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Christian Baker Fined & Silenced


Luigi

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Basilisa Marie

I'm willing to bet that a baker who refuses to make a cake with the confederate flag on it wouldn't be forced to pay $135,000 in emotional damages.

Not in Oregon, but maybe in South Carolina. :|

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Not in Oregon, but maybe in South Carolina. :|

And this is one of the problems - freedom of expression should freedom of expression, no matter what the topic or which state one is in. At the moment, it seems like what's legal here is not legal there.

To me, the larger issues are:

1. The fine. I can understand some sort of fine if the baker has broken the law. But $135K? The original request was for $150K, so the judge-mediator-whoever gave the baker a 10% discount - but, big deal! How does a $135K make it right? Just how insulting was the insult? And how does $135K make the insult go away? Will the insulted couple use it to pay for therapy, or what?

2. The silencing of the baker. I know that in some legal settlements, all parties are sworn to silence about the details. All parties agree to silence. That's not the case here - only the baker is being silenced. And how does the state labor secretary have the right to take away a baker's freedom of speech?

3. The bullying. The gay & lesbian community jumped all over GoFundMe, which then took down the page to fund the baker. The gag order against the baker seems like bullying, too. If bullying is a recognized problem in so many other areas of our society, why is not recognized in this situation. Willful ignorance is the only thing I can come up with.  

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Lilllabettt

"Dear Friends and Neighbors, we are grateful for your patronage and are happy to serve you. We strive to operate our business on Christian principles. This means you can expect respect, fair treatment, and hard work from us at all times. It also means that there are some customer requests we cannot fulfill in good conscience. We regret that we cannot cater gay weddings, Planned Parenthood meetings, or events with sexually explicit themes. We also cannot fulfill design requests that are in our judgment sexually explicit, racist, or unkind.  We apologize for any inconvenience and thank you for understanding. We wish happiness and peace to all!"

"Dear Gay Friends and Neighbors,

Legal advice informs us that we cannot include gay weddings among the events we will not cater. We respectfully ask that out of kindness you not ask us to cater your wedding. We will happily cater any other event you may have, including birthday parties, graduations, retirements, etc. If you ask that we cater your wedding, we will comply with the law to the best of our ability.

However, please note that we cannot in good conscience profit from catering a gay wedding. Any proceeds will be donated to courage.org, an organization which works to support gay people who choose to live chastely.

Please speak to the manger on duty if you have any questions about this policy.We wish you peace and happiness!"

 

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Lilllabettt

The above is how to say "Bye Felicia" to litigious gays. Or anybody else who tries to get the law to force you to violate your conscience. You want some freedom to marry? Have some freedom of me expressing my self by donating your money to a cause you can't stand. 

It will work every time and its completely legal.

Look Nihil, another lifehack. I came up with this and the airline work-around in the same 12 hour period. God bless America.

 

ETA: p.s. also, not sure if serving cake is required for a legally valid wedding. I'm leaning towards "yes."

Edited by Lilllabettt
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We can look forward to more of such lawsuits and unjust rulings ad nauseum, thanks to our Supreme Court's recent glorious ruling, so celebrated by our media and Dear Leader.

Let's make no mistake, the real goal here isn't "equal rights," but silencing and punishing any and all opposition to to the "gay" social agenda.

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I dunno how I feel about this. But $135 seems a bit ridiculous.

On the one hand you are dealing with a wedding cake, so there is a connection between that and religious beliefs. I don't think you can say that a Catholic wedding planner is wrong to refuse to plan gay "weddings".

On the other hand, there is a concern that there could be a bit of a slippery slope to unjustified discrimination, such as a not serving a gay couple at your restaurant, etc. . .

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I dunno how I feel about this. But $135 seems a bit ridiculous.

On the one hand you are dealing with a wedding cake, so there is a connection between that and religious beliefs. I don't think you can say that a Catholic wedding planner is wrong to refuse to plan gay "weddings".

On the other hand, there is a concern that there could be a bit of a slippery slope to unjustified discrimination, such as a not serving a gay couple at your restaurant, etc. . .

So called "gay marriage" has only existed at all in this country extremely recently, so the "slippery slope" argument doesn't really doesn't hold a lot of water, especially with the direction social attitudes are (unfortunately) moving.  Most "gays" have no problem getting served at restaurants and such.

I'm convinced most of the people filing these lawsuits could easily find another baker or such willing to cater to them - what's going on is the targeting of businesses owned by Christians opposed to homosexual activity for destruction by activists. 

 

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So called "gay marriage" has only existed at all in this country extremely recently, so the "slippery slope" argument doesn't really doesn't hold a lot of water, especially with the direction social attitudes are (unfortunately) moving.  Most "gays" have no problem getting served at restaurants and such.

I'm convinced most of the people filing these lawsuits could easily find another baker or such willing to cater to them - what's going on is the targeting of businesses owned by Christians opposed to homosexual activity for destruction by activists. 

 

In fact, the couple who sued the baker did find another bakery which would and did make their cake. They had cake at their wedding.

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So called "gay marriage" has only existed at all in this country extremely recently, so the "slippery slope" argument doesn't really doesn't hold a lot of water, especially with the direction social attitudes are (unfortunately) moving.  Most "gays" have no problem getting served at restaurants and such.

I'm convinced most of the people filing these lawsuits could easily find another baker or such willing to cater to them - what's going on is the targeting of businesses owned by Christians opposed to homosexual activity for destruction by activists. 

