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Apple's Tim Cook Calls Out "Religious Freedom" Laws As Discriminatory

An anonymous reader writes It will come as no surprise that Apple's CEO Tim Cook doesn't agree with so-called religious freedom laws. Cook says, "[they] rationalize injustice by pretending to defend something many of us hold dear," and has penned an op-ed piece for The Washington Post which reads in part: "A wave of legislation, introduced in more than two dozen states, would allow people to discriminate against their neighbors. Some, such as the bill enacted in Indiana last week that drew a national outcry and one passed in Arkansas, say individuals can cite their personal religious beliefs to refuse service to a customer or resist a state nondiscrimination law. Others are more transparent in their effort to discriminate. Legislation being considered in Texas would strip the salaries and pensions of clerks who issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples — even if the Supreme Court strikes down Texas' marriage ban later this year. In total, there are nearly 100 bills designed to enshrine discrimination in state law. These bills rationalize injustice by pretending to defend something many of us hold dear. They go against the very principles our nation was founded on, and they have the potential to undo decades of progress toward greater equality."

1,168 comments

  1. Christian Theocracy by ohnocitizen · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This is another power grab by the religious right. It is connected to their efforts to restrict sex (through access to contraception, sex education, abortion, etc) and control the lives of Americans in the bedroom. But you know what? Every article, every boycott and every protest is pushing them back. Similar bills are stalling or failing. The outrage at actions like these are causing more and more Americans to leave their religion in disgust. The more we drag this bullshit into the light, the more the theocrats feel the heat.

    1. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      You mean like the 19 other states that already have similar laws? http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2015/03/27/19-states-that-have-religious-freedom-laws-like-indianas-that-no-one-is-boycotting/

      Or maybe you're referring to the lead theocratic, Bill Clinton, who signed a federal RFRA law back in 1993?

    2. Re:Christian Theocracy by davek · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      The "Religion of State" is just as much a religion as those you are maligning. It requires faith, has a common belief structure, and has a god. Bills like this fight against theocracy. You are pushing for it.

      --
      6th Street Radio @ddombrowsky
    3. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      similar laws

      Key word "similar". The other 19 states protect the rights of people from their government.

      This one goes farther. No-one has the right to not be offended, unless you're in Indiana and your religious sensibilities are offended.

    4. Re: Christian Theocracy by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 2, Informative

      Go look how many times this claim has been made, how many times it has been refuted (including a good refutation in the VERY STORY you post here), and then tell me that the pro-RFRA folks are being intellectual honest.

      Never mind, by even parroting this claim you have proven you have not trouble with lying at all.

    5. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      The "Religion of I-Hate-Blacks" is just as much a religion as those you are maligning. It requires faith, has a common belief structure, and has a god. Bills that allow individuals to refuse to serve blacks fight against theocracy. You are pushing for it.

      Now do you see how stupid you are being? I suspect you won't, but hopefully others will.

    6. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least liberals don't lie to everyone about what they want. Enjoy your "small" government.

    7. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      The "Religion of State" is just as much a religion as those you are maligning. It requires faith, has a common belief structure, and has a god. Bills like this fight against theocracy. You are pushing for it.

      That is complete nonsense. Faith is believing in something without evidence. These laws are pushing one religion's beliefs onto others - it is religious fascism just like the nuts in the Middle East. With these Christians forcing their stone age ignorant beliefs on other are creating a theocracy.

      Legislation being considered in Texas would strip the salaries and pensions of clerks who issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples

      - looky there! That is the STATE forcing religion on other people.

      And contrary to the delusions of most christians, they are the majority in this country and the only ones doing any persecuting are them.

    8. Re:Christian Theocracy by TWX · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This is another power grab by the religious right. It is connected to their efforts to restrict sex (through access to contraception, sex education, abortion, etc)...

      But one doesn't need contraception. sex education, or abortion in order to have sex. After all, no other animals on our planet have contraception, sex education, or abortion and they have plenty of sex.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    9. Re:Christian Theocracy by TWX · · Score: 2

      I'm unfamiliar with this Religion of State that you're talking about. To where do I go to attend services?

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    10. Re:Christian Theocracy by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      actually, the laws and bills have not gone far enough.

      some kind of visual indication should be included, so you know who the enemy is. maybe an armband. it could be phrased as a 'fashion statement'.

      what could possibly go wrong with that? sounds pretty christian to me!

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    11. Re:Christian Theocracy by Dracos · · Score: 4, Insightful

      These laws won't last long after one brave business in each of these states puts up a simple sign: "No Christians."

    12. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      At the DMV of course

    13. Re:Christian Theocracy by pushing-robot · · Score: 3, Funny

      Apparently the closest chapter is in Pyongyang.

      --
      How can I believe you when you tell me what I don't want to hear?
    14. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Congress?

    15. Re:Christian Theocracy by roman_mir · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually the entire idea of these special entitlements that destroy individual rights TO DISCRIMINATE is a power grab by the insane government that is out of control.

      Individual people discriminate every day. As a potential employee you can choose to work for a one legged Brazilian tranny and there is nothing any of the other potential employers can do to stop this obvious bigotry and discrimination by you against their businesses, NOR should there be anything they could do to force you to work for them. That's EXACTLY the same thing.

      PRECISELY the same thing, since you working for a company is exactly like a company doing work for other people. When you buy a product you are buying work done by a company for you. A company is people standing behind it (corporations are in fact people, not as in 'Google is a living person', it is not. It is as in Google is owned by people, that's the people corporations are). A person that owns/runs a company has his or her right to discriminate and the Constitution of the USA is there to protect that right.

      A right is a protection against government oppression and abuse, nothing else.

      A government telling somebody that just because they are employing somebody they now lost a right is abuse and oppression and a power grab and unconstitutional and illegal and immoral.

      Should people discriminate against each other based on sex, gender, age, race, colour? We know that some will and some do. If a business does so, it will face consequences whatever they are in the market. As to a belief that just because a business exists somewhere you automatically get an entitlement to their service - that is hubris and destruction of the people running that business as individuals and it cannot stand.

    16. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Here is your proof:
      1993 Federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act:

      “Government may substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion only if it demonstrates that application of the burden to the person (1) is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest; and (2) is the least restrictive means of furthering that compelling governmental interest.”

      2015 Indiana Religious Freedom Restoration Act:

      “A governmental entity may substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion only if the governmental entity demonstrates that application of the burden to the person: (1) is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest; and (2) is the least restrictive means of furthering that compelling governmental interest.”

    17. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      >And contrary to the delusions of most christians, they are the majority in this country and the only ones doing any persecuting are them.

      Of course, many of them are totally dishonest and actually understand that all they've lost is the supposed right to violate people's civil rights, but other's actually are as stupid as they present themselves as, and think that not allowing them to discriminate is unfair bias against the bigots. They're all worse than useless, since they're easily duped into electing evil Republicans.

    18. Re: Christian Theocracy by MightyMartian · · Score: 2

      How does one explain the Civil Rights Act of 1968, then?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    19. Re: Christian Theocracy by macs4all · · Score: 5, Informative

      You mean like the 19 other states that already have similar laws? http://www.washingtonpost.com/...

      Or maybe you're referring to the lead theocratic, Bill Clinton, who signed a federal RFRA law back in 1993?

      Ya know; it's time this particular rubric is laid to rest.

      The Indiana RFRA (IRIFRA) is NOT, as Gov. Pence would have you believe, simply a Copypasta of the Federal RFRA; and as usual, the Devil's in the Details. Here's a couple of differences:

      1. The Federal RFRA Restricts its application to suits involving the Government or its employees and agents. The IRFRA specifically states that the Government does NOT have to be a Party to the Action; and furthermore, that the Government may INTERVENE in any action on the RFRA issues.

      2. The Federal RFRA does NOT preclude lawsuits regarding RFRA issues; the IRFRA specifically states that the RFRA can be used as an "Affirmative Defense" in lawsuits. An "Affirmative Defense" is just one step from immunitization. For example, a Statute of Limitations is an Affirmative Defense. It does NOT hinge on the Merits of the case; but rather what amounts to a Jurisdictional issue.

      Those two things alone make the IRFRA nothing like the Federal RFRA.

      And as proof of the fact that this is nothing more, and nothing less, than an end-run against the LGBT community, you need look no farther than the picture of Gov. Pence at the PRIVATE (that is, by INVITATION-ONLY) signing of the IRFRA Bill into Law. The people who are standing CLOSEST to Pence (again, no accident) for the Photo-Op, just HAPPEN to be the same 3 or 4 people who have been the MOST vocal opponents to Gay Marriage in the State. By the way, the Press (let alone the Public) wasn't invited.

      BTW, I live in Indiana, where a LOT more information regarding this has been presented than leaks out into the National/International news.

    20. Re:Christian Theocracy by MightyMartian · · Score: 5, Insightful

      One brave and short-lived business. That's the problem with these laws; essentially they allow the majority to persecute the minority, under the cover of "religious freedoms". It strikes me as being no different than the same disingenuous arguments used to justify Segregation.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    21. Re:Christian Theocracy by jythie · · Score: 5, Informative

      This highlights why a supposedly neutral law is de facto discriminatory.

      If a business excludes gays, or atheists, or muslims, they lose some business and maybe get a bit of outrage if it gets enough attention, but chances are the effect on their bottom line will be minimal.

      If a business excludes Christians, they go out of business.

      So while in theory it is religion neutral, in practice, some types of exclusion can be practiced with minimal negative consequences while others are simply not an option for reasons outside the actual words of the law.

    22. Re: Christian Theocracy by macs4all · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Go look how many times this claim has been made, how many times it has been refuted (including a good refutation in the VERY STORY you post here), and then tell me that the pro-RFRA folks are being intellectual honest.

      Never mind, by even parroting this claim you have proven you have not trouble with lying at all.

      No. The Pro-RFRA people, including Gov. Pence, are the ones who are being dishonest.

      The IRFRA differs from the Federal RFRA on several key points. This is where the "there" is.

      The Indiana Law is NOT "The same as what Obama Signed". Not even close. For one thing, the Federal RFRA had Bipartisan support. The Indiana RFRA was voted STRICTLY on Party Lines (guess which Party?). But the pro-RFRA crowd never mentions THAT, do they? they just keep talking about a Law that isn't THIS law.

      Just like Mike Pence going on This Week yesterday and lying his ASS off REPEATEDLY by stating that this was ONLY restricting actions by the GOVERNMENT. That is only true if you count COURT ORDERS as an "Action by the Government". If you read the analysis of the Federal RFRA and Indiana RFRA linked above, you'll see that I am correct.

    23. Re:Christian Theocracy by macs4all · · Score: 1

      You are obviously either a cock gobbler or a rump ranger. These kinds of bills are exactly why I put my 10% into the collection plate every week.

      What Would Jesus Do?

    24. Re:Christian Theocracy by Daniel+Hoffmann · · Score: 1

      "This is another power grab by the religious right"

      I think this is just a bunch of politicians spending money and time on something stupid. Politicians either trying to grab votes from the more radical religious voters or just radical religious politicians trying to force their world view on other people. I don't think these people can be considered one coherent group like your statement suggests.

    25. Re:Christian Theocracy by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      sounds good. a state full of Repo Men!

      (can I have my plate-o-shrimp, now?)

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    26. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Tolerance goes both ways.

      In no way should a Christian business owner be forced to do something that violates his conscience. Ditto the homosexual business owner. Civil rights in no way trump religious rights an vice versa. If someone is a homosexual and they are refused a cake for their "wedding", they should just find a homosexual baker or someone willing to bake for them. Same goes for any business.

      I'm personally intolerant of homosexuality. I don't dislike the individual homosexuals, but I will NEVER affirm their way of life -- and such will never be required of me. I'm actually a middle of the road guy politically, but I am a Christian -- and God's Word on the issue is firm. Love the sinner, hate the sin. And yes, I, too, am a sinner, but I'm not making the life choice for something that God has called an abomination in His eyes. I would welcome a homosexual into my church congregation with the understanding that he is there not for judgment, but healing. The church, properly run, is a hospital for sinners's souls, not a courtroom, but God will not be mocked. Just like homosexuals, I need to daily repent of my sins and ask God for His forgiveness -- and to exercise faith and obedience. God wants two things: faith and obedience. Obey God's Word == eternal life. Disobey, homosexual or heterosexual == eternal damnation.

    27. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or might find some support when a black baker is otherwise forced to make cakes for the Klan.

