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Do you think Congress and President Johnson were so dumb that they passed the Civil Right Act knowing it was unconstitutional? Or that the SCOTUS was so stupid that their 9-0 opinion didn't take into an account of the First Amendment? C'mon.
Mick
Congress passing an unconstitutional law and SCOTUS upholding it? Never! Are you drunk?
That freedom of association has been to destroyed in this country is a pretty terrible thing. I support gay marriage, I also support the right of people to freely associate. The two are not mutually exclusive.
So you would have no problem with a baker refusing to serve a black couple?
Freedom of association is dead in America if you own a business. Public accommodation laws of the civil "rights" era removed that fundamental right. THAT should be the real story here.
So you feel a store owner can have a sign that say, "we do not serve black people here" in their window? Is that the fundamental right you are hoping to regain?
So you feel a store owner can have a sign that say, "we do not serve black people here" in their window? Is that the fundamental right you are hoping to regain?
If.that is their wish? Yes. Would I shop at such a business? No. This is confusing?
I have no idea what this video is about. From the comments I'm reading nobody else seems to know either and they're just commenting on the "scandal" behind the story in general, so I will make my comments the same way. It seems to me that in this case the bakers were not refusing to serve gay people, they were refusing to make a cake for a gay wedding. Is there any indication that they would not have been served if they were trying to order a birthday cake? Is there any indication that they would have served a cake for a gay wedding if heterosexuals had ordered it? A gay wedding cake is a specific product, and this bakery does not provide that product. As long as they would not provide that product to anyone, what have they done wrong? Some people have compared this situation to a bakery that would refuse to serve black people or women but it's not really the same. It's more comparable to a situation where a baker would be willing to make black people a cake, but not a Kwanza cake. Does a bakery have the right to not offer Kwanza cakes? Can the government say all bakeries must provide Kwanza cakes? In this particular case, is a bakery allowed to say "I'm sorry we do not offer gay wedding cakes, that's just not a product we sell"? How about "I'm sorry but we don't serve strawberry frosting"? If a baker provides one flavor should it be forced to provide all flavors?
I suppose in an era where the government can force people to buy a particular product, it can also force people to sell a particular product. I'm not sure that's the direction we ought to be going in though.
Are Nazis a protected class? If so, then no it would not be okay.
Point taken.
So would it then be okay for someone to go into a Kosher Bakery, or a Muslim bakery, and ask that a cake be made in the shape of a Jesus on the Cross?
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