Bomb#20
Contributor
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2004
- Messages
- 9,506
- Location
- California
- Gender
- It's a free country.
- Basic Beliefs
- Rationalism
Dude, leave me out your arguments with third parties if you can't be bothered to listen to what I say. We have already been through this. Ms. Nelson isn't refusing to photograph anyone's wedding because he's gay. If someone were to ask her to photograph a gay wedding, she would refuse because of what he wants her to photograph him doing, not because of what he is.And if photographers within 50 miles all refuse to serve gay marriages? At what point does lack of accommodation become a problem?
That's the point I'm trying to make, and that Bomb#20 doesn't seem to grasp. There is no difference between a cashier at a grocery store refusing to check me out with my purchases because I'm a [racial slur], and a photographer refusing to do my wedding pics because I'm gay.
And people care whether they have licenses because if they do business without one the state will punch them in the nose. I.e., their right to their nose ends where the state swings its license-pulling fist. Do you understand who's initiating the violence and who's on the receiving end?If photographers are licensed they should lose their license to do business. If a grocery is licensed it should lose it's license to do business.
(Note: I ask not to imply that this means the photographer should win -- libertarianism is not the law of the land -- but because earlier you loused up the fist/nose analogy.)
That's simply another way of saying that equality and fairness should be legally higher priority than freedom and nonviolence. That's a perfectly legitimate position to take, but it's not what the Constitution says. Freedom and nonviolence are in the Constitution; equality and fairness are statutory law; and the Constitution is the supreme law of the land. If you want free speech rights to be trumped by legislators voting to define protected groups, then, legally, you need a Constitutional amendment.Presently discrimination is not to the degree where Jimmy Higgins hypothetical scenario is real but that should not matter legally. All it does is temporarily provide the courts with wiggle room to accommodate the racists and the bigots and the xenophobes, and keep a little bit of Jim Crow alive.