    28. Re: Christian Theocracy by DarkOx · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I think Tim Cook misses the point. There is a world of difference between the government discriminating by not letting homosexual couples say file a joint tax return and Jane's Wedding Cake emporium refusing to put two groom cake toppers on their baked goods.

      Civil rights laws that try and force a private business to serve all customers should be considered unconstitutional. We have the freedom of association under the first amendment that implies a freedom to disassociate from others or other groups in order to have any meaning at all, and if you won't accept that argument than refusing service or entry could also be viewed as kind of speech.

      Personally I can't understand why any business would ever do this. To mean one person's dollars are as good as the nexts. I don't care what color, or gender passing them across the counter to me happens to be. I also don't really care about the religious ideas or sexual desires the mind governing that might hold, only that its willing to freely offer me dollars in exchange for whatever good or service I happen to be proffering. Same goes for hiring, I just want the person who will do the best job for lowest cost.

      I don't think its right to deny someone based on race,color,creed, sexual orientation etc, but as strongly as I feel that is wrong, so do I feel about forcing someone to act against their will or conviction. So the baker who wont sell a wedding cake to the nice gay couple is a prick, he will loose their business and mine, because I'd prefer to do business which someone I think well of.

      Ultimately the market prevails, you can the relative economic success of places across the world, and you find with a few exceptions that happen to be sitting on huge oil reserves, the wealthy places are the ones that don't have serious problems with race, or gender discrimination. I suspect that correlation is no accident.

      Our economy is large enough that minority groups who face discrimination probably can find another employer or another shop who will treat them fairly. I don't think that is a problem, for one thing nobody can tell much about who or what you are behind a web form. I think we should err on the side of individual freedoms here.

      Where we need to be careful though is all the places government is involved, if we don't make sure our tax policy, family law policies, education, civil services, law enforcement behavior, etc are equal for all citizens than we are failing as a free society. The 'system' should work for everyone.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    29. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the people most vocal about homosexuality usually have something to hide

    30. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I hope you're just as intolerant of divorced people, and think bakers should refuse to bake wedding cakes for divorcees getting remarried.

      God's word on the issue is firm. Jesus said so, "What therefore God has joined together, let not man separate." (Matthew 19:6)

    31. Re:Christian Theocracy by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      Well, his daddy would destroy a whole city:
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S...

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    32. Re:Christian Theocracy by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      Sell somebody a cake regardless of race/religion/sex or sexual orientation/etc/etc fine. No problem.

      Being forced to *participate in and/or advocate* for or against a religious principle or political/ideological position, *there* is where the problem lies.

      For example, an LGBT-owned bakery should not be forced to provide a cake with "God Hates Fags" on it for the Westboro Baptist nutjobs. Provide a generic cake? Yes. Provide the message? No.

      Same thing here. Provide a cake, yes. Participate in advocating LGBT practices, no.

      Why is this so difficult a concept to understand? What gives anyone the right to force someone else to participate in and/or advocate for something they are fundamentally opposed to?

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    33. Re: Christian Theocracy by OhPlz · · Score: 2

      The AHA didn't have bipartisan support, but now we're supposed to accept it as the law of the land and not attempt to modify it.

    34. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you read that link? The only difference it posits is whether the law can be used as a defense in private suits. In Indiana, yes. For the Federal law it depends on which circuit court you're in, and for other state laws it also varies.

      Anyhow, if you read further down in the comments section, people have pointed out that Indiana doesn't have any state-wide laws which prohibit discrimination against homosexuals. It provides a defense for which there was no right for homosexuals to assert a case. Most people don't understand this--discriminating against homosexuals is [unfortunately] legal today in most states. The Supreme Court hasn't declared homosexuals a protected class, yet, at least not in any sense that would protect them under existing, catch-all Federal anti-discrimination laws.

      I think both sides are pretty much correct. There's nothing really new about this Indiana law. What's new is the pushback and the evolution of the public mindset.

      Yes, this law seems very bigoted and mean spirited. All the more so when you realize it has zero effect, except to nullify a handful of anti-discrimination ordinances in a few large cities in Indiana. But what's truly changed is the public acceptance of homosexuals.

    35. Re: Christian Theocracy by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      What's your point exactly? "Other states and a president 22 years ago are bad too?"

      CONGRATULATIONS! You have proven that Indiana's actions are NOT UNPRECEDENTED! You MIGHT have even proven that Bill Clinton is not the paragon of liberalism that... let's see here... NO ONE is claiming he is!

    36. Re:Christian Theocracy by kqs · · Score: 1

      I'd prefer if a requirement for using this law as a defense were putting a sign on your store and your website and advertising materials saying "No Gays Allowed", just so that I'd know what bigoted businesses to avoid at all costs.

    37. Re:Christian Theocracy by Vyse+of+Arcadia · · Score: 1

      I can't wait until some asshole refuses to serve black people on religious grounds. That's going to be a fun shitstorm to watch.

    38. Re: Christian Theocracy by ranton · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Civil rights laws that try and force a private business to serve all customers should be considered unconstitutional.

      I don't think its right to deny someone based on race,color,creed, sexual orientation etc, but as strongly as I feel that is wrong, so do I feel about forcing someone to act against their will or conviction.

      Our economy is large enough that minority groups who face discrimination probably can find another employer or another shop who will treat them fairly.

      When people are proponents of laws like these I just hope they simply haven't thought about their opinion thoroughly enough. But here is someone who fully knows the ramifications of this opinion and is actually proud of it. I don't meet people like this often, and it is very chilling.

      I simply couldn't imagine someone walking into a store with a "Whites Only" sign on the door and hear him say "Good for them for sticking up for their convictions." But it is clear that DarkOx is such a person. I guess I just have to take solace in the hope that most people don't think like him/her. I'm an upper middle class white male living in a wealthy liberal area, so it is quite likely I am in a bubble where I simply don't see how dark parts of this country still are.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    39. Re:Christian Theocracy by Steve+Hamlin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "In no way should a Christian business owner be forced to do something that violates his conscience....Civil rights in no way trump religious rights"

      Do you believe that business owner should have the legal ability to refuse service to a black/hispanic/asian person, or a woman?

      If not, what is it about homosexuality (an immutable characteristic) that is different than race or gender?

      If so, why are you an bigot?

    40. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are obviously either a cock gobbler or a rump ranger. These kinds of bills are exactly why I put my 10% into the collection plate every week.

      obviously ... either ... or?
      Some of us do all three things you mentioned.

    41. Re: Christian Theocracy by macs4all · · Score: 2

      Did you read that link? The only difference it posits is whether the law can be used as a defense in private suits. In Indiana, yes.

      Oh, and that little bit about the fact that the Indiana Government can (at taxpayer expense) INTERVENE (that is, make itself a PARTY to the Suit, without even being ASKED, apparently!). That's a BIG difference!

      it has zero effect, except to nullify a handful of anti-discrimination ordinances in a few large cities in Indiana.

      And you dismiss that as having essentially "zero effect"?

      You do realize, of course, that the reason those cities have anti-discrimination ordinances is because that is where the greatest concentration of LGBT population is in the state, right? And so, what you are saying is, "This law has zero effect except where it affects the greatest percentage of the LGBT population."

    42. Re: Christian Theocracy by sycodon · · Score: 2

      So you believe that the intent and text of a law is different depending on who votes for it?

      WTF?

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    43. Re:Christian Theocracy by epyT-R · · Score: 1, Insightful

      As opposed to the feminist left's attempt to dictate that consent is mens responsibility alone? ..or how her body her right her choice is somehow still his responsibility? How about all the policy that's destroying healthy hetero families and marriage (I believe the stat is 50/50 now)? While the religious right wants to use the state to impose toxic culture and behavior, the left does too. Neither is acceptable. A mantra for a free society should include "Live how you want, but don't expect everyone to like you."

    44. Re: Christian Theocracy by parkinglot777 · · Score: 1

      Huh? Where are your citation links? That is a portion of the each bill that makes 2 bills look the same. They aren't the same if one has to interpret from the whole bill.

      RFRA -- http://www.prop1.org/rainbow/r... -- under section 3 EXCEPTION (b)

      IRFRA -- https://www.documentcloud.org/... -- under section 8

    45. Re:Christian Theocracy by fyngyrz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But one doesn't need contraception. sex education, or abortion in order to have sex. After all, no other animals on our planet have contraception, sex education, or abortion and they have plenty of sex.

      Yes indeed. But (some) people are able to evaluate the consequences of having sex, such that they would like to modify their behavior so that they can enjoy the act, without the consequences. By attempting to remove the means to do this, religion seeks to leverage people's actions through their concern for consequences (pregnancy and so on, if you are having trouble following.)

      Inasmuch as religion has no relevance to my life, I have no interest in what they would like me to do, and I utterly reject anything that they would force me to do. Now, if you want to restrict your access to contraception, sex education and abortion along the lines of some set of religious dictates, that's perfectly ok. Just keep your superstitious claptrap away from my personal choices and you'll be fine. Otherwise, we have a problem.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    46. Re:Christian Theocracy by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      So. What you're saying is that Christians should be forced to wear armbands. Have I got that right?

      What do you want on them? "Superstitious"? "Gullible"? "Critical Thinking Impaired"?

      Just wondering...

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    47. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "For example, a Statute of Limitations is an Affirmative Defense."

      Bullshit. A statute of limitations is just that ... it is a LIMIT, not an affirmative defense. An affirmative defense is a JUSTIFICATION OR EXCUSE.

    48. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > In no way should a Christian business owner be forced to do something that violates his conscience.

      Nobody's "forcing" anybody to do anything; you can choose to do business with the public and not discriminate, or find some other line of work.

      What's more, your attitude is the most un-Christian I can imagine. You know Jesus preached love, right? He didn't go around condemning sinners, he went around forgiving them. He sacrificed himself to demonstrate to his followers - to YOU - that love is more important than life itself. Yet you feel it's your prerogative to judge, condemn, ostracize, and punish.

      Maybe you ought to focus more on getting that beam out of your own eye than the mote in your brother's.

    49. Re: Christian Theocracy by macs4all · · Score: 0

      So you believe that the intent and text of a law is different depending on who votes for it?

      WTF?

      You need to learn to read.

      The Indiana RFRA is different from the Federal one because it is different. As in "different words with different meanings."

      It is the pro-RFRA crowd that is saying "Nothing to see here. Same law as was passed 20 years ago."

      But it isn't. And THAT'S the DIFFERENCE!

      Got it?

    50. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually some animals do have abortion. Check out Zebras. Male zebras will have sex with a pregnant female when they take over as dominant and the shape of their penis will allow them to abort the fetus and then have their own child by impregnating the female. And some have infanticide. Check out Lions. They will kill another males young when they take over a pride, then have sex with all the females. So yes, lots of sex, but also abortions. And infanticide. You choose which is worse. I guess you are right about no contraception.

    51. Re:Christian Theocracy by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      There are quite a few businesses that support themselves, just doing what they do because they like doing it. These people are already financially independent, they just like to work.

      I ran a martial arts school with lots of students at a very low rate monthly because I loved teaching. Did it for years. I supported it with my software business. Now, although I'm done teaching, I still keep a free studio open where my black belts can go to practice with mats, heavy bags, speed bags, pads, makiwara, mirrors, recording equipment (for self-evaluation) and so on. It's not huge, but it is heated and cooled and provides everything needed to work on one's progress and maintain conditioning.

      Should I decide to hang a "no Christians" sign on my studio, it would make absolutely no difference to my willingness and ability to keep it open. Nor would it for my school. It'd just mean no Christians. And no one who didn't "get it", most likely, as it's just as idiotic as "no gays" or "no blacks" or "no women" or "no felons."

      It's quite practical in a case like mine, in terms of doing it and sustaining it. I hope someone in one of these states does it. Not because I support discrimination of this type; but because it puts a point on the real issue here: you shouldn't discriminate based on what others do or don't do as long as it doesn't involve you. And other people's relationship choices do not impact others except in their imagination, and that puts us back to the right and proper and complete lack of a "right not to be offended", which, if it existed, would be a basic and profound anti-liberty concept. Not only would it put a point on it, it would attract the news media quite well, which again would be an entirely good thing, outside of hacks like Drudge and agitprop vendors like Fox News.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    52. Re: Christian Theocracy by ohnocitizen · · Score: 1

      This shouldn't be marked informative, it is misleading. This law differs in several substantial ways from the laws at play in other states (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/03/30/connecticut-indiana-boycott-lgbt_n_6969684.html). However even if they were equivalent laws on the books in other states - then they too would be examples of the religious right exerting influence.

