, included as a protected class.

Along side that protected class of race, color, national origin is the problem of religion in America. It is a special topic that national laws are not supposed to mess with--the separation of church and state. But that wall or separation is in reality impossible. The Supremes are going to deal with this again next term , in a case involving the momentous problem of who pays for playground equipment in a church yard. At the same time, actual religious practice is fragmented and shrinking. If I am free to post a sign in my business that concealed weapons are not allowed inside my coffee shop (in Texas, for example) can I refuse entry to a male adult believer in the principles of the Sikh religion that requires him to carry weapon out of a religious duty to be prepared to protect others who are unable to protect themselves? At the same time the most common answer to polls about religious preference in America is now 'none'.

Can I be a soup nazi and refuse to sell you food in my restaurant, just because I am an ass-hole, but not permitted to refuse to sell you a wedding cake because I think you should not get married?

Where is the wall that prevents me from imposing my religious preferences on you? As I have frequently discussed with a lawyer friend, just what is the basic principle of justice in America? It is not 'natural law'; it is not a deference to divine law; yet it seeks to resist tyranny of the majority.

Justice seems to me to be a shifting, fluid concept; always in a state of change, always a common goal, but never a common definition.

snailgate

Burning Petard
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by Burning Petard »

And BB, I still see signs that say "No shoes, No Shirt, No Service"

My wife and I have reached an agreement that I may go into such an establishment wearing only shoes and shirt and demand service, but I can only do this after she is dead.

snailgate

rubato
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by rubato »

Burning Petard wrote:And BB, I still see signs that say "No shoes, No Shirt, No Service"

My wife and I have reached an agreement that I may go into such an establishment wearing only shoes and shirt and demand service, but I can only do this after she is dead.

snailgate

If there is a better and more accurate example of "marital compromise" I have never heard it. :D


yrs,
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Bicycle Bill
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Re: Supremes to get into cake business

Post by Bicycle Bill »

Burning Petard wrote:And BB, I still see signs that say "No shoes, No Shirt, No Service"
I like this one better.  Never seen anyone who took them up on it, though......

Image
Image
-"BB"-
Yes, I suppose I could agree with you ... but then we'd both be wrong, wouldn't we?

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