quote:Link??
Did you just ask if Kim Jong-Il wanted a theocracy? He had one. His dead father continues to be revered as a god in North Korea.
quote:Link??
Did you just ask if Kim Jong-Il wanted a theocracy? He had one. His dead father continues to be revered as a god in North Korea.
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I don't have the time or inclination to refute the false argument that "the only legitimate arguments to be made against gay marriage are religious in nature".
quote:I'm against public accommodation laws too, but not one at a time. If we are going to protect classes of people that are clearly choice based, I don't see why a class of people that cannot be demonstrated are that way because of a choice should be excluded.quote:
The only legitimate arguments to be made against gay marriage are religious in nature. If you oppose gay marriage, why not be intellectually honest and admit you want a theocracy rather than liberty?
I don't have the time or inclination to refute the false argument that "the only legitimate arguments to be made against gay marriage are religious in nature".
It is not endorsing a theocracy to support the traditional definition of marriage as being between 1 man and 1 woman. So do you believe we have been living in a Theocracy up until the last few years?
I don't buy your arguments, but even if I did, this is related to forcing someone who opposes gay marriage for religious reasons to participate in something that violates their religious beliefs.
Would you support an ordinance that forced kosher delis to serve bacon?
Nothing wrong with bacon. People eat bacon all the time. It's only a religious argument against bacon. So should observant Jews who happen to own a Kosher Deli be forced to serve bacon?
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It is not endorsing a theocracy to support the traditional definition of marriage as being between 1 man and 1 woman. So do you believe we have been living in a Theocracy up until the last few years?
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I don't buy your arguments, but even if I did, this is related to forcing someone who opposes gay marriage for religious reasons to participate in something that violates their religious beliefs.
Would you support an ordinance that forced kosher delis to serve bacon?
Nothing wrong with bacon. People eat bacon all the time. It's only a religious argument against bacon. So should observant Jews who happen to own a Kosher Deli be forced to serve bacon?
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Your example is of making a business offer a product that it does not offer, not of making it serve whatever products it does offer a particular type of customer. It would be just like asking if an Italian restaurant should be forced to sell car batteries. That is not what is happening in these cases. If your kosher deli served non-bacon items to some people, but not to a certain group of them (i.e. Muslims/Christians/Hindus/Women/Asians), then yes, they would absolutely be violating applicable public accommodation laws.
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I've said repeatedly that I'm against public accommodation laws, and I don't see why you would think I'm ok with this. I've said over and over again that people like this should be able to refuse service to gay people, and then deal with whatever well-deserved negative press they get for doing so. Let the market sort it out just like with any other bad customer service issue. I'm just pointing out that this is not an example of what the OP and the author of this article are trying to make it out to be. Churches are still free to discriminate against whomever they want, just like I'm sure Jesus would want them to do. "The Hitchin Post" is not a church, even if ministers run it. A Pizza Hut run by ministers wouldn't be a church either.
I also don't find these laws evil; I just don't think they're necessary or do anyone very much good.
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Bacon is a breakfast food. The deli serves breakfast. They may even sell beef-bacon, or turkey-bacon. They just don't serve real bacon for religious reasons.
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How about cheeseburgers? They don't serve cheeseburgers for religious reasons. They may sell cheese and they may serve burgers, but put cheese on that burger? Nope, not here.
quote:It's not. I gave you a valid one - a kosher deli who serves it's menu to some people but not others.
It is a valid analogy.
quote:quote:Link??
Did you just ask if Kim Jong-Il wanted a theocracy? He had one. His dead father continues to be revered as a god in North Korea.
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Actions have consequences. If you infringe on another's rights you deal with them even if you're born that way. homosexuality infringes on nobody and doesn't cause harm to others.
I may think it's an illness to believe in a deity and it's bad to have tons of kids and indoctrinate them in such a belief but I'm not going to ask to criminalize it because it doesn't harm me.
I'm not sure if you're blinded by hate, willfully ignorant, or radically depraved (but suspect it's a combination of the thrice, particularly the latter).
quote:I don't understand why a gay person who gets bad customer service should just "keep the peace," but anyone else can let other people know about their experience. If I go to a restaurant and the service sucks, food was bad, they messed up my order, staff was rude, place was dirty, etc., I'd let people know about it, and I suspect you would too. I took a marketing class at A&M where the professor talked about how a bad customer service experience with a flower shop in a small town led to that business eventually closing. This kind of thing happens all the time. It's the entire reason websites like Yelp exist. Only The Gays are expected to not speak up about it.
Liberalism supposedly holds liberty as a chief end. Not today. When someone's behavior is not in line with a liberal's morality, that person is coerced - either by law or severe pressure from "the market." The days of letting a person be and live his life in peace are long gone. A time where this gay couple would have simply "kept the peace" and sought another avenue to get married have passed. No, this chapel must be taught a lesson of what is right and wrong. If not by the government, by an overwhelming marketing campaign to put them out of business.
I'm certainly not a liberal, but I am often surprised that they so quickly abandon their political ideology.
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They're not serving bacon to anyone.
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They're not serving bacon to anyone.