    53. Re:Christian Theocracy by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      If your business is supplying cakes, then you should supply cakes, just do it as well as you manage. No matter who wants a cake. No harm at all in that. There's no reasonable place for a business to refuse service based on opinion. Behavior in your place of business, sure -- but that's about it.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    54. Re:Christian Theocracy by pspahn · · Score: 1

      ... but I'm not making the life choice for something that God has called an abomination in His eyes.

      This is the fundamental issue I see with Christians and homosexuality. Christians make statements as you have, saying things like "hate the sin, love the sinner" to come across as less of an asshole. When it comes down to it, you view homosexuality as a life choice. Whether this is true or not is irrelevant to my point.

      Because you view it as a life choice, the good Christian feels no guilt for calling someone an "abomination". It's their choice to be that way, you say, so it's their fault for being sinners.

      At this point, I just can't see this as 100% true. I don't know what causes every homosexual to be a homosexual. I tangentially care about it, as I think it's an interesting subject from a biological standpoint, but what "caused" any given person to be homosexual is none of my fucking business just like what "caused" someone to have freckles and pale skin is none of my business. I am not here to play God or assume those powers. I am not here to evangelize my superiority over other people because they were born a certain way.

      Christians need to accept that homosexuality isn't black and white a lifestyle choice and that the Bible's lessons on it are based on archaic knowledge of biological systems.

      --
      Someone flopped a steamer in the gene pool.
    55. Re: Christian Theocracy by macs4all · · Score: 3, Informative

      "For example, a Statute of Limitations is an Affirmative Defense."

      Bullshit. A statute of limitations is just that ... it is a LIMIT, not an affirmative defense. An affirmative defense is a JUSTIFICATION OR EXCUSE.

      Bzzt! WRONG!

      From the Indiana Rules of Trial Procedure, Rule 8(C):

      "(C) Affirmative defenses. A responsive pleading shall set forth affirmatively and carry the burden of proving: accord and satisfaction, arbitration and award, discharge in bankruptcy, duress, estoppel, failure of consideration, fraud, illegality, injury by fellow servant, laches, license, payment, release, res judicata, statute of frauds, statute of limitations, waiver, lack of jurisdiction over the subject-matter, lack of jurisdiction over the person, improper venue, insufficiency of process or service of process, the same action pending in another state court of this state, and any other matter constituting an avoidance, matter of abatement, or affirmative defense. A party required to affirmatively plead any matters, including matters formerly required to be pleaded affirmatively by reply, shall have the burden of proving such matters. The burden of proof imposed by this or any other provision of these rules is subject to the rules of evidence or any statute fixing a different rule. If the pleading mistakenly designates a defense as a counterclaim or a counterclaim as a defense, the court shall treat the pleading as if there had been a proper designation." [Ind.Trial.Rule 8(C), emphasis added].

      Here's another definition of "Affirmative Defense, specifically referencing "Statute of Limitations".

      "Affirmative Defense" is a "Term of Art", idiot. Learn what those words mean (all of them).

    56. Re:Christian Theocracy by LoyalOpposition · · Score: 0

      Do you believe that business owner should have the legal ability to refuse service to a black/hispanic/asian person, or a woman?...If so, why are you an bigot?

      Do you believe that a white person should have the legal ability to refuse to marry (as in, become the spouse of) a black person? If so, why are you a bigot?

      ~Loyal

      --
      I aim to misbehave.
    57. Re: Christian Theocracy by ranton · · Score: 1

      Now I have even more despair that someone would mark my comment as trolling. That is more of a lack of reading comprehension though, since I gave no interpretation on what DarkOx said. He openly said it is okay to discriminate since people could just do business elsewhere. I merely stated I am upset people actually think like that.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    58. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All monotheistic religions are inherently arrogant -- because all of them claim that they hold the truth that can't be obtained by other means. Interpreting their gods whichever way they would like to and then arrogantly insist that must be the truth. Even if the gods were a fact, whatever s/he told the people of some 2000 years ago would never involve cell phones and rockets to the moon. It's always a wonder that the religious zealots would expect any one to follow those supposed teachings. A serious defect of all these religions is none of them seem to realize the available world is finite and nothing goes on forever -- gods just can't promise everything to everybody and make all the zealots happy.

    59. Re:Christian Theocracy by DutchUncle · · Score: 2

      Our local kosher bakery has a couple of christian-themed cake decorations on a display . . . gathering dust. :-) I can assure you that plenty of non-Jews buy things there, especially people looking for vegetarian and/or totally-dairy-free foods. They sell tasty baked goods; they take valid currency. It's called "business".

    60. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yet it's perfectly legal and seen as a great thing for my daughter's preschool to say "we accept 2 asians, 2 caucasians, 2 blacks and 2 latinos into every class because we want to be diverse". And if I apply for college, they will use my race to help determine whether or not I'm accepted. White House isn't stepping in to say that is unfair and discriminatory.

      Before you know if discrimination is okay or not, you need to check who is being discriminated against and for what reasons. Discrimination on a basis of creating diversity, or helping a minority group is perfectly fine ... in fact, it's touted as better than no discrimination at all! In fact, I'm racist and pro-discrimination for simply implying it is.

    61. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quick! Build a strawman to knock down!

      The Indiana law does exactly nothing to enshrine Christian values in society, but rather protects ALL individuals from being forced to engage in business activities that conflict with their consciences. This is, of course, obviously equivalent to issuing scarlet letters to individual undesirables. *rolls eyes*

    62. Re:Christian Theocracy by Nemesisghost · · Score: 1

      Do you believe that business owner should have the legal ability to refuse service to a black/hispanic/asian person, or a woman?

      If not, what is it about homosexuality (an immutable characteristic) that is different than race or gender?

      If so, why are you an bigot?

      The difference in racial bigotry & homosexual bigotry is the former is forbidden by a matter of law, something the later does not enjoy. Just as importantly, these laws are a knee jerk reaction to gay marriage proponents trying to force their beliefs on those who want no part of it. What did people think was going to happen when they sued a bunch of private businesses that refused to cater to gay weddings? And given the Hobby Lobby SCotUS win along similar grounds, I'd be willing to bet that these laws will stand judicial review for the same reasons.

      Here's the thing, we do not have a right to not be discriminated against. We are all allowed to walk down the street & cross it if we encounter someone who outwardly portrays something we don't like, be it his/her race or the way he/she walks & dresses. When you walk into a store the salesman is allowed to treat you as courteously or as mean as he feels like, even if it's because you walked in with your same sex partner, to the point of refusing to sell something to you.

      Businesses have the right to refuse service. Is it discrimination if the bank refuses to give a loan to someone who walks in wearing smelly rags pushing a shopping cart? Or what about clubs that only let "fit" men/women in? Can your John Candy & Chris Farley's sue for discrimination?

      If I don't like you, then I should have the ability to no associate or do business with you, for any reason I see fit. The only exception to that is if I'm providing a service & my dislike for you is due to you belonging to a protected class(race, sex, religious beliefs, disabilities, or national origin). Notice what's missing? It's what I said at the beginning, sexual preference is not a protected class.

    63. Re:Christian Theocracy by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      All religions. Monotheism has nothing to do with claims of exclusive knowledge of 'Truth'.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    64. Re: Christian Theocracy by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      put it in another light

      should a jewish baker be forced to cater a nazi rally?

      should a black photographer be forced to film a pro klan calender???

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    65. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I had cited rather than quoted you would have complained about the citations. Just admit you hate because you want to hate and have no legal standing for pushing your hate on others.

    66. Re:Christian Theocracy by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      But (some) people are able to evaluate the consequences of having sex, such that they would like to modify their behavior so that they can enjoy the act, without the consequences.

      but why should anyone but the individual pay for said options???

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    67. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shut your pie-hole Tim Cook.
      We already have Muslim cabbies in Minneapolis refusing to take fares
      if they are carrying alcohol or pork products.
      Stop persecuting Christians!!

    68. Re:Christian Theocracy by ganjadude · · Score: 0

      its not hard to understand. people simply are twisting what is going on to instill more hatred towards the right. its kinda funny if it wasnt so sad how they want to force X to not hate...by using hate?

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    69. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      @fyngyrx - you are pretty dense @TheGratefulNet was referring to the "Yellow Badge", go back and re-take your history of the 20th century. And yes, this thread has achieved full Godwin.

    70. Re:Christian Theocracy by jythie · · Score: 1

      True, there is the special case of stores and services which cater exclusively to various religious groups, though they tend to depend on local concentrations of whatever community they serve, creating a regional majority. Though given that any Christian simply has to go a few miles in any direction to be back in a Christian majority region, it is debatable how much restricting the service would impact others. Which is why Christian groups are not sitting and worrying about being barred from Kosher bakeries or Halal meat vendor, and also why such vendors are unlikely to bother discriminating.

    71. Re: Christian Theocracy by ranton · · Score: 1

      put it in another light
        should a jewish baker be forced to cater a nazi rally?
        should a black photographer be forced to film a pro klan calender???

      IANAL, but almost the only reason this law is a problem is because sexual orientation is not a protected class in Indiana. People are generally allowed to refuse business on any grounds, such as being anti-Nazi or anti-KKK, but not when they are refusing someone because of them being part of a protected class.

      At this moment in history, LGBT rights are at the forefront of the civil rights movement (a movement that apparently never ends). In an alternative world where religion isn't being used as a smokescreen for homophobia, this law would be very uncontroversial. But that is not a world we live in.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    72. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better check your clothing, if it is from blended fabric, you are also disobeying Leviticus.

      I also hope you don't like sea food, as that is just as much an abomination in his eyes.

    73. Re:Christian Theocracy by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      This is another power grab by the religious right. It is connected to their efforts to restrict sex (through access to contraception, sex education, abortion, etc) and control the lives of Americans in the bedroom. But you know what? Every article, every boycott and every protest is pushing them back. Similar bills are stalling or failing. The outrage at actions like these are causing more and more Americans to leave their religion in disgust. The more we drag this bullshit into the light, the more the theocrats feel the heat.

      Just, wow. This is not about some vast right-wing religious conspiracy or hatred for some group or groups.

      This is about not being forced to advocate for a religious/ideological/political belief/position to which one is fundamentally opposed.

      From my post here: http://slashdot.org/comments.p...

      Sell somebody a cake regardless of race/religion/sex or sexual orientation/etc/etc fine. No problem.

      Being forced to *participate in and/or advocate* for or against a religious principle or political/ideological position, *there* is where the problem lies.

      For example, an LGBT-owned bakery should not be forced to provide a cake with "God Hates Fags" on it for the Westboro Baptist nutjobs. Provide a generic cake? Yes. Provide the message? No.

      Same thing here. Provide a cake, yes. Participate in advocating LGBT practices, no.

      Why is this so difficult a concept to understand? What gives anyone the right to force someone else to participate in and/or advocate for something they are fundamentally opposed to?

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    74. Re:Christian Theocracy by catchblue22 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But you know what? Every article, every boycott and every protest is pushing them back. Similar bills are stalling or failing. The outrage at actions like these are causing more and more Americans to leave their religion in disgust. The more we drag this bullshit into the light, the more the theocrats feel the heat.

      Fair enough, but what scares me is how many extremists are already in power, in Congress and in the Senate. And on the road to the White House. We as a society really do need to take a close look at what is known as the "christian dominionist movement". This movement seeks to establish an American theocracy with the rule of law given by the bible. We should think about what these people are actually proposing: the death penalty for abortion, both for doctor and mother. The death penalty for homosexuality. Here is an article to give you an idea of what I am talking about. A very good read on this subject is American Fascists.

      It is easy to dismiss these people as being a crazy fringe. Indeed every society has its own lunatics. What is concerning is how this extreme form of christianity has infiltrated the main stream of christianity and what we commonly know as the christian right. What is extremely concerning is how many mainstream politicians share similar modes of thought to this movement. When I hear about laws such as what Tim Cook is writing about, I hear the clicking of a ratchet, bringing us a small step towards an American version of the taliban government.

      Those of us with a sense of what is actually going on must work towards steering our society away from this cliff. Above all, we should promote the idea that although we live in a tolerant nation, we should never tolerate intolerance. The bastards who bring in laws like this should be run out of town.

      --
      This and no other is the root from which a tyrant springs; when first he appears as a protector - Plato (423 to 327 BC)
    75. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In fact homosexuality is not the same as gender or race/ethnicity because it is not disclosed in the course of casual interaction.

    76. Re:Christian Theocracy by preflex · · Score: 1

      Not all Christians are assholes. Such a sign would be counterproductive. Limit your retaliatory actions to the actual assholes.

