Posted on 08/16/2015 2:47:21 AM PDT by markomalley
Just in case you need a refresher: Back in 2012, a baker in the Denver suburb of Lakewood was asked by a gay couple to make them a wedding caketwo years before gay marriage was even legalized in Colorado. The owner of Masterpiece Cakeshop, Jack Phillips, declined to participate in Charlie Craig and David Mullins celebration, because such an event conflicted with his Christian faith.
Here are a few things Phillips didnt do: He didnt query consumers about their sexual preferences. He didnt bar same-sex couples from purchasing a cake at a place of public accommodation. He didnt ask consumers traveling in same-sex pairs to leave his shop. He didnt hang a No Gays Allowed sign in his window.
What he could never have known when he first opened his shop was that celebrating gay marriages would be a precondition for making a living. And when you consider that there are at least a few dozen other bakeries within a short drive from Masterpiece Cakeshop that could have accommodated the couples celebratory pastry needs, why would he?
Yet instead of exhibiting a basic level of tolerance (or dignity), two priggish bullies decided to call the authorities when Phillips refused to bake them a cake. And the cultural commissars at Colorados Civil Rights Commission soon ruled that he had discriminated against the couple.
The shop was not only ordered to alter store policy and start baking cakes for gay weddingsor else face debilitating fines, a consequence often reported on by the mediabut it was also forced to provide comprehensive staff training, ensure compliance, and then file quarterly obedience reports with the government for two full years. In these reports, Phillips had to describe exactly which remedial measures the shop had taken to conform, and document the reasons why any other patrons were denied service.
So, you know, Im sure this is exactly how Jefferson imagined America would turn out when he was writing the Declaration of Independence.
Phillips appealed the decision and just this week, a three-panel Colorado Court of Appeals unanimously decided that Masterpiece Cake Shops policy against creating wedding cakes for same-sex couples was a discriminatory and unfair practice, further ruling that the shop must continue to answer to the Civil Rights Commission, or else be run out of business.
Incredibly, the court acknowledged in its decision that it would have looked at the First Amendment arguments more closely had the gay couple ordered a cake with some explicit messaging that advocated for gay marriage. In other words, the Colorado Court of Appeals believes the threshold for denying religious liberty is the presence of advocacy. The court has effectively tasked itself with determining for you when religion should matter.
If nothing else, its comforting to know that Colorado can force an orthodox Islamic butcher to make sausages for a polyamorous bisexual bachelor/bachelorette party, so long as no one asks the butcher to outwardly promote swine and free love.
Not only does the court now apparently hold the power to bore into the souls of shopkeeps to establish that their religious objections arent authentic, but it can also decide when their prejudice is. It makes the risible assertion that any theological problem with gay marriage is really just opposition to the existence of gay Americanswhatever that means:
Specifically, Masterpiece asserts that its refusal to create the cake was because of its opposition to same-sex marriage, not because of its opposition to their sexual orientation. We conclude that the act of same-sex marriage is closely correlated to Craigs and Mullins sexual orientation, and therefore, the ALJ did not err when he found that Masterpieces refusal to create a wedding cake for Craig and Mullins was because of their sexual orientation, in violation of CADA.
A person may have gay friends and relativesthey may even love their fellow gay Americansbut if they decline to participate in a same-sex wedding for theological reasons, the court wants us to assume they could only be motivated by bigotry.
In any event, Im sure there will be an appeal. But since most Americans are fine with gay marriage and simultaneously put off by unpleasant (and in this case, deceptive) words like discrimination and prejudice, the courtsnearly always driven by the vagaries of public opinionwill find a way to force all to comply. This will go for any other businesses even tangentially related to weddings, such as food catering, music, and so on. And the crusade will accelerate until the legal lynch mob gets to religious institutions. No doubt advocates will work backwards to come up with a great legal rationalization for all of it.
All of this is not to say that in American life, the minority should never be compelled to surrender to some form of majoritarianism, judicial force, or government. In this case, though, the minority does not have the ability to compromise without abandoning its faith. The other side refuses to compromise precisely because of this reality. And courts and commissions around the country are willing to destroy businessesbusinesses that sometimes took a large part of a lifetime to buildby ignoring one of the most vital functions of the First Amendment.
The position of these businesspeople, unlike Southern racists decades ago, in no way undermines the newfound right of gay Americans to marry, nor does it inhibit them from enjoying freedom or finding happiness. In this case, only one side is attempting to legislate morality.