And the wedding chapel isn't giving same sex marriages to anyone.
A valid analogy.
quote:really? I didn't read that part of the story. Can you refer me to when this couple was refusing interracial couples?quote:quote:
They're not serving bacon to anyone.
And the wedding chapel isn't giving same sex marriages to anyone.
A valid analogy.
And at one point they weren't marrying any interracial couple but that got struck down.
quote:I do love the argument that religious people should just get to exempt themselves from any law that applies to everyone else. Like Jim pointed out, lots of people used to (and many still would if they're being honest) define it as a union between a man and woman of the same race. They often had sincerely held religious beliefs on that. They still have to follow the law, and like in your attempt at making this a relevant example, they weren't offering interracial marriages to anyone.
If the wedding chapel owner says, "we only do weddings for marriages" and by their definition a marriage is a permanent union between one man and one woman, then they should be allowed to provide only the product they wish to offer.
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The government then comes in and changes the definition of "marriage" to mean something different than what this business owner has used.
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The business owner's definition may be religiously based, but they should have a right to abide by it.
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Only The Gays now have the power of government to fine or close down the business.
quote:quote:really? I didn't read that part of the story. Can you refer me to when this couple was refusing interracial couples?quote:quote:
They're not serving bacon to anyone.
And the wedding chapel isn't giving same sex marriages to anyone.
A valid analogy.
And at one point they weren't marrying any interracial couple but that got struck down.
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Only The Gays now have the power of government to fine or close down the business.
FIFY
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Not if it conflicts with a law that applies to everyone else, and their definition results in them discriminating. The kosher deli not selling bacon isn't discriminating against anyone; these people are.
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You are using the law to justify itself.
quote:It's really discouraging to see an otherwise intelligent person keep returning to this. By this logic they're discriminating against anyone who wants any of the literally billions of products and services they do not offer. If I want a car battery, a dump truck, or someone to put a roof on my house, this deli isn't discriminating against me by not offering those things for sale. If they suddenly opened a Deli/Car Battery/Dump Truck/Roofing business, and refused to offer me any of those things based on my race/religion/gender/sexual orientation (in some places), they would be.
By not selling bacon, the kosher deli is discriminating against someone who wants to eat bacon.
quote:Because they're not selling opposite-sex marriages, they're selling marriages. I get that you think they're different. Under the law they're not. You're not a precious snowflake.
By not "selling" same sex marriages, the wedding chapel is discriminating against someone who wants a same-sex marriage.
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I don't understand why a gay person who gets bad customer service should just "keep the peace," but anyone else can let other people know about their experience. If I go to a restaurant and the service sucks, food was bad, they messed up my order, staff was rude, place was dirty, etc., I'd let people know about it, and I suspect you would too. I took a marketing class at A&M where the professor talked about how a bad customer service experience with a flower shop in a small town led to that business eventually closing. This kind of thing happens all the time. It's the entire reason websites like Yelp exist. Only The Gays are expected to not speak up about it.
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I get that you think they're different. Under the law they're not.
quote:For legal purposes they absolutely do. If any other religious "sacrament" also carried any actual meaning in the realm of our legal system, they could change them too. Your church can still call them whatever it wants within the church. I guarantee you the church I grew up in would adamantly define marriage as the union of a man and woman of the same race. They can do that even though the state thinks otherwise.quote:
I get that you think they're different. Under the law they're not.
The government doesn't have the authority to change the definition any more than they have the ability to change the definition of any other religious sacrament. And that is the key that makes this a religious discrimination issue.
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I've wondered why homosexuals even want to be married by a church/pastor. If someone opened a store called the Anti-Christ Groceries and sold the same stuff as HEB, I wouldn't want to shop there even if they were forced to let me. I would obviously not be welcome.
quote:I haven't seen any trying to get married by a church who doesn't want to marry them. Like with any other service there are plenty of churches and pastors who gladly will do so.
I've wondered why homosexuals even want to be married by a church/pastor.
quote:Do you realize how fast this store would be sued if they operated this way and actually refused service to christians? Don't act like gays are the only ones to use the legal system. Imagine the outrage that would pour out over the Anti-Christ grocery that refused to sell anything to you because of your faith.
I've wondered why homosexuals even want to be married by a church/pastor. If someone opened a store called the Anti-Christ Groceries and sold the same stuff as HEB, I wouldn't want to shop there even if they were forced to let me. I would obviously not be welcome.
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I've wondered why homosexuals even want to be married by a church/pastor. If someone opened a store called the Anti-Christ Groceries and sold the same stuff as HEB, I wouldn't want to shop there even if they were forced to let me. I would obviously not be welcome.
So gays can't be people of faith?
quote:quote:Do you realize how fast this store would be sued if they operated this way and actually refused service to christians? Don't act like gays are the only ones to use the legal system. Imagine the outrage that would pour out over the Anti-Christ grocery that refused to sell anything to you because of your faith.
I've wondered why homosexuals even want to be married by a church/pastor. If someone opened a store called the Anti-Christ Groceries and sold the same stuff as HEB, I wouldn't want to shop there even if they were forced to let me. I would obviously not be welcome.