Is that head on enough for you?

That would seem to be the crux of the issue here...Never said I wouldn't serve any particular customer - in fact, I wrote the opposite. But "serving" a person is not the same as refusing to "write" their particular message on my product. There is a difference between "person" and "message"
But that's just it. Those who are behind these so-called "religious liberty" laws want to be able to permit someone to sell a cake that says "Happy anniversary, Hector and Sadie" but refuse to sell a cake that says "Happy anniversary, Alastair and Bjorn" and claim that it is about the message, not the customer. And that's bullshit, it is the same message, only they refuse to write it on the cake because the customer is someone they don't want to write it for.Lord Jim wrote:It's one thing to say you're required to sell a cake to whoever enters your store to buy one...
Quite another to say you're required to write a message on that cake that you find morally offensive...
Not exactly, what Hobby Lobby stated is that a corporation can claim a religious belief and use that as a basis for denying certain medical coverage to all its employees. The actual belief itself or the religious substantiation for it was never up for consideration; the only determination was whether the corporation could claim it had that belief and whether it acted consistently with the belief.If there exists a trend within states toward "religious liberty" laws (as Scooter stated), then the adjudication of such laws is, whether I like it or not, to be made in the courts. I think that ship has sailed. Is not the Hobby Lobby case an example, of a kind?
absolute? there are rarely any absolutes in law. It would depend on the facts of the situation.But you do agree that as the provider of signs or slogans, I have an absolute freedom to accept or refuse requests for designs which I find offensive?
OK, and what do you do with those "few and far between establishments--let them discriminate because of religious liberty? Or let the government say those beliefs are not worthy of being considered under the law?even if some establishments sheltered behind a religious liberty argument, they are bound to be few and far between.
The question is not the content of the message is (this is not a First Amendment issue), but whether as a commercial establishment you provide a particular service to some customers but not others based on the status of the customer.Lord Jim wrote:Okay, let me go back to my analogy...
I'm the owner of Lord Jim's Tasty Confectioneries..
And one day, the Sturmbannführer of the local Nazi party walks in and demands not only that I sell him a cake, but that I should put a swastika on it, and write the words, "Happy Birthday Adolph, We Love Gassing Jews"...
To follow the logic of some here, that would make perfect sense; of course I should be compelled to do that, under penalty of losing my business...
After all, I'm in the cake baking business....
If you're going to defend the argument that people should be compelled to express views they disagree with in the creation of their products, then you should also be prepared to defend people being compelled to do so even if they are highly unpopular views...
The principle remains the same...
Okay, laying the advocating killing people part aside...If you would decorate a cake for some customers with the message "Happy Birthday Adolph, We Love Gassing Jews," then you should logically decorate a similar cake with the message, "Congratulations Hutus, We Love Slaughtering Tutsis." If you produce cakes celebrating genocides, you shouldn't be permitted to discriminate on the basis of whether the genocide was European or African.