      Just ask every customer, "Do you support the $BILL_WHICH_ALLOWS_FOR_DISCRIMINATORY_PRACTICES ?"

      If 'yes':
      "I believe your religion is dangerous, and don't want it in my store. Get the fuck out of here. Never come back."

      If 'no':
      "Welcome to my store! How can I help you?"

      If 'I don't know':
      "You shouldn't. Welcome to my store! How can I help you?"

    77. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you really that ignorant? Or perhaps illiterate and can't read the laws for yourself? There isn't a dimes worth of difference between them, which means the "Anit-RFRA" people are the ones either being dishonest or simply arguing out of ignorance. So which are you? Ignorant or Dishonest? Because you certainly aren't right on the facts.

    78. Re: Christian Theocracy by sycodon · · Score: 1

      The Indiana Law is NOT "The same as what Obama Signed". Not even close. For one thing, the Federal RFRA had Bipartisan support. The Indiana RFRA was voted STRICTLY on Party Lines (guess which Party?).

      Context matters. This is what I was responding to and clearly he seems to suggest that because the vote was not bi-partisan, then it is not like the Federal law. The margin by which it passes does not affect the actual text of the law itself.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    79. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'Round here it's the self-described queers and feminists who are constantly agitating for more policemen in more people's bedrooms. But maybe this varies by locality.

    80. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mmmm ....

      Seems if you're religious (in any one of the world's major religions) you now have the right to discriminate and persecute, to be a bigot of the first order, to be intolerant and abusive, to be a racist raving anti-Semite for example, and to impose your beliefs on others without consideration for their feelings. And this is different from the radical Islamists, how exactly?

      Separation of church and state in a secular society was once one of the guarantees of democracy, but it seems that democracy now plays a second fiddle to religion.

      Good to know.

    81. Re: Christian Theocracy by linuxrocks123 · · Score: 1

      You must be new here, because his view is essentially a textbook statement of the standard Libertarian position on this issue.

      Also, reading comprehension fail.

      You:

      I simply couldn't imagine someone walking into a store with a "Whites Only" sign on the door and hear him say "Good for them for sticking up for their convictions." But it is clear that DarkOx is such a person.

      Him:

      So the baker who wont sell a wedding cake to the nice gay couple is a prick, he will loose their business and mine, because I'd prefer to do business which someone I think well of.

      You again:

      I guess I just have to take solace in the hope that most people don't think like him/her. I'm an upper middle class white male living in a wealthy liberal area, so it is quite likely I am in a bubble where I simply don't see how dark parts of this country still are.

      Your bubbliness might be hurting you here, but not in the way you think. You might want to try to consider positions you don't really understand a little more before having a knee-jerk reaction like this. Thinking something shouldn't be illegal isn't the same as thinking it's morally okay. I don't agree with DarkOx on this, either, but he's not a monster. He just disagrees with us on something.

      --
      vi ~/.emacs # I'm probably going to Hell for this.
    82. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you believe that business owner should have the legal ability to refuse service to a black/hispanic/asian person, or a woman?

      Don't businesses already have this right? How do female-only gyms exist, if sexual discrimination is illegal? Or is discrimination only illegal against some groups (e.g. men), but not others (e.g. women)?

    83. Re:Christian Theocracy by mr.mctibbs · · Score: 1

      I hope you realize you're reinforcing jythie's point.

    84. Re:Christian Theocracy by TWX · · Score: 1

      Neither of those examples is an analog to human behavior though, as both of those examples feature 'birth control' as a function of the male, not of the pregnant female.

      At the moment, in the United States, matters related to the female body are hers first and foremost legally. There are attempts at prohibitions on some of her choices, but there really aren't any situations when the male in a conception has any rights over the woman's choices with regard to her body. A human male cannot cause spontaneous abortion/miscarriage through coitus with a pregnant female. He cannot order an abortion against her will and if he engages in an action that causes one the law calls for his prosecution. He cannot kill a newborn baby even if he doesn't want to raise it.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    85. Re:Christian Theocracy by TWX · · Score: 1

      My point was that restricting access to training and materials surrounding sex and reducing the odds of pregnancy won't stop the sex itself, therefore it's not really going to modify behavior and will simply result in more babies.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    86. Re: Christian Theocracy by macs4all · · Score: 1

      There isn't a dimes worth of difference between them

      Only if you can't read.

    87. Re: Christian Theocracy by LoyalOpposition · · Score: 1, Insightful

      When people are proponents of laws like these I just hope they simply haven't thought about their opinion thoroughly enough. But here is someone who fully knows the ramifications of this opinion and is actually proud of it. I don't meet people like this often, and it is very chilling.

      I agree with everything DarkOx said.

      I simply couldn't imagine someone walking into a store with a "Whites Only" sign on the door and hear him say "Good for them for sticking up for their convictions." But it is clear that DarkOx is such a person.

      I wouldn't say that. Rather--I'm glad that neither the government nor anyone else can force them to take the sign down. It's kind of like saying, "I may not agree with what you say, but I'll defend to the death your right to say it."

      ~Loyal

      --
      I aim to misbehave.
    88. Re: Christian Theocracy by macs4all · · Score: 1

      The Indiana Law is NOT "The same as what Obama Signed". Not even close. For one thing, the Federal RFRA had Bipartisan support. The Indiana RFRA was voted STRICTLY on Party Lines (guess which Party?).

      Context matters. This is what I was responding to and clearly he seems to suggest that because the vote was not bi-partisan, then it is not like the Federal law. The margin by which it passes does not affect the actual text of the law itself.

      Wrong. That's not what I meant.

      The actual text of the law differs in some significant ways.

      I agree that a good portion of the law is the same as the Federal version; however, the bit about using the IRFRA as an "Affirmative Defense", and the fact that the STATE can actually INTERVENE to act as a Co-Defendant/Amicus PARTY in a CIVIL case are pretty substantial differences. True, they don't take much words; but the EFFECT could be HUGE.

    89. Re:Christian Theocracy by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      a) I was well aware of the kind of punitive shaming / badging he was referring to;
      b) My knowledge of the history of the 20th century isn't all that bad, try me if you like;
      c) I was table-turning his (hopefully) tongue-in-cheek contextual suggestion to force armbands on gays,
      d) while making fun of Christians, because superstition embodies all those weaknesses.
      e) Godwin's law is the mention of Nazism or Hitler as a comparison, and WRT:
      f) punitive shaming / badging is common in the US now, so no need to go prior to the 1950's:
      g) therefore, Godwin's law is not in play (my references here are not a comparison.)
      h) My slashdot id is "fyngyrz", not "fyngyrx"

      Any questions for me, AC?

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    90. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would you like to repeal the 1st amendment, too? Just as the 1st amendment defends one's right to say deplorable things, why can't a person with a private business choose with whom he deals? Like the other poster, I think it'd be atrocious to operate a whites-only anything, but if it's the prerogative of the owner, what right does the government have to stop it?

      I believe certain industries (utilities, public transport, grocers) should not be able to discriminate, but it should be a "owner-decision" default with exceptions, not "force acceptance everywhere" default.

      I'm a middle-middle class white male living in a mixed-politics urban area. Whoopty-doo.

    91. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If only there was opposition to that crooked southern governor whose wife is corrupt that introduced the Federal version of the law in November 1993.

    92. Re: Christian Theocracy by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Being a Nazi or a member of the KKK are not protected classes since they are personal choices, not inherent qualities.

    93. Re: Christian Theocracy by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      No. The Pro-RFRA people, including Gov. Pence, are the ones who are being dishonest.

      After seeing Gov. Pence on a This Week interview, I have to think he's one of the slimiest governors I've seen interviewed. He steadfastly REFUSED to answer questions straight (I'm setting myself up for jokes, I know). Even totally straightforward questions like "do you think business owners should be allowed to discriminate against gay people?" Every single response was a "poor, poor me" deflection. "Ohh, the intent of the law is being tooooottally misunderstood! Hoosiers are the most kind, generous people, this is terrible!" Etcetc. Never answered anything of substance.

    94. Re:Christian Theocracy by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Tolerance goes both ways.

      In no way should a Christian business owner be forced to do something that violates his conscience. Ditto the homosexual business owner. Civil rights in no way trump religious rights an vice versa. If someone is a homosexual and they are refused a cake for their "wedding", they should just find a homosexual baker or someone willing to bake for them. Same goes for any business.

      I'm personally intolerant of homosexuality. I don't dislike the individual homosexuals, but I will NEVER affirm their way of life -- and such will never be required of me. I'm actually a middle of the road guy politically, but I am a Christian -- and God's Word on the issue is firm. Love the sinner, hate the sin. And yes, I, too, am a sinner, but I'm not making the life choice for something that God has called an abomination in His eyes. I would welcome a homosexual into my church congregation with the understanding that he is there not for judgment, but healing. The church, properly run, is a hospital for sinners's souls, not a courtroom, but God will not be mocked. Just like homosexuals, I need to daily repent of my sins and ask God for His forgiveness -- and to exercise faith and obedience. God wants two things: faith and obedience. Obey God's Word == eternal life. Disobey, homosexual or heterosexual == eternal damnation.

      If God thinks homosexuality is such an abomination then why did he create homosexuality in the first place?* Homosexuality is not just a human trait. It occurs and has been documented in many other animal species often in similar proportions to humans. Why would there be homosexuality in the non-human animal kingdom unless it's something that happens naturally?

      * As an agnostic that's a rhetorical question for me.

    95. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe he meant that he can't understand how DarkOX can still think that the market corrects for these pricks when it has been proven time and again that it does not. I'm having a hard time imagining it as well but I know that this is a libertarian position. One that if you actually try it or follow it to its logical conclusion, it does not lead where libertarians think or hope it will.

    96. Re: Christian Theocracy by macs4all · · Score: 1

      After seeing Gov. Pence on a This Week interview, I have to think he's one of the slimiest governors I've seen interviewed.

      I am embarrassed as hell to be a Hoosier.

      And as far as I'm concerned, this picture, of the PRIVATE Bill-Signing Ceremony for IRFRA, (Press and Public not invaded!) says it all.

    97. Re:Christian Theocracy by Last+Warrior · · Score: 1

      The difference in racial bigotry & homosexual bigotry is the former is forbidden by a matter of law, something the later does not enjoy.

      So what you are saying is that you think it is ok to discriminate against someone based on their ethnicity, race, sex, whatever but you dont do it because those are protected groups and it's against the law? Are you one of those people that thinks that anyone who is not religious and does not have gods law to protect them from going out and murdering and raping people at random?

      Seriously? The only reason that you don't discriminate is because it's against the law. And then you wonder why we need these laws.

      Businesses have the right to refuse service. Is it discrimination if the bank refuses to give a loan to someone who walks in wearing smelly rags pushing a shopping cart?

      There are these things called fairness in lending laws. If that smelly dirty bum looking person can prove that they have the financial means to repay that loan, then the bank should and would make a loan to that person. If you are afraid of someone a little smelly, you probably have never come home after working a blue collar job.

    98. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    99. Re:Christian Theocracy by youngatheart · · Score: 1

      you shouldn't discriminate based on what others do or don't do as long as it doesn't involve you.

      What if it does involve you?

      Do you offer a prayer before your training sessions start? Maybe you do and maybe you don't. Regardless of your choice, I don't think you should be forced to based on the preferences of your students or potential students. In Indiana they give you the right to refuse to do something that disagrees with your own beliefs. In Colorado, you as a business owner, must do things that disagree with your own beliefs.

      That's the key point most of the reports and discussions on this subject are ignoring. Indiana is trying to preserve the right of business owners to refuse to take a specific action. Colorado has taken the opposite stance and legally obligated business owners to take an action they disagree with on moral and/or religious grounds.

      In Colorado, where bakers have been ordered to create things they find morally objectionable, the door has swung the other way now as well. There is a case being pursued, right now, where a man asked for a cake that had an anti-gay message and was refused.

      Is it reasonable for a law to require you to provide the same service to people regardless of their characteristics? I think so. Is it reasonable for a law to require you to provide a service that you would never provide otherwise because of who requests it? Indiana doesn't think so, but Colorado does.

      I appreciate people who make me think or speak ideas I couldn't formulate clearly on my own and you have a good start on that. I can't promise I can do the same for you, but I hope you'll consider my reasons for replying to you if you decide to reply to me. I am willing to change my mind, even on the most basic issues, if I'm given sufficient reason.

    100. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sin was introduced after the fall, caused by Adam and Eve. God gives men free will, but he expects us to obey His commands.

