You will know nothing of the sort. First off he was not being forced to participate in any wedding. He was being asked to provide a cake for a wedding which is a service he provides to the public. Secondly, simply because he was willing to provide other services does not stop this one time from being a case of illegal discrimination based on sexual orientation.
It shows that he was not discriminating against them for "being" homosexual. He was prepared to bake a birthday cake for homosexuals.
And it's a rather silly argument to say that baking a cake for a wedding is not the same as supporting the wedding. Let's pretend that you married someone and afterwards you sent out "thank-you" notices to all the people who helped make the wedding happen. Would you avoid sending a thank you to the person who baked the cake because in your mind baking a cake for a wedding is not the same as supporting the wedding?
Double standard much?
Which is illegal discrimination based on sexual orientation. From the ruling:
It's rather disappointing to see you hiding behind a ruling when there is
evidence to show that it was not discrimination against being gay. The fact that he would have baked a birthday cake for them shows that just "being" gay was not the issue. The guy did not want to support gay
activity.
Even judges can get it wrong sometimes. In this case, they misinterpreted the evidence.
And, as I said, if he had couched it in those terms he would likely have a case. Unfortunately he tried to make it about his religion and that does not fly.
But you don't give any reason for why his faith in God is not a good enough reason for his decision. I think it's probably because you view decisions based on faith in God as not good enough, though you have no rational reason to think that way. It doesn't need to be good enough for you or for the gay community.
The guy said it was an issue of conscience and he has evidence from his holy book to support that stand. He could not do the same if it was a case of racism.
Very poorly stated and not really what I said, but yes.
It's poorly stated and not really what you said buuuuuut...yes.
Lol, you funny guy.
The right of free association (Not the persons views on it) would make for a much stronger legal case. The righ of religious freedom does not really apply since baking a cake is not an expression of religion. From the ruling again:
Agenda much? It really depends on the content of the cake, doesn't it? That's why the guy said he'd be willing to bake a birthday cake for homosexuals, but not a cake supporting gay marriage. The clients in both cases are gays. Obviously, the discrimination is not with being gay.
The only difference the two cakes is the reason for
why the cake is being made in the first place.
I will bake a birthday cake for an atheist, but I will not bake a cake for a "Jesus isn't real" party. Is the baker against atheists? No, of course not. The reason for the cake makes all the difference. I don't know why you keep refusing to see that but I suspect it's because you feel this is a really good case for the LGBT movement, getting the movement into the spotlight and showing the world that gays can eat cake too!
But it's a misfire. In your efforts to promote social justice, you've ignored crucial evidence to keep the case going.
It has nothing to do with my agenda and everything to do with what I believe to be sound reasoning.
But it is not sound reasoning. You are ignoring the fact that the guy would have baked a birthday cake for gays. You keep saying it's about discrimination against gays. The evidence shows that it was not. It was discrimination against a particular activity, which gay people just happened to be participating in.
Ask the same baker to bake a cake for an adultery party and he will almost certainly refuse. Why? Is he against heterosexuals, too? No, just against the action of adultery, like he is against the action of gay marriage. That is what the evidence shows.
If you are going to argue with the law you should know what the law says and what is considered to be valid reasoning and what is not.
The law says we have freedom to practice religion. It is against the Christian religion to participate in homosexual behaviour. There is evidence inside the Christian's holy book to support this. It is not a case of discriminating against a particular group of people so much as it is a case of trying to be loyal to the values of that religion.
This is proven by the fact that the guy would have made a birthday cake for the same two gay men who sued him for not making a wedding cake. They wanted him to support gay marriage, not just to bake any kind of cake.