 

They might not have problems getting served at most restaurants. But they might run into some problems getting served at a restaurant owned by a couple such as the one who refused to make them a cake. And if other people have a right to eat at the restaurant then I believe that a gay couple should as well, because sitting down for a cheeseburger has nothing to do with religion. The point is that we do not want to encourage people to use religious freedom as an excuse to discriminate in areas that have nothing to do with the expression of one's religion. There could be a slippery slope there, I think. You could end up with some folks saying things like "Well, serving gay people at my restaurant is not consistent with my religion" in the same manner that the people here said "Well, baking a wedding cake for gay people is not consistent with my religion."

Lets say that another gay couple who just happens to love chocolate walk in to the same bakery and say "please bake us a simple chocolate cake that we will eat after dinner tonight." Can the owners of the bakery refuse them?

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Credo in Deum

They might not have problems getting served at most restaurants. But they might run into some problems getting served at a restaurant owned by a couple such as the one who refused to make them a cake. And if other people have a right to eat at the restaurant then I believe that a gay couple should as well, because sitting down for a cheeseburger has nothing to do with religion. The point is that we do not want to encourage people to use religious freedom as an excuse to discriminate in areas that have nothing to do with the expression of one's religion. There could be a slippery slope there, I think. You could end up with some folks saying things like "Well, serving gay people at my restaurant is not consistent with my religion" in the same manner that the people here said "Well, baking a wedding cake for gay people is not consistent with my religion."

Lets say that another gay couple who just happens to love chocolate walk in to the same bakery and say "please bake us a simple chocolate cake that we will eat after dinner tonight." Can the owners of the bakery refuse them?

The reality is a heterosexual couple looking for a cake for a gay wedding would have also been denied service had they made it known what the cake was for.  This has been the policy of many Christian businesses.  This bakery did not discriminate against gays, it discriminated against an event which went against their beliefs.  In the same way they would discriminate against Planned (un)Parenthood if they had requested a cake for one of their events, or if a Pornography provider had requested a cake for one of their events. 

Businesses have and should always have the right to do this.  They, however,  do not have a right to not serve someone because they're gay and that is something I think all of us can agree on.  If a gay couple wanted a birthday cake, then they should be served.  A wedding cake? No.

And for those who think they hold some moral high ground because they closed a small business for a false social justice reason while ruining an entire family's business and livelyhood over a cake? well you seriously have your priorities all out of whack.

Edited by Credo in Deum
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The reality is a heterosexual couple looking for a cake for a gay wedding would have also been denied service had they made it known what the cake was for.  This has been the policy of many Christian businesses.  This bakery did not discriminate against gays, it discriminated against an event which went against their beliefs.  In the same way they would discriminate against Planned (un)Parenthood if they had requested a cake for one of their events, or if a Pornography provider had requested a cake for one of their events. 

Businesses have and should always have the right to do this.  They, however,  do not have a right to not serve someone because they're gay and that is something I think all of us can agree on.  If a gay couple wanted a birthday cake, then they should be served.  A wedding cake? No.

And for those who think they hold some moral high ground because they closed a small business for a false social justice reason while ruining an entire family's business and livelyhood over a cake? well you seriously have your priorities all out of whack.

Well. I am not so sure that everyone here would agree with that!

I think it is tough to make an argument that there was not discrimination against gays. If person A walks into a cake shop and says "please give me a cake with 'wedding' written on it" and is granted and then person B walks into a cake shop and says "please give me a cake with 'wedding' written on it" and is denied, then person A and person B have been treated differently.

The question is when the discrimination is justifiable. In the case where taking the action would cause the seller to act inconsistently with his religious convictions we say that the discrimination is justified. In the case where taking the action would not cause the seller to act inconsistently with his religious convictions we say that the discrimination is not justified.

The problem then becomes - where and how do we draw the line? What if someone honestly and sincerely believes that their religion mandates that gay couples should not celebrate birthdays together? I am guessing that a few of the 3 million or so protestant denominations out there has something along those lines in their materials. Can the seller say "sorry, no birthday cakes either!" in that situation?

Personally, I feel that the couple should have a right to refuse making a gay "wedding" cake. But I am a little worried about where else that could go. What if a gay couple had come in to buy paper towel? Can the store owner say "Hmm. You guys look gay. What is this paper towel for? A wedding? Sorry. My religion forbids gay weddings and I cannot help anything that would further that. Please buy it somewhere else."?

I think that would be going a bit too far. . . but I struggle to see how it is logically much different than refusing to bake a cake.

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State Silences Bakers Who Refused to Make Cake for Lesbian Couple, Fines Them $135K - Oregon Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian finalized a preliminary ruling today ordering Aaron and Melissa Klein, the bakers who refused to make a cake for a same-sex wedding, to pay $135,000 in emotional damages to the couple they denied service. In the ruling, Avakian placed an effective gag order on the Kleins, ordering them to “cease and desist” from speaking publicly about not wanting to bake cakes for same-sex weddings based on their Christian beliefs.

safe_image.php?d=AQCAoh1GhuFVd_tc&w=470&
They are no longer legally allowed to speak out.
DAILYSIGNAL.COM
 
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It's  the law in Oregon.  The fine strikes me as being extreme.  But, Oregon is Oregon.  The Catholic Church, or whoever wants to represent the couple, can take it to the Oregon State Supreme Court.  This might happen elsewhere, also, as in the conservative Deep South, where a baker refuses to make a cake for an inter-racial wedding, but which the state now says is legal. The baker supplies the cake and damages. 

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