      A lot of people also say Jesus never condemned homosexuality, but since Jesus was/is God in the flesh, He cannot disagree with Himself. Jesus did not come to do away with the law, He came to fulfill it with His new covernant, We are still held to the law. Remember, the law convicts you, the Gospel saves you. We are saved by grace through faith in the finished work of Jesus Christ on the cross.

      Apostle Paul speaks to this in his epistle to the Romans:

      Romans 1:26-31

      26 For this reason God gave them over to degrading passions; for their women exchanged the natural function for that which is unnatural, 27 and in the same way also the men abandoned the natural function of the woman and burned in their desire toward one another, men with men committing indecent acts and receiving in their own persons the due penalty of their error.

      28 And just as they did not see fit to acknowledge God any longer, God gave them over to a depraved mind, to do those things which are not proper, 29 being filled with all unrighteousness, wickedness, greed, evil; full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, malice; they are gossips, 30 slanderers, haters of God, insolent, arrogant, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, 31 without understanding, untrustworthy, unloving, unmerciful; 32and although they know the ordinance of God, that those who practice such things are worthy of death, they not only do the same, but also give hearty approval to those who practice them.

    101. Re:Christian Theocracy by penguinoid · · Score: 1

      Haven't you heard? God said such things are OK now, like shrimp and women's rights.

      You want to go after a really bad sin? Try greed -- which is one of the most pervasive violations of the rule "Love your neighbor as yourself". Be a real man, and make your stand against a *popular* sin, rather than one most people can't even be tempted by.

      --
      Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
    102. Re: Christian Theocracy by phrackthat · · Score: 1

      You do realize, don't you, that the federal courts have, with the exception of two circuits (and the Supreme Court smacked down the reasoning used by Judge Posner in the 7th circuit - so it really means only one circuit is an exception), found that using the courts in a private suit constitutes government action because the judiciary is part of the government. In other words, the Federal RFRA would be applied in the same exact way as the Indiana RFRA would - as a defense raised before the court because the court could not rule on the case because it would involve government action in contravention of a person's sincerely held religious beliefs? The Indiana version merely codifies this rule. So no real difference here. This one issue swallows both of your "differences" because 1.) The government becomes an actor once it comes to court and 2.) The Federal RFRA becomes essentially an affirmative defense because of #1.

    103. Re:Christian Theocracy by DutchUncle · · Score: 1

      They have no interest in discriminating. And it is not in the interest of any business to be discriminating. The interest of business is business.

    104. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You HAVE to TYPE some of the words in all caps, otherwise people won't KNOW you're a raving LUNATIC.

    105. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can support the rights of the religious.

      You can support the rights of gays.

      You can pick one. Either choice discriminates.

    106. Re: Christian Theocracy by phrackthat · · Score: 1
      On an additional note, you might want to actually read the article you cite to prove that the Federal RFRA and the Indiana RFRA are so radically different. The author, Josh Blackman, states at the end:

      "There here we have it. Indiana, as well as Arizona’s RFRAs are very similar to the Federal RFRA."

    107. Re: Christian Theocracy by phrackthat · · Score: 1
      You should really actually read the article you cite to prove that the Federal RFRA and the Indiana RFRA are so radically different. The author, Josh Blackman, states at the end:

      "There here we have it. Indiana, as well as Arizona’s RFRAs are very similar to the Federal RFRA."

    108. Re:Christian Theocracy by DutchUncle · · Score: 1

      Ummm. . . partly, yes. OTOH the reason there's a kosher bakery is that there is enough of a community to keep it in business, and doesn't need outside customers. They probably *could* say "to the tribe only". But business is business, business is not religion. (One might say that religion is a business - and then argue about whether it's a protection racket or an entertainment industry - but that's another story.)

    109. Re: Christian Theocracy by Jeremi · · Score: 1

      Rather--I'm glad that neither the government nor anyone else can force them to take the ["Whites Only"] sign down.

      Just to be clear -- the US government can and does force businesses to take any "Whites Only" signs down. Outside of "private clubs", discrimination by businesses was outlawed by the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    110. Re: Christian Theocracy by macs4all · · Score: 1

      You HAVE to TYPE some of the words in all caps, otherwise people won't KNOW you're a raving LUNATIC.

      No.

      I just get tired of manually typing in style tags, and so revert to the old non-styled text way of providing emphasis.

      And so what, exactly does that have to do with the content of my post, Mr. AC?

    111. Re: Christian Theocracy by macs4all · · Score: 1

      You do realize, don't you, that the federal courts have, with the exception of two circuits (and the Supreme Court smacked down the reasoning used by Judge Posner in the 7th circuit - so it really means only one circuit is an exception), found that using the courts in a private suit constitutes government action because the judiciary is part of the government. In other words, the Federal RFRA would be applied in the same exact way as the Indiana RFRA would - as a defense raised before the court because the court could not rule on the case because it would involve government action in contravention of a person's sincerely held religious beliefs? The Indiana version merely codifies this rule. So no real difference here. This one issue swallows both of your "differences" because 1.) The government becomes an actor once it comes to court and 2.) The Federal RFRA becomes essentially an affirmative defense because of #1.

      Actually, IMHO, the Indiana language raises a serious "Entanglement" question. Of course, the law in its present form is untested; so we have no idea whether that will be the case (no pun).

      But, the Term of Art "Intervene" is used, as it is in a Federal False Claims Act ("Qui-Tam") case, not to refer to the Judiciary performing its usual duties of "interpretation"; but rather when the Government actually becomes a PARTY to the case-in-chief (in the case of the FCA, the Plaintiff, and in the case of RFRA, the Defendant(?)). Otherwise, the Government would ALWAYS be considered a Party in EVERY case, and of course that is patently ridiculous.

      And besides, it is clear by the plain language of the IRFRA that it is primarily intended to be used as an Affirmative Defense not by the Government; but by the "real" Defendant(s).

    112. Re: Christian Theocracy by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      offence is a bad defense as its taken not given. discrimination is the key word here

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    113. Re:Christian Theocracy by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      "I'm personally intolerant of homosexuality. I don't dislike the individual homosexuals, but I will NEVER affirm their way of life -- and such will never be required of me." i think you'll find you'll find no-one is expecting you to affirm their way of life, just keep your nose out of their life and stop judging them by your christian espoused bigoted standards. You are on more dubious ground of judgement by believing in something that has no probabililty of existing.

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    114. Re: Christian Theocracy by dave420 · · Score: 1

      The former discriminates against people for being born the way they are. The latter discriminates against people for holding outdated beliefs based on old books interpreted in small-minded ways. Equating the two only serves to make you look intellectually ugly.

    115. Re:Christian Theocracy by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Being a hate-filled Christian is a choice, being gay isn't. What's so difficult to understand about that?

    116. Re:Christian Theocracy by dave420 · · Score: 1

      The only hate in this discussion is held by people who don't want to treat others as normal human beings because their religion teaches them to despise others for being who they were born.

      But you can twist it in to some sort of attack on "the right" if you wish - it only serves to make you look rather foolish and encouraging the very hate you pretend to not like.

    117. Re:Christian Theocracy by dave420 · · Score: 1

      I recall how you once said women shouldn't be scientists. You are so wrapped up with insecurity it's not even funny. It would be hell to spend a few minutes in your mind.

    118. Re:Christian Theocracy by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Making a cake is not advocating anything beyond "cakes are good". Being a hate-filled Christian is a choice, being gay is not, so equating the two is pathetic. You have no argument, just a strong desire to discriminate.

    119. Re:Christian Theocracy by Cederic · · Score: 1

      I came across the term 'financial abortion' last night - basically the concept that a man that doesn't want a child can legally remove his financial obligations for it if the mother chooses to carry to term.

      Can't see it ever reaching the stage of legislation but it's an interesting concept.

    120. Re:Christian Theocracy by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Not all Christians are assholes.

      Not all gays are arseholes. Or even arsebandits.

      Doesn't seem to stop the religiously damaged from treating them as a homogenous group. So why not respond by treating anybody stupid enough to believe in magical sky fairies as a single homogenous group?

    121. Re:Christian Theocracy by Cederic · · Score: 1

      I believe any person should have the legal ability to refuse to marry. What the fuck does colour have to do with it?

    122. Re:Christian Theocracy by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Erm. Isn't Cook speaking out against laws that would explicitly legalise those actions by medievally ignorant cabbies?

      How is that persecuting perpetuators of Roman era ignorance?

    123. Re:Christian Theocracy by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Heh. From the last time this discussion took place last week:
      http://slashdot.org/comments.p...

    124. Re: Christian Theocracy by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Ultimately the market prevails, you can the relative economic success of places across the world, and you find with a few exceptions that happen to be sitting on huge oil reserves, the wealthy places are the ones that don't have serious problems with race, or gender discrimination. I suspect that correlation is no accident.

      Indeed, the Gulf States are paradises for women, gays and foreign labourers. Oh, wait...

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    125. Re: Christian Theocracy by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      When people are proponents of laws like these I just hope they simply haven't thought about their opinion thoroughly enough. But here is someone who fully knows the ramifications of this opinion and is actually proud of it. I don't meet people like this often, and it is very chilling.

      I agree with everything DarkOx said.

      I simply couldn't imagine someone walking into a store with a "Whites Only" sign on the door and hear him say "Good for them for sticking up for their convictions." But it is clear that DarkOx is such a person.

      I wouldn't say that. Rather--I'm glad that neither the government nor anyone else can force them to take the sign down. It's kind of like saying, "I may not agree with what you say, but I'll defend to the death your right to say it."

      ~Loyal

      Similarly, there should be no law against my displaying child porn videos in my bar, right?

      You can't have absolute freedom and any sort of civilisation. I don't have the freedom to murder you without repurcussions.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    126. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you feel the religious iron boot-heel crushing your drooling fagboi face? Good !

    127. Re:Christian Theocracy by Steve+Hamlin · · Score: 1

      "It's what I said at the beginning, sexual preference is not a protected class."

      Not yet, but it's going to be within a generation, because just like race and gender, it is an immutable charateristic of a person who didn't choose it, and over time society is realizing the wrongness of such fear and animosity of them.

      "we do not have a right to not be discriminated against" Wrong, there are laws that prevent such discrimination in certain cases and against certain classes that society has deemed need to be protected, and those laws change as society does. What is currently legal is not my point, nor my question to the grandparent commenter. It's a question of what SHOULD BE legally allowed (without reference to a historical text written by men).

      From what you've written it seems like, absent a legal prohibition against doing so, you personally would be OK with refusing to provide service to a black man or an hispanic woman simply because of who they are. If so, nothing further need be said - you've shown your true colors.

    128. Re:Christian Theocracy by Steve+Hamlin · · Score: 1

      There is a fundamental difference between personal choices in marriage and the rules for engaging in commerce. Commercial activity is simply different than choices in your personal capacity.

      Discriminate in your your personal capacity all you want. Don't date outside your race, don't associate with people you think are icky, don't marry someone you don't like for any reason in the world. [But if you deeply love someone for a host of reasons but don't want to marry them for the sole reason that they are black, then yes, you are a bigot.]

      But if you want a license to engage in certain occupations, sell certain products, incorporate, deduct business expenses, use public roads in the pursuit of profits, or otherwise economically engage with society as a business, then society can establish rules for doing so. And they will - history is not on your side.

    129. Re:Christian Theocracy by LoyalOpposition · · Score: 2

      This is another power grab by the religious right.

      You remind me of Bluto Blutarsky when he was ranting about it not being over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor, in the movie Animal House. Of course, the Germans didn't bomb Pearl Harbor, and neither is this a power grab by the religious right for the simple reason that it isn't a power grab. A power grab is when one uses political power to force someone else to do something they don't want to do, or force them not to do something that they want to do.

      Instead, this is a reaction to a previous power grab by the homosexuals wherein they forced bakers to provide cakes for the marriage of homosexuals. Do you see who is doing the forcing? It's the homosexuals. Do you see who doesn't want to do something? It's the religious right. Do you see what they are being forced to do that they don't want? It's provide cakes for homosexual marriages. So, who has made a power grab? It's the homosexuals.

      It is connected to their efforts to restrict sex (through access to contraception, sex education, abortion, etc) and control the lives of Americans in the bedroom.

      If, in fact, there is such a connection it's a remote one. The more direct connection is not in the bedroom, but rather in the store front, or the service location. The religious right wants to provide certain products or services and not provide others. Homosexuals have used political power to force a choice on them. Either the religious right can provide cakes to whom they don't want to provide cakes to, or they can quit providing cakes altogether. Neither choice would be what they would prefer to choose if they were free to do so.

