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Who is being prevented from exercising their religion, business transactions have not one thing to do with religious freedom.
Yours is the popular opinion. To a business owner who believes marriage is a holy institution, a sacrament, a union of a female and male before God, a business transaction that facilitates a ssm can seriously infringe on their beliefs. I could give other examples.
Yours is the popular opinion. To a business owner who believes marriage is a holy institution, a sacrament, a union of a female and male before God, a business transaction that facilitates a ssm can seriously infringe on their beliefs. I could give other examples.
Then they should not offer wedding cakes for sale.
I can give examples of businesses claiming that their religious beliefs forbade them from serving everyone too, the courts don't seem to side with them.
Finished huffing and puffing? Pretty sad to go to such lengths defending a state that's so backward, and yet seems to revel in it. Mississippi is the kind of state that needs federal intervention, for its own good.
I had a geology professor in college who, at one time, had worked on the oil rigs out in the Gulf out of Louisiana. He used to say, "If they ever have to give America an enema, Louisiana is the place." I think he had the wrong state.
As applied to intestate and international commerce. Because the Constitution grants the federal government no right to interfere in intraststa commerce matters.
Exactly. LGBT is NOT a federally protected class. One must wonder why Obama and the Dems refused/neglected to include them as a protected class in 2009-2011 when they had the Presidency, House, and Senate.
Well, that's sort of like when I wonder how the Republicans keep saying they are a party of a "big tent", and yet they do virtually nothing of substance within their party to actually have a "big tent".
Yours is the popular opinion. To a business owner who believes marriage is a holy institution, a sacrament, a union of a female and male before God, a business transaction that facilitates a ssm can seriously infringe on their beliefs. I could give other examples.
Allowing businesses to determine who they will serve based on religious beliefs is a very slippery slope. How far do you go with that, do you refuse to serve divorcees, people that drink alcohol or sleep around. The other part is how do they even determine if they are selling to a same sex couple in most instances, some may be pretty obvious, others not so much.
I don't believe in discriminating against gays. The only exception I'd make is that Pastors should not be forced to marry them. We all sin, but just like with fornication, homosexuality is not okay. I'm sick of it being promoted as an "alternative lifetsyle", as if the lingo makes it okay. Like any sin you or I commit, it needs to be repented of. Of course, if one buys into the lie that it's not a sin- no need to repent. We can all justify our behavior by pointing the finger at God or His followers, anything to avoid looking in the mirror and taking personal responsibility for our choices- right?
And therein lies your problem. You think that everyone in the world has your Christian viewpoint. You need to get out more and begin to realize that there are other moral viewpoints in the world...not to mention other Christian viewpoints in the world.
There is more than one way to protest. Cyndi Lauper is doing it one way. Another way is for celebrities to stay away, in the hope that the people who lose money will pressure the legislature to repeal the law. Both are legitimate and both can be effective.
I agree, and it's the right thing to do, but it's also the easiest way out IMO. I think what Cyndi Lauper is doing by performing in NC and donating all the proceeds in much more effective, however. I know from experience that there are plenty of people who say they believe in something (i.e., more affordable housing, a halfway house, food banks) and will write a check or sign a petition, as long as it's not in their backyard.
I agree, and it's the right thing to do, but it's also the easiest way out IMO. I think what Cyndi Lauper is doing by performing in NC and donating all the proceeds in much more effective, however. I know from experience that there are plenty of people who say they believe in something (i.e., more affordable housing, a halfway house, food banks) and will write a check or sign a petition, as long as it's not in their backyard.
I'm sure Mississippi will see all manner of protests before it repeals this statute.
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