Not sure if this has been discussed already, but there was a lot about it in the paper recently. I'm not sure where I stand on this issue.
https://tinyurl.com/3ua4wb4z
https://tinyurl.com/3ua4wb4z
@SunnyNot sure if this has been discussed already, but there was a lot about it in the paper recently. I'm not sure where I stand on this issue.
https://tinyurl.com/3ua4wb4z
Here's the bottom line.@Sunny
I get a 500 Server Error with that link.
I wish that were the case... then we wouldn't need laws and court cases like this one. If it were my bakery I would only discriminate against those who couldn't pay...On the other hand, if someone is Jewish, or Italian, or gay, it seems like you could just do business, and not get emotionally involved.
It has been, probably, as it is a 2017 case. You may be thinking of this one, decided in June.Not sure if this has been discussed already, but there was a lot about it in the paper recently. I'm not sure where I stand on this issue.
https://tinyurl.com/3ua4wb4z
I agree, Bobcat. While I think the baker is wrong (assuming that the plaintiffs are real people and this is not just a test case), how would I feel about a Jewish baker being forced to bake a cake for the local Proud Boys or Nazi party, with a big swastika on top? What a slippery slope this is!I can see both sides of this argument. It's a tough call. I think business owners should have some right of refusal. If someone comes in wearing a shirt that says "I'm a proud member of the Klu Klux Klan, you should be able to point them to the door. On the other hand, if someone is Jewish, or Italian, or gay, it seems like you could just do business, and not get emotionally involved.
However, I think it is still the case that a priest in the Catholic church will only perform a ceremony if one or both are catholic because that is the long standing rule of their church. You would think, that if you weren't catholic, you would just go to anyone else who doesn't have a problem with it.
It's like girls wanting to be admitted to boy scouts, and vice versa. Why not just go to the one designated for you. The same applies to bathrooms. It's worked for years to just go into the one that is your birth gender.
I dunno, but I think even if they win the case, the bakery is going to give them a cake that will cause diarrhea for a week, so it will probably be a sad ending.
I suppose anyone going into business should familiarize themself with the laws, and if they can't abide by them, then maybe they should consider something else. It's a crazy world, and I guess it's hard for dinosaurs to get used to.
bobcat said:However, I think it is still the case that a priest in the Catholic church will only perform a ceremony if one or both are catholic because that is the long standing rule of their church.
Yes, the case I cited in post 7 was also from Colorado. That case however was filed in Federal Court initially, whereas the Cake case was filed in State Court.Yes, I thought it was the same case, although it had been decided in the state of Colorado. There was a lawsuit or something, that made it all the way to the Supreme Court.
That is it PP.The case sounds similar to this one
https://www.seniorforums.com/threads/baker-refuses-to-make-wedding-cake-for-gay-couple.3313/
They won their case.
There’s a huge difference between feeling animosity between a gay couple marrying and a group of people who capture coloured people and burn them to a stake.Yes, both LGBT and the state of Colorado were trying to force individuals to do something against their personal beliefs.
Whether you agree with one side or the other it basically comes down to whether you think it's ok for government to force an individual to do something against their own beliefs.
Of course, the decision has been made and it is final. At least it's final until another case makes it's way through the courts and puts things in a different light.
I'm glad to see that some here see the catch in this. While you might support LGBT in forcing a Christian baker to make an LGBT cake or a Christian designer to design for an LGBT wedding, some here recognize that they wouldn't want the KKK to be able to force a baker or a designer to make a cake with a burning cross on it.
Personally, I don't want the government to be able to force anyone to act against their principles. It would be just as wrong to force a gay baker to make a Christian wedding cake with a cross on it, if he didn't believe in doing so, as it was to try to force the Christian baker.
Again, the Constitution protects individual Americans from the government.
I know that and it wasn't my example. It was an example brought up by someone earlier in the thread who recognized that the legal principle could apply to things other than an LGBT cake. It was post #5 by Bobcat and he obviously realized the difference too.There’s a huge difference between feeling animosity between a gay couple marrying and a group of people who capture coloured people and burn them to a stake.
There have been a number of these cases brought by LGBT in an effort to force the businesses to comply with their wishes or shut down. I would have gone across the street to a different baker but this was political. I expect some people in this thread would have tried to force the businesses too.Why would I want someone to bake me any kind of cake that doesn't want to do it for whatever reason? To prove a point? No, I will take my money somewhere else and have peace of mind that the cake is OK to eat and no one will get sick. But, to each his own.
I'm doing this to avoid this thread turning ugly... but while there's still time to edit, Patty...There’s a huge difference between feeling animosity between a gay couple marrying and a group of people who capture EDITED TERMINOLOGY BY KATE and burn them to a stake.
Thanks Kate but I’m not editing anything.I'm doing this to avoid this thread turning ugly... but while there's still time to edit, Patty...
https://www.bbc.com/news/newsbeat-30999175
I love your commentsI can see both sides of this argument. It's a tough call. I think business owners should have some right of refusal. If someone comes in wearing a shirt that says "I'm a proud member of the Klu Klux Klan, you should be able to point them to the door. On the other hand, if someone is Jewish, or Italian, or gay, it seems like you could just do business, and not get emotionally involved.
However, I think it is still the case that a priest in the Catholic church will only perform a ceremony if one or both are catholic because that is the long standing rule of their church. You would think, that if you weren't catholic, you would just go to anyone else who doesn't have a problem with it.
It's like girls wanting to be admitted to boy scouts, and vice versa. Why not just go to the one designated for you. The same applies to bathrooms. It's worked for years to just go into the one that is your birth gender.
I dunno, but I think even if they win the case, the bakery is going to give them a cake that will cause diarrhea for a week, so it will probably be a sad ending.
I suppose anyone going into business should familiarize themself with the laws, and if they can't abide by them, then maybe they should consider something else. It's a crazy world, and I guess it's hard for dinosaurs to get used to.