      But you know what? Every article, every boycott and every protest is pushing them back. Similar bills are stalling or failing. The outrage at actions like these are causing more and more Americans to leave their religion in disgust. The more we drag this bullshit into the light, the more the theocrats feel the heat.

      You sound like those salesmen selling multi-level marketing. "Don't you want to get into this opportunity early? Everyone is buying in! Don't be the last one to have a piece of this action!"

      ~Loyal

      "Never mind; he's on a roll."

      --
      I aim to misbehave.
    130. Re:Christian Theocracy by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      Being a hate-filled Christian is a choice, being gay isn't. What's so difficult to understand about that?

      So, you're in favor of the Westboro Baptists forcing LGBT-owned bakeries to bake cakes with "God Hates Gays" and other equally disgusting slogans? You'd like to see black-owned bakeries forced to bake cakes with "Niggers Are Monkeys" for the KKK?

      That is what you're advocating for.

      Of course to realize this you would have to have spent some time actually "thinking" about the subject rather than simply "emote" your way through logical problems.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    131. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This was modded up. Really?

      This corner of the internet has turned into nothing more than a site for political indoctrination with posts like this, quite possibly one of the most condescending I have ever read. It *is* absolutely true to form, however: it drips with sympathy but certainly no empathy. Sympathy for not sharing like views along with the blatant implication of superiority and higher intelligence.

      One day I hope to be as superior in belief, and mind, as you, oh ranton.

    132. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too bad Indiana didn't use the exact wording of the Illinois state law; the one voted on by that right wing nut Barack Obama (when he was a state senator). President Obama has been secretly leading the religious right's power grab. This topic is definitely full of bullshit

    133. Re:Christian Theocracy by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      Christians need to accept that homosexuality isn't black and white a lifestyle choice and that the Bible's lessons on it are based on archaic knowledge of biological systems.

      Whoa, careful there, buddy! Implying (or outright stating) that the Bible is NOT God's word-for-word law is treading into a minefield. For True Believers, understanding begins and ends at the Bible, and if something else contradicts that, it's that something else (belief, faith, observation, science, whatever) which must be wrong and needs to be harmonized to match Biblical Truth.

    134. Re:Christian Theocracy by jythie · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but businesses are made up of people, people who will generally have to balance their own priorities and interests against what is good for the company.

    135. Re: Christian Theocracy by camazotz · · Score: 1

      You may want to dig a bit deeper into that article. Just because those four words are used in other bills does not make them even remotely equivalent. New Mexico's bill, for example, as NM is listed as on the map with such a RFRA, is nothing like what is now law in Indiana.

    136. Re:Christian Theocracy by h4ck7h3p14n37 · · Score: 1

      Christianity doesn't have a problem with homosexual feelings/attraction, the issue is homosexual _acts_. People don't choose their feelings, but they do have control over their actions.

      I'm attracted to women, but that doesn't mean I can't choose to be celibate.

    137. Re:Christian Theocracy by cassador · · Score: 1

      People ask Christians the wrong questions. Rephrase as:

      "If so, will you treat other practitioners of sexual sin (i.e. fornicators and adulterers) the same way?"

    138. Re:Christian Theocracy by h4ck7h3p14n37 · · Score: 1

      What exactly does "being gay" mean? People don't get to choose their feelings, but they do choose their actions. Being attracted to a member of the same sex isn't a choice, but having relations with that person most certainly is.

    139. Re:Christian Theocracy by camazotz · · Score: 1

      Tolerance goes both ways.

      In no way should a Christian business owner be forced to do something that violates his conscience. Ditto the homosexual business owner. Civil rights in no way trump religious rights an vice versa. If someone is a homosexual and they are refused a cake for their "wedding", they should just find a homosexual baker or someone willing to bake for them. Same goes for any business.

      I'm personally intolerant of homosexuality. I don't dislike the individual homosexuals, but I will NEVER affirm their way of life -- and such will never be required of me. I'm actually a middle of the road guy politically, but I am a Christian -- and God's Word on the issue is firm. Love the sinner, hate the sin. And yes, I, too, am a sinner, but I'm not making the life choice for something that God has called an abomination in His eyes. I would welcome a homosexual into my church congregation with the understanding that he is there not for judgment, but healing. The church, properly run, is a hospital for sinners's souls, not a courtroom, but God will not be mocked. Just like homosexuals, I need to daily repent of my sins and ask God for His forgiveness -- and to exercise faith and obedience. God wants two things: faith and obedience. Obey God's Word == eternal life. Disobey, homosexual or heterosexual == eternal damnation.

      I hate to break it to you, but you are not middle of the road, you are rather far to the right there. Middle of the road people are fine with sexual equality, gay marriage and the right of the public not to be discriminated at by a business. You're post gave me chills, creepiest thing I've read so far. "God will not be mocked." Hebdo much?

    140. Re:Christian Theocracy by camazotz · · Score: 1

      Your example is not quite accurate, though. A baker that refuses to make a cake with two men on top because it might connote a gay wedding is comaprable to an LGBT baker refusing to bake a cake with a fish symbol on top because it implies christianity. In both cases, neither baker is compelled to engage in or endorse hate speech and you don't need a religious freedom law to protect you from being compelled to write either "God Kills" or "God Hates Fags" on a cake. Your examples need to be equivalent and the same thing: hate speech is not protected speech last time I checked.

    141. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sex is an act. Homosexuality is a thought. Race and gender are physical distinctions.
      You can control the first two through will. The latter are immutable through acts of will, and if changed they must be changed via physical means.

    142. Re:Christian Theocracy by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      Your examples need to be equivalent and the same thing: hate speech is not protected speech last time I checked.

      "Hate speech" is a completely arbitrary, subjective, politically-driven, and constantly-changing standard, meaning it is no standard at all.

      As I said above, bake them a cake, sure. But, to *force* a person under threat of deadly force to include symbols/symbolism, slogans, etc which convey support for or against any religious, ideological, political, or ethical subject/topic/party/etc to which they are fundamentally opposed is WRONG.

      No matter the motive, it is wrong.

      The next time there's some Bill or Proposition seeking to restrict rights of a protected class like LGBTs before a legislative body over which there is much contention, would it be OK for some anti-LGBT group to force an LGBT baker to provide them a cake with the graphic symbol being used to self-identify by that group? Like a swastika, maybe?

      Sorry, you cannot force free people to participate in and/or advocate for things they fundamentally oppose. That's one of the reasons people came to colonize America, to escape exactly such tyranny by the churches and the monarchies of the Old World.

      Only an ideological Luddite would want to turn history back and destroy basic pillars of individual liberty and freedom that so many have died for.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    143. Re:Christian Theocracy by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      The only hate in this discussion is held by people who don't want to treat others as normal human beings because their religion teaches them to despise others for being who they were born.

      But you can twist it in to some sort of attack on "the right" if you wish - it only serves to make you look rather foolish and encouraging the very hate you pretend to not like.

      So then you're in favor of skinheads and Westboro Baptist-style nutjobs forcing LGBT and ethnic owned bakeries to provide cakes with Nazi/KKK/skinhead themed cakes.

      Be very careful what you wish for. A law forcing people to participate in, enable, and/or advocate for things they are fundamentally opposed to have historically demonstrated a nasty habit of being turned around and used against the very people who thought they were a great idea.

      You're a special kind of stupid. The kind that enables tyranny.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    144. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Christianity doesn't have a problem with homosexual feelings/attraction, the issue is homosexual _acts_.

      I don't buy that for a second. These businesses clearly don't want to serve people because of who they are, not anything they've done.

      I wish they would be honest and just admit they don't like gays. It would save a lot of time arguing over why they give other sins a free pass.

    145. Re:Christian Theocracy by righteousness · · Score: 1

      So you're saying people are leaving their religion because they don't like the rules, not because they believe that the religion is false?

      --
      Don't fornicate. Seriously, just don't do it.
    146. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Religion has existed for thousands of years. Homosexuality has only been socially acceptable for, maybe decades if you're generous. Why do the pro-gays feel that thousands of years of tradition can be undone just like that? It's hypocritical. The rainbow crowd insists that homosexuals are born a certain way and are what they are. It's no different for people of faith. How do you not see that? Generations of followers, family traditions, communities built around the church. Just take all that, toss it away. "You're stupid for believing in anything." What an argument! I'm not even religious, but conflicts like this might have me reconsider. Atheists are no less intolerant than the fanatically religious that they despise so much. Atheists have actually turned atheism into a religion with its own self-righteous crusade.

      Neither side is going to change for the other. We either have to walk away from these conflicts, or one side has to gut the other. Whose rights do you want to destroy?

    147. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought that's what WWJD bracelets and fish bumper stickers were for!

    148. Re: Christian Theocracy by SupraTT+GOP · · Score: 1

      You completely ignored the part where he talked about how liberty and free association trumps all, even though he agrees with your sentiments. That makes you a bad person. By contrast, DarkOx is a very good, honest person.

      The worst of all evils is meddlers doing their meddling. Stop it.

    149. Re: Christian Theocracy by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      An affirmative defense is a defense that, if accepted, wins. Like the "insane" plea. If determined and accepted as insane at the time, then you "win". Period. Same with the statute of limitations, and all other affirmative defenses. It's just trivial to prove the date of the crime and the date of being charged, so it's treated more absolutely than the others.

    150. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Civil rights laws that try and force a private business to serve all customers should be considered unconstitutional. We have the freedom of association under the first amendment that implies a freedom to disassociate from others or other groups in order to have any meaning at all, and if you won't accept that argument than refusing service or entry could also be viewed as kind of speech.

      Good, I shouldn't have to serve those Niggers. They smell funny, and they steal. Next, you should talk about hate crimes impinging on my free speech I like to exercise by burning a cross on a Nigger-lawn. Maybe a ticket for littering, or illegal burn, but hate speech? That's free speech.

    151. Re:Christian Theocracy by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      A right is a protection against government oppression and abuse, nothing else.

      So the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness means the government can't murder you, but your neighbor can? You deserve no protections from your neighbor, as he can't impinge on your rights.

    152. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So then you're in favor of skinheads and Westboro Baptist-style nutjobs forcing LGBT and ethnic owned bakeries to provide cakes with Nazi/KKK/skinhead themed cakes.

      I think you'll have to force skinheads and Westboro types to even consider being a sincere patron to an ethnic owned business.

      "Yeah, I hate your people. That's why I'm gonna give you my money and do business with you, legitimizing your existence and enriching you in the process! Take that!"

    153. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ALEC

      captcha: transfer

    154. Re:Christian Theocracy by roman_mir · · Score: 0

      The right means exactly that: government cannot oppress you and abuse you (and murdering you is a form of oppression and abuse), there is no concept of a 'right' between 2 individuals or businesses and there cannot be, because out of 2 individuals or businesses none of them have any legal authority to dictate to another and/or to use any form of violence. We have to have rights when we are dealing with a government, because government has legal authority to use violence (unfortunately), so to counterbalance that legal authority to violence we have to have rules that prevent governments from just using that violence however they like.

      As to violence between 2 individuals or companies, that has nothing to do with rights, that has to do with criminal law as it is understood within that locality. You could have a completely private criminal justice system and still deal with violence that way. People did give up their right to deal with criminal code to governments in most cases, but because the governments are (supposed to be) bound by the rules that are established as individual rights, governments also cannot just pretend to deal with criminal cases without abiding by those rules.

      These are completely different issues, a right is about an individual or a company (which I also see as an individual) dealing with the violent government authority and criminal code is about individual and private matters, where individuals are interested in preventing crime committed by other individuals.

    155. Re:Christian Theocracy by Alioth · · Score: 1

      Should a shop be able to refuse to provide a cake with a mixed race couple on it? Or a black couple?

    156. Re:Christian Theocracy by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      So a person has no rights. A "right" is only a restriction on the government, and not tied to a person. You can't have the right to travel, or the right to bear arms, as every "person" you deal with can take those "rights" from you. Up to the limits of criminal law.

      That's the opposite of what the Founders of the USA said when crafting the Constitution, and I've never seen anyone agree with such an odd view of rights.

    157. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Religion has existed for thousands of years. Homosexuality has only been socially acceptable for, maybe decades if you're generous. Why do the pro-gays feel that thousands of years of tradition can be undone just like that? It's hypocritical.

      You are completely delusional. Homosexuality has probably existed for millions of years--far longer than religion, anyway. Most likely it pre-dates language itself.

      Also homosexuality has appeared repeatedly though history and across cultures, which points to it being a naturally-occurring phenomenon. It has been "socially acceptable" in numerous cultures at different times through history. Possibly in pre-history as well, but of course we have no record of that.