If you admitand many rational people do, even those who quarrel with the reasoning behind religious obstinacythat millions of Christians hold some form of a genuine, long-standing religious conviction that prohibits them from celebrating gay marriages, but you still support state coercion against them, then you might as well just concede that religious freedom isnt compatible with your conception of a contemporary society.
Whereas at one time the state wouldnt substantially burden religious exercise and would use the least restrictive means to further compelling interests, the state today is inclined to substantially burden a Christian by the mere fact that someones feelings are hurt.
One of the reasons the court can get away with this is because so many people reject ALL religion, that they simply don’t care about ANY ruling that would legitimize religion in ANY way.
“One of the reasons the court can get away with this is because so many people reject ALL religion, that they simply dont care about ANY ruling that would legitimize religion in ANY way.”
And when they come for them, who will remain to stand in their defense?
And another reason is that obama stacked the courts with anti-religious judges.
So when is someone going to order Pork Liver Pate’, Bacon and Brats from the Halal butcher for their Tim Tebow Tailgate Party and Prayer Breakfast?
This from a link in the SteynOnline archives. A bakery in Denver can refuse to make an anti-homesexual cake, but must make a homosexual “wedding” cake.
http://www.smalldeadanimals.com/2015/04/i-dont-think-th.html
Now that I’d like to see.
Call me out of step, but it has really never occurred to me to make a social or political statement with a cake.
Is this what Malcolm X meant with “...by any means necessary?”
In the new era, everything is a social or political statement. A cake for a Christening celebration is a Statement. A cake for a wedding or baby shower. A cake for graduation or joining the military.
I once had a giant cookie decorated to celebrate the completion of the Tiger Cub rank by the group of boys I was leading. Someone could have taken offense! Another time I got cakes for an event at a religious foundation. An atheist (or Moslem) Sam’s Club employee might have objected to writing “Missionaries of the Poor” in icing.
Perfect answer.
We need a president and congress with enough guts and majority to correct the direction and path this country has gone down. Will it ever happen? I pray every day for that miracle.
Congress needs to put the Judicial branch of government on notice for it’s activism and repeal a few unconstitutional “laws” created by a branch that has no business “making” law.
How about this.....Bake the damn cakes and double the price. When the dust settles give half the profits to the church of your choice, thus having let the purchaser contribute to the church in your name. The churches may be willing to accept the money as most often they need it.
quote: “so many reject ALL religion.”
America is too secular, drugged-out and hormone-addled to care about the rights of those Bible-thumping Christians.
The powerful secularists include the liberal media, college professors,liber-doper-tarians, and promiscuous homosexuals (I repeat myself).
On top of that, rising numbers of atheist young people think the Bible has too many rules, especially the narrow-minded ban against hooking up and shacking up.
Yes, America was founded as a free country. However, our nation, like all nations except Israel, will eventually fade into the dust. We as Christians simply need to remember our salvation comes from the Lord and not from man...no matter how much we agree with them politically.
It started in the civil rights era when government passed laws forcing businesses to do business with minorities. The constitution only prohibits government from discriminating or showing preference for anyone, as we are entitled to equal treatment under the law.
I personally think it’s evil to discriminate against someone based on the color of their skin, but I also think it’s evil for government to show preference based on skin color (affirmative action) and to take away private property rights, freedom of religion, and freedom of association. Nevertheless, that’s where the country is today.
The only way to solve these issues is to return to constitutional governance. That is the only reasonable, clear standard. Government must not discriminate or show preference. Otherwise, every law becomes a struggle for political power with the winner cramming their will down on everyone else.
I expect some businesses will choose those options. However, the intention of the homosexual activists is not to acquire a cake. The intention is to create a “discrimination” case. If the merchant simply quotes a price - high or low - the activists might continue looking until they found someone who would not.
Sounds like bad logic even about what advocacy is. This was not about a blank cake but a wedding-themed cake.
Being that as it may be, perhaps it would show a better tie to traditional Christian beliefs to also be selective about what opposite-sex marriages get serviced.
The main requested caketop decoration must have to be a same-sex couple set of silly dolls. Otherwise, ANYONE purchasing just a simple generic wedding cake would not have to blubber on about it being a “gay” wedding to the baker. If I had a bakery; I’d just quit “decorating” wedding cakes & just make plain white cakes with white frosting & sell flower decorations separately so PEOPLE can simply decorate their own dern cakes themselves.
Jesus never promised freedom. He said we’d be persecuted. Buckle up.
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