Me too. I thought the whole idea was to let people live their lives as they see fit. But that isn't the case at all.BIGOT
thought the lbgt community was all about love.
Do you have kids Dutch?
Me too. I thought the whole idea was to let people live their lives as they see fit. But that isn't the case at all.
If I'm a photographer, for example, and I don't want to spend my day watching gay people hold hands and kiss because I find it morally objectionable, why should I be forced to? Can't I select my own clientele? What if a straight couple asks me to film their wedding at a nudist resort? Can I turn down their business or is that discrimination?
In the case of the baker, the court fined the business $250K, IINM. That essentially puts them out of business.
SEC. 201. (a) All persons shall be entitled to the full and equal enjoyment of the goods, services, facilities, and privileges, advantages, and accommodations of any place of public accommodation, as defined in this section, without discrimination or segregation on the ground of race, color, religion, or national origin.
659A.403¹
Discrimination in place of public accommodation prohibited
(1) Except as provided in subsection (2) of this section, all persons within the jurisdiction of this state are entitled to the full and equal accommodations, advantages, facilities and privileges of any place of public accommodation, without any distinction, discrimination or restriction on account of race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, national origin, marital status or age if the individual is 18 years of age or older.
(2) Subsection (1) of this section does not prohibit:
(a) The enforcement of laws governing the consumption of alcoholic beverages by minors and the frequenting by minors of places of public accommodation where alcoholic beverages are served; or
(b) The offering of special rates or services to persons 50 years of age or older.
(3) It is an unlawful practice for any person to deny full and equal accommodations, advantages, facilities and privileges of any place of public accommodation in violation of this section.
Diagreeing and not personally taking part in something does not always equal bigotry and hate.
I agree that it is silly. But if that private owner doesn't want to...
If I'm a photographer, for example, and I don't want to spend my day watching gay people hold hands and kiss because I find it morally objectionable, why should I be forced to? Can't I select my own clientele?
I agree that it is silly. But if that private owner doesn't want to...
Again, the fact that they are private owners of businesses doesn't magically lift the anti-discrimination laws for places of public accommodation.
There are very good reasons why such laws should exist. It is relatively hard to see it in a society that in its majority wouldn't reject services for people based on their gender, race, sexuality, etc. and in a society where there is a great choice of such services, so if one is rejected by 1 business, one can go to the next one and get those services without a problem. The reason for such laws is to protect the minorities against discriminatory and oppressive practices by the majority. For you to see where the problem lies you need to imagine that it was the only bakery in town or that all bakeries refused baking cakes to you.
In the case of bakeries and florists, it's a trivial case, but imagine if it was a vital service you required. Lets say you get into a car crash and you are driven to the nearest hospital, which happens to be 100% privately owned. The emergency room is in full panic mode - "but he's black! we don't service blacks here" or "but he's homosexual, what if I get AIDS from all this blood spewing, and according to my religion I shouldn't be helping the gays", etc.
That's why anti-discrimination laws apply to private businesses in the public square - once you agree as a private business to operate in the public and profit from the public, once you agree to use all the rights as a business provided to you by the state, you agree not to discriminate against people based on some prefixed protected characteristics. If one wants to discriminate on those characteristics, they have the right to make that business a private club and offer services only to members.
I agree that they are prevented form doing so under the law. That was never in question. Doesn't mean I have to agree with it though.
Sure, you don't have to agree with it. I was just giving the reasons why I think those laws are pretty reasonable(if not desirable) and it's great that they are in effect.
Those kinds of policies(allowing discriminatory practices by privately owned businesses) are as good as the society you live in.
Think pre-Jim Crow situation or worse. Imagine a society where no one thinks discriminating against race for example is reprehensible. Imagine a situation where say 90% of the businesses refused to hire or serve black people. Now imagine that nobody objected to that and noone punished those businesses by not doing business with them. A lot of libertarian ideas have never been implemented to full extent and thus we can't really know if they'd work. This one is not one of them - this one is an idea that has been shown to not work and to produce horrible results both for the people discriminated against(unable to get jobs/services/etc. with everything that it entails) and to the society as a whole(increased crime rates, violence, etc.).
Again, the question is not "so what if one bakery shop refused to bake me a cake?", the question is "what if all of them refused?" and "what's stopping them?"(substitute bakery with hospital if you think acquiring a cake is trivial and non-important). What's stopping them is the law, what's allowing it is the societal tendencies.
I get that but we no longer live in that society. Have not for a long time (yes there are still problems but 2010s America is not 1920s America). I see the purpose of the law and get the good it does. So it is a mixed bag. Don't care for it over all but I won't fight to overturn it either.
That's the thing, even in the current society it presents problems. I set up the example to the extreme, just so people could more easily see the shortcomings of the proposed policy. In the current society such discrimination is to a huge extent hidden and a lot of people condemn it when it is in the open, but it still exists and it still creates clearly noticeable problems.
Problems either way imo.
But at this point its jsut rehashing the same points.
Personally I think that a private business (using private in the sense that they are not taking government subsides and are not city/state/federal offices...) has the right to be a hate filled place if they want to be. Society will respond accordingly.
Like that photog in NM that got sued for not doing a Homo wedding. That photog shouldn't have to imo. But if I was in that community I would not take my business to them as a result of their decision.
I think this kind of argument with regards to gay marriage is a bit of a straw man. Those laws can be addressed without banning gay marriage. If people don't like those laws then they should focus on those laws but they shouldn't use them as their reason to oppose others exercising their rights. Further weighing the concerns of the baker against those of the couple it is clear that exclusion from marriage has a greater negative effect on the couple than forced baking for profit has on the baker.
I had left the gay marriage argument on a tangent when I made this.