      And of course "acceptable" implies that someone who calls the shots has to do the accepting, and it always seems to be heterosexuals, doesn't it? In a modern, enlightened democracy, the right of individual self-determination is recognized. You don't get to decide for me what's "socially acceptable," I'd rather just avoid you.

    158. Re:Christian Theocracy by roman_mir · · Score: 0

      So a person has no rights. A "right" is only a restriction on the government, and not tied to a person.

      - that's not what I said. A right is everything that you can do without government abusing you. USA founders said exactly that, some where more insistent than others that the Constitution is the exact literal enumeration of powers allocated to the government, the powers that allow government to step over the rights of an individual under specific conditions. Government is violence by definition, that is all it is and for the governed to accept the government they have to see good reason for it and the way the USA Founders saw it, government had to have very specific powers given to it to deal with cases where people would be denied their rights.

      A person in jail is a person, whose right to freedom is denied by government oppression, that oppression has to be enumerated as one of the powers allocated to the government. Government has to prove that it can oppress the right of that individual to freedom.

      A person murdered by another person or a person hurt somehow by a company (which is really just another person or a group of people) is an individual situation, where criminal code may apply in order to establish guilt or innocence and to hand out oppression of rights again to those, who basically broke the criminal code rules.

      So you can see that rights are related to individual or business and government, while criminal code is related to dealing between individuals or companies.

      Government officials can break the law as well of-course, then it also has to be punished according to the criminal code, but government as a system cannot be punished by any criminal code, there is nobody personally to punish, so because government is a system it has to adhere to rules defined in the Constitution, rules as to how the government can oppress/abuse individuals, who have all the rights until the government can use its authority to deny that right.

    159. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not delusional at all. Society has not found homosexuality acceptable until recently, and even now, it's only a splinter of the population. It may have gone on forever, like prostitution, but like prostitution, it remains unacceptable to a lot of people. Same thing with polygamy, which even homosexuals won't defend even though the same arguments made to support gay marriage would also apply to poly marriage. Existence and acceptance are two different things.

      Acceptance is by the masses. Of course heterosexuals have a big part in that, they have always been the majority of the population. Not surprising since it takes a man and a woman to create a child. Biology itself discriminates in that way.

      I don't get to decide what's acceptable for you? Good! You don't get to decide for me either. Religion is a human right. Supporting traditional values is a human right. Democracy isn't the sole play toy of liberals. If the majority decides there's a need to defend religion, then democracy demands it to be so. See how that works?

    160. Re:Christian Theocracy by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      A right is everything that you can do without government abusing you.

      So the Civil Rights movement was not related to any "rights"?

      I read the blog in your sig, and it seems that the issue is that you use words outside their established definitions, not that others misunderstand. You do. Deliberately.

    161. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Not delusional at all. Society has not found homosexuality acceptable until recently

      You're so blinkered, you think your society in relatively recent history = "society"

    162. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you saying that gay rights have diminished over the centuries or that there is a thriving gay nation somewhere on the planet that no one has ever noticed?

      BTW, I live in a society but I don't actually have one of my own. It tends to require a number of other people, otherwise I believe it's just a mental disorder, like homosexuality was until it wasn't.

    163. Re:Christian Theocracy by roman_mir · · Score: 0

      So the Civil Rights movement was not related to any "rights"?

      - civil rights movement did one (1) of 2 things that was correct, it insisted that government must treat everybody equally and it must.

      It did one more thing, which was absolutely illegal, unconstitutional and most importantly immoral, it destroyed rights of individuals to private property and association when it caused businesses to be regulated that way.

    164. Re:Christian Theocracy by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      It did one more thing, which was absolutely illegal, unconstitutional and most importantly immoral, it destroyed rights of individuals to private property and association when it caused businesses to be regulated that way.

      Not many hold your views, and if that's your morality, I'm happy to be immoral.

      The right of property [owners] doesn't override the rights of the people. It's the other way around.

    165. Re:Christian Theocracy by roman_mir · · Score: 0

      You are wrong because you don't understand what a right is. You think you have a right to dictate to other people and to take their rights away to get your entitlements, you see rights as something that must be taken away from somebody else and given to you.

      Rights are protections against government abuse, you can't have a moral society where some people use violence of the State to steal rights of others and give themselves entitlements they believe they have a 'right' to.

      Your belief is a belief of somebody who wants to enslave others to himself and that is definitely immoral.

    166. Re:Christian Theocracy by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      You are wrong because you don't understand what a right is.

      I use the word the way 99% of the English speakers use it. You can't understand "I understand and I disagree" and repeat that I don't understand.

      I get that you have a mental disease that makes you a closed-minded zealot. But I thought that you understood English. Apparently your mental disease refuses to let you understand that someone can understand you 100%, yet still disagree.

      It's your opinion, not fact.

    167. Re:Christian Theocracy by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      Did you bother to read the law? It's the same one the ACLU, Chuck Scheumer pushed and Bill Clinton signed in 1993. It allows a business to argue the 1st amendment. Not that they would win. Intentionally mis-reporting the news. Otherwise we'd see the despotism better.

      As it is now, someone could make a muslim Deli business in Indiana sell pork products, for example and there's nothing they could do. Can't claim it's against their religion. Nope, can't have that. So stupid and people believe it.

    168. Re:Christian Theocracy by roman_mir · · Score: 0

      Then it follows from your comment that 99% of English speakers are spoon fed social justice theory that prevents them from understanding the most basic things.

      Should a Jewish photographer be forced to take pictures at a Nazi party? Especially when in fact there are thousands of other photographers that will do it for you.

      Should a black baker be forced to bake a KKK cake for the Klan meeting? Especially when in fact there are thousands of other bakers that will do it for you.

      Should an atheist doctor be forced to perform brit milah (circumcision) on religious grounds? Especially when in fact there are thousands of other doctors that will do it for you.

      Basically to find a single case of a business that will discriminate against whatever practice or religion or race one has to go very much out of their way.

      I am sure that to make a story out of this (like a story of a cake maker that would not make cakes for some gay wedding or a story of a photographer that will not work at a gay wedding) one has to call up dozens if not hundreds of businesses out of Yellow Pages specifically looking to create a story out of nothing.

      The zealot is you, the person who believes that if there is one business out there that will not serve you based on whatever prejudice that the business holds, it must be made illegal for that business to exist even though the rules of the market and competition ensure that you have dozens, hundreds, thousands of options.

    169. Re:Christian Theocracy by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      The zealot is you, the person who believes that if there is one business out there that will not serve you based on whatever prejudice that the business holds, it must be made illegal for that business to exist even though the rules of the market and competition ensure that you have dozens, hundreds, thousands of options.

      You are the zealot. You are so brainwashed by your ideology that you feel the need to ignore what everyone else says and lie and make up strawmen. I do not believe what you assert.

      But what I say doesn't matter. You are like some loonitarian chatbot. What is said isn't listened to, other than to generate the next pre-programmed response.

    170. Re:Christian Theocracy by roman_mir · · Score: 0

      The last 2 and a half comments from you were pure garbage, so I don't see a point talking on these terms. Cheers.

    171. Re:Christian Theocracy by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Ah, the last word to say "I'm not going to respond to you, other than the last post to get the last word". And I note, you didn't ever address what I said, but focused on how I said it, running down the list of logical fallacies, hoping one would stick. I hope you seek professional treatment for your mental illness. Cheers.

    172. Re:Christian Theocracy by whipnet · · Score: 1

      Is this happening in Tehran at their Apple store as well?

    173. Re: Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Civil rights laws that try and force a private business to serve all customers should be considered unconstitutional.

      I don't think its right to deny someone based on race,color,creed, sexual orientation etc, but as strongly as I feel that is wrong, so do I feel about forcing someone to act against their will or conviction.

      Our economy is large enough that minority groups who face discrimination probably can find another employer or another shop who will treat them fairly.

      When people are proponents of laws like these I just hope they simply haven't thought about their opinion thoroughly enough. But here is someone who fully knows the ramifications of this opinion and is actually proud of it. I don't meet people like this often, and it is very chilling.

      I simply couldn't imagine someone walking into a store with a "Whites Only" sign on the door and hear him say "Good for them for sticking up for their convictions." But it is clear that DarkOx is such a person. I guess I just have to take solace in the hope that most people don't think like him/her. I'm an upper middle class white male living in a wealthy liberal area, so it is quite likely I am in a bubble where I simply don't see how dark parts of this country still are.

      That's an easy game to play, ranton. Argue from the extremes. Why don't we imagine instead a photographer being forced by the government to photograph a Nazi or KKK event that he'd otherwise pass on because he's sticking up for his convictions. That'd be just as chilling, no?

    174. Re:Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Sin was introduced after the fall, caused by Adam and Eve. God gives men free will, but he expects us to obey His commands.

      But homosexuality, bisexuality, transsexualism and transgenderism occur naturally in other animal species. AFAIK, animals can't sin according to the Bible because they don't have free will. So God must have set it up so that ALL of his creation was ruined by ONE species screwing up. Sounds like a pretty UN-intelligent design to me!

      In fact, some species CANNOT survive using heterosexual reproduction, so God must have had to UN-make those species and RE-make them the "wrong" way due to Adam and Eve!

      There are more things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio, than you have dreamt of in your philosophy...

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1LLGe1xh87c

  2. Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Religious freedom" in all its guises empowers and gives "freedom" to religious assholes and oppressors to take away the freedom of others.

    Religion is a Trojan Horse for other backwards notions, like giving superstitious and ignorant people the right to silence speech they deem "offensive". The most fucked-up countries are the ones where somebody can use take arbitrary "offence", and use that office to attack somebody. E.g. the offence of "insulting a Muslim" in most Islamic countries.

    Anybody propagating the idea that it should be illegal to "give offence" should be stabbed in the head, imnsho.

    1. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Grishnakh · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Unfortunately, it's not just the right that wants to silence "offensive" speech; the left wants to as well: the SCOTUS refused to hear a case about high school students who wore t-shirts with the American flag to school on Cinco de Mayo and got in trouble because the school said this could "incite violence" among Hispanic students who apparently are offended by the US flag. This case was even supported by the students who had worn black armbands back in the 60s to protest the Vietnam war, and won the SCOTUS case, the decision of which said that free speech rights do not end at the schoolhouse door (these former students supported the flag-wearing teenagers' right to free speech).

      It's weird how some on the left are so eager to push "diversity" that they'll compromise our own liberal western values in the process of pandering to people who do not share these values. These values are under assault from both sides: the wacky Christian religionists on the right, and the leftists who denounce right-wing Christians (for good reason) and then back up people with the same or worse values just because they're non-Western.

    2. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      see the real definition of 'left'.

      #include "I_dont_think_it_means_what_you_think_it_means.h"

      no one on the left would support a hate-bill like this. sorry, but you have no clue what left means if you think this.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    3. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Jason+Levine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Don't confuse actual religious freedom with the idiocy that politicians in Indiana are pushing. Real religious freedom is important. Real religious freedom states that nobody should force you to violate your religious beliefs (or lack thereof) because that other person has a different religious view. Without religious freedom, the Christian majority could vote and decide that all Jews, Muslims, Atheists, etc were required to worship Jesus.

      The key, though, is that real religious freedom has its limits and the people pushing these laws aren't respecting those limits. I have the freedom to not eat pork since I'm Jewish. Someone who is Christian can't make eating pork a condition of citizenship. However, I also can't use my religious beliefs to ban all pork products. Like all other rights, my rights end when others' begin. Sadly, the people pushing these laws think their religious views should trump all other rights. Of course, if someone denied them services because they worshiped Jesus instead of being Muslim/Atheist/etc, they would cry foul.

      I completely agree with the "no right to be free of offense", though. If someone wants to criticize my religious beliefs, they can go right ahead. It's their right. It won't change my beliefs (especially if they are jerks about it) and I might try to offer counter-arguments, but I won't demand that they be silenced for criticizing what I believe in*.

      * If their "criticism" calls for hurting/killing people who believe X, though, all bets are off. Threats do not equal discussion.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    4. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Charcharodon · · Score: 1, Flamebait
      The most fucked-up countries are the ones where somebody can use take arbitrary "offence", and use that office to attack somebody. E.g. the offence of "insulting a Muslim" in most Islamic countries.

      Kind of like in the US if you speak out against the behavior or Blacks, Homosexuals, or Women......

    5. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's weird how some on the left are so eager to push "diversity"

      They're not eager to push diversity. They're eager to find a selling point which can be leveraged to expand their own level of power and/or wealth.

