Correct
Marriage isn't merely an idea.
Disagree
Being that we're the only mammals that have developed ornate rituals surrounding the process of "socially approved" sex, it is an idea that someone came up with (and a religious idea at that)
And that's not even mentioning the fact that prior to Judeo-Christian influence, marriage had little to do with romance/love and was largely rooted in family arrangements. (and actually still is in many parts of the world)
Humans as a species value certain things very strongly
1. The right to have concentual sexual relations with a partner of choice.
2. The right to form a loving family with a partner of choice.
Nobody is denying those things...
The argument of whether someone is born gay or whether gay is a choice is totally irrelevant.
Neither you, nor I, nor government, nor church gets to pick other people's partners for them, or gets to say "No" to other people's relationships.
Certainly, I can't just come up with a claim that interracial relationships are bad, or that people with blue eyes aren;t to marry people with green eyes. Or people that are into astrology aren't to marry people into astronomy.
I don't believe being a gay is a choice either, which is why I referred to it as an immutable characteristic.
Nobody's telling people who their partner has to be. And I'm not suggesting that gay people shouldn't be allowed to get married.
If you sell wedding cakes or make wedding websites and sell to the general public then you shouldn't be able pick and choose the type of person you will sell to. Sure if someone is rude or threatening then you should be able to choose not to do business with them. But you shouldn't be able to deny them simply because YOU don't approve of who their partner is.
You're not picking the "type of person", you're picking the "type of event".
Being gay is protected class, a wedding is an event...not a person.
There's a difference between providing catering services to white people and providing catering services for a white supremacy event, yes?
Cool, But why not a wedding website?
They will produce wedding websites, but just not for gay couples. Sounds like discrimination to me.
For the same reason that I, as a software developer, gladly built business-related websites for a few members of my parents' church back in the day, but declined the offer to do their actual church website, itself. As an atheist, I didn't feel like spending my free time designing a website for something I don't agree with.
I don't dislike them for being the specific brand of Christians they are, I get along well with them at social events and would be happy to do other types of tech work for them, but I didn't want my name attached to/associated with content that was suggesting that common core was tied to "cultural marxism", so I declined.
And the association aspect is a big part of it as well. If you begrudgingly did a website for something you didn't personally agree with, do you want your name out there in all the Yelp reviews and forums as "The person who made an amazing website for cause XYZ"?
People don't get married to prove a point. They do it to celebrate their love for each other and to exercise their natural right to form a family.
I didn't suggest that people get married to prove a point, I suggested that some people are going out of their way to find someone who will refuse to provide them the specific customized service they're looking for so that they can "kick the hornets nest" so to speak.
If you go into a cake shop (when there's 20 other cake shops in the area that are thrilled to make a gay wedding cake) specifically because you know their viewpoint on it and want to make it into "a thing", that is doing it to prove a point.
It'd be like a person claiming "the ability to eat meat is an extension of my religion because of 1 Timothy 4:3 and Genesis 9:3 of the KJV bible", and then going to the one vegan restaurant in town and demanding they make you a hamburger, and "if you don't do it, that's discriminating against Christianity"
Clearly that'd be an absurd claim.
Should we allow cafateria's to refuse black people just because there is another cafateria somewhere in the city that allows black people?
But that's not an apples to apples comparison. The website designer isn't refusing to do work for gay people, they're refusing to design a gay wedding website. It's a subtle difference, but a difference none the less.
Do you understand how irrelevant this analogy is?
The Happy Holidays shop doesn't have any Christmas trees in stock, they don't sell Christmas trees to anyone.
However the cake baker has ovens and flour and butter and make cakes and sell them.
The website builder has computers and a language and servers and skills.
It's not irrelevant, it's the exact same ask.
If you were a hypothetical gay baker and/or website designer (or just someone who's an ally of the gay community)...noting that religion is a protected class, would you want to design and decorate a cake with a bible verse out of Leviticus? Or would you say "hey, sorry, I'll sell you a cake/website, but those specific customizations you're asking for...yeah, you'll have to go somewhere else to get that part done"
Would that make you "bigoted against Christians" for that refusal?