    6. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 2

      With laws like these I find the best approach is to abstract them and ask the simple question of: should it be legal for to people to be complete raging assholes to each other while not committing any other offense against each other? To this question I would have to answer yes so supporting a law like the Indiana one makes sense as all it seems to be doing is codifying that being an asshole is not a crime. This same logic also works well in you example of insulting Muslims in an Islamic country, and in this example we find that Islamic countries have made being an asshole illegal.

      In the case mentioned in the summary with Texas we would need to modify our question and have it be: Should the state be able to be a raging asshole to a citizen of that state? As this best represents that situation in general. Here though I would find that my answer should be a definitive NO since we are dealing with the state which shouldn't be an asshole to its citizenry. In addition to that the Texas case seem to be promoting a specific set of religious values over another, especially considering that a fairly major branch of Christianity just voted to allow it.

      That said there are still laws and constitutional amendments dealing with similar discrimination issues applying to other groups. If people were being honest in this debate they would instead seek to make LGBT individuals another protected class under existing law. This I feel is the correct debate to have and given that they are born that way, much like being born black, Romanian, Jewish, etc. it seems like they should be included.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    7. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

      see the real definition of 'left'.

      #include "I_dont_think_it_means_what_you_think_it_means.h"

      no one on the left would support a hate-bill like this. sorry, but you have no clue what left means if you think this.

      I doubt you understand a word of what you are talking about.

      http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/n...

      And have no idea what the small government right in America is about, or what the totalitarian left are up to.

    8. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Again: You have an old books of fallacies (Marx), we have history. You are wrong.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    9. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      both sides

      There's your problem

    10. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Botched · · Score: 1

      You can speak out against the behavior of Blacks, Homosexuals or Women all you want in the US and no one will bat an eye, until you state that their behavior is BECAUSE they are Black, Homosexual, or Women.

    11. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      No, American left-wingers would obviously not support these "religious freedom" laws, because they're obviously aimed at letting Christians discriminate against people they don't like (mainly homosexuals).

      However, these same left-wingers are certainly *not* the ones who want to keep kids from wearing American flags to school because they'd "offend" Hispanics. I don't think I need to prove that it's the leftists who are behind this one. Right-wingers are up in arms about stuff like this (though not necessarily for the right reason, which is freedom of speech).

      Honestly, I really think that if someone tried to push a law that banned "insulting Islam" in the US, a good number of left-wingers would support this, because they're so big on "celebrating diversity" that they compromise true liberal values (equal rights, secularism, etc.) just so they can cozy up with "oppressed" minorities like Hispanics and Muslims.

    12. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by rwa2 · · Score: 1

      Yep. From one perspective, the US was founded and colonized by pilgrims on the promise of the religious freedom to practice one of the most restrictive religions of the time.

      On the other hand, capitalism is largely the religion of this era. Vegas might as well be one of the 7 Wonder of the Modern World, and it's essentially a huge mega-mall, the grandest temple of temples where all the little consumers go to worship regularly.

      From that perspective, you want your temple to be as inclusive as possible, because what idiot would limit their customer base through discrimination? So you can see why many of the large successful corporations are pretty progressive with equality. And you can also see about how more... er... traditional organizations may fall by the wayside.

    13. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by OhPlz · · Score: 1

      My understanding of the Indiana law is to prevent businesses from being forced to offer goods or services that violate their beliefs. Both sides are arguing for the use of the force of law, are they not? One side wants to force people to violate their beliefs and offer their goods or services to everyone, the other wants to allow businesses to force those customers to shop elsewhere.

      I don't see a completely fair, unbiased solution for this problem. It's one set of values versus another.

    14. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

      No-one is born jewish.

      And assuming sexual preference is a mental function then I'm not sure that such function is present in a newborn either (I know the brain is still developing).

      Being Romanian is merely an artifice to do with the parents' legal status and the place of birth, not anything intrinsic to the newborn's biology (the baby is a citizen of Earth).

      So of all of the things you list as being innate at Birth I would say that skin tone is innate, Sexual Orinetation may be innate, nationality is not a biological issue and jewishness is an add-on later (or a take-away if you count the Bris I suppose).

      --
      Nullius in verba
    15. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have the freedom to not eat pork since I'm Jewish. Someone who is Christian can't make eating pork a condition of citizenship. However, I also can't use my religious beliefs to ban all pork products. Like all other rights, my rights end when others' begin. Sadly, the people pushing these laws think their religious views should trump all other rights. Of course, if someone denied them services because they worshiped Jesus instead of being Muslim/Atheist/etc, they would cry foul.

      Your analogy is flawed. Under the proposed legislation, if you were the owner of a Jewish deli, you could not be required to sell pork products even if non-Jewish, pork-eating patrons demanded it. The opponents of the legislation state to the contrary that you should be required to sell pork products even though your religion prohibits the consumption of pork - or even the handling of pork (per Leviticus 11:7-8) - and to deny pork-eaters access to pork because of your own religious convictions would be discriminatory against pork and pork-eaters. You own a deli, and you will be required to offer all meats equally, without preference to chicken, fish, or beef eaters.

      A supporter of the legislation might say, "I own a Jewish deli, and I refuse to sell pork on religious ground. If people want pork, they can go to the Italian deli down the street, and that guy will happily sell swine to anyone. And if I lose business because of my decision not to sell pork, then so be it."

      Freedom of association is also the freedom of non-association. We're all free not to like someone (or even, a whole group of someones), for any reason whatsoever. And you can't legislate to the contrary.

    16. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      They're not eager to push diversity. They're eager to find a selling point which can be leveraged to expand their own level of power and/or wealth.

      That would explain the motivation of the politicians and others at the top. However, it doesn't explain all the lower-middle-class 20-something liberals who buy into all this stuff. My guess is that they're just parroting what their "leaders" have fed them, just like people on the right parrot everything that their leaders (like Pat Robertson, Rand Paul, etc.) feed them.

    17. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      Just a stray thought: would it be ok for a Jewish/Muslim baker to refuse to create a cake in the form of a pig, say if he also creates cake in the form of a chicken?

    18. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by ranton · · Score: 1

      While I may disagree with punishing those high school students, it is a very poor comparison with the discriminatory law being questioned in this forum.

      You may disagree with it, but most people understand free expression should be limited in some cases. Yelling fire in a crowded theater is one example. Not allowing US flags to be worn simply to incite anger on a school campus is another. No one was being offended by the US flag, they were being offended by the context in which they were worn.

      A flag is just a symbol. It can be a rallying cry for national pride but it can also be a rallying cry for xenophobia. In the context that these shirts were worn in this case, the American flag was little different than a slogan saying "deport anchor babies."

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    19. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      the American flag was little different than a slogan saying "deport anchor babies."

      So are you suggesting that t-shirts bearing that slogan should be censored by the government? I find that offensive. This is a matter of free speech, nothing more. Teenagers should enjoy the same free-speech protections that the rest of us enjoy, even if it offends some people. I saw plenty of teenagers in my high school wearing religious t-shirts; those, to me, are offensive (and even moreso today considering how extremist American Christianity has become). Why should they be allowed to wear those, but not anti-immigration t-shirts?

      If a school wants to avoid this stuff, maybe they should just have a blanket policy, in effect on *all* school days, that explicitly describes the allowed dress code. Then they could just forbid all clothing with slogans or flags of any kind.

      Finally, I have to disagree that a US flag is somehow like making a political statement about immigration. It's the flag of this nation; if wearing it is offensive to someone, regardless of the day, that seems rather ridiculous.

    20. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by diamondmagic · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The bill isn't banning "all products". It's saying you can't be compelled to do something you don't personally agree with.

      If I walked into a bakery and legally compelled them to bake a cake depicting a same-sex couple that they don't want to bake... aren't I the one imposing my values?

    21. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Yeah I can totally see how one school's dumb decision is equal to a law enacted by the government of a state that affects millions of people.

    22. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      'Jewish' is both a race and religion.

      By Jewish law, if your mother is Jewish, so are you.

      Not that we care about Jewish law all that much, by Muslim law if your father is Muslim then so are you. They all like to run around 'claiming the house'.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    23. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by ranton · · Score: 1

      the American flag was little different than a slogan saying "deport anchor babies."

      So are you suggesting that t-shirts bearing that slogan should be censored by the government? I find that offensive.

      I find those t-shirts, in the same context, would be similar to yelling fire in a crowded theater, swatting someone, or committing slander. All three of these similar instances could be defended by citing freedom of expression or free speech. All three are expressions I would like our laws to limit. The wearing of t-shirts is far less extreme than any of these three examples, but the reasoning on why freedom of expression should be limited in all four cases is the same.

      Teenagers should enjoy the same free-speech protections that the rest of us enjoy, even if it offends some people.

      While adults are not prevented from using hate speech (or any other symbols that promote hate), there are places where they are not allowed. You will probably be asked to leave a courthouse if you start spouting hate speech during a trial, or even when standing in line at the DMV. I am also okay with this, even though both are government buildings.

      Then they could just forbid all clothing with slogans or flags of any kind.

      I see no reason to go to this extreme. Schools generally use the guideline of preventing a hostile learning environment when determining what to allow on campus. I believe having a cohesive learning environment is more important than students giving up a few liberties while at school. I also believe children's property rights should be respected, but would give teachers the ability to confiscate calculators during math tests if necessary.

      Finally, I have to disagree that a US flag is somehow like making a political statement about immigration. It's the flag of this nation; if wearing it is offensive to someone, regardless of the day, that seems rather ridiculous.

      You are more than likely bright enough to realize the students were making a political statement with those t-shirts. They even freely admit it. And this case in particular has nothing to do with the action being offensive. Being offensive is okay. Creating a hostile learning environment is the heart of the matter, not offensive speech.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    24. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Talderas · · Score: 1

      No-one is born jewish.

      Jewish by birth is accepted by all Judish tradition. In cases where one of a offspring's parents is not jewish then whether the offspring is jewish is dependent on whether its mother is jewish.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    25. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by spencerogden · · Score: 1

      I see a large difference between the government forcing two parties to do business vs a single business forcing a customer to go elsewhere.

    26. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Maltheus · · Score: 1

      Well I have a right to eat pork. If you were to run a deli, refusing to stock it for religious reasons, would I have the right to sue you for discrimination? It's the same issue with the cake thing.

    27. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by OhPlz · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree, just pointing out that it's one side forcing something to happen vs the other side forcing something to happen. There's no winning this one.

    28. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      You may disagree with it, but most people understand free expression should be limited in some cases. Yelling fire in a crowded theater is one example. Not allowing US flags to be worn simply to incite anger on a school campus is another. No one was being offended by the US flag, they were being offended by the context in which they were worn.

      And who decides what are those cases where the right should be limited? Are you aware of the track record of such limitations?

      For example, you bring up that famous line "fire in a crowded theater". But do you know its origin? It's from a SCOTUS case that ruled that anti-war speech encouraging draft resistance is not protected speech (this was during WW1). As a result, a number of people from the US Socialist party were jailed for distribution of leaflets with anti-war propaganda.

      Luckily, that decision was overturned later, and now the standard for speech that gets outside of the protected boundary is when it can trigger "imminent lawless action". Wearing the flags is obviously a very far cry from that, even if you're right about their meaning (though I do think that it's extremely biased on your behalf to treat the mere presentation of flag as "deport anchor babies").

    29. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      as a former lower-middle-class 20-something liberal, Pretty much. We dont know enough and we buy into the touchy feely emotion based logic. then we grow up

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    30. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmunds%E2%80%93Tucker_Act

    31. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      A flag is just a symbol. It can be a rallying cry for national pride but it can also be a rallying cry for xenophobia.

      the fact that you even think that, is the problem with this country today. regardless of their reasons for wearing the shirts, no one should be able to tell them no. and if anyone is offended by it, too bad, you dont have the right to come here, celebrate the holidays of another country, and be outraged by people who love this country

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    32. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      You are more than likely bright enough to realize the students were making a political statement with those t-shirts. They even freely admit it.

      So what? Are other students allowed, at other times, to make political statements? If the answer is "no", then sure, not allowing flag t-shirts is fine. However, if other students are allowed to make political statements, then you can't tell them they can't make political speech. A "hostile learning environment" is irrelevant: any political speech of any kind is going to offend someone, so if you're allowing some political speech but not others, then you're discriminating and playing favorites. It's not the school's job to select which political opinions are OK and which aren't.

    33. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The cake case that sparked this law seems fairly analogous to "you are a butcher, so sell this man his sausage as he desires, whether it meets your kosher rules or not."

    34. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by ranton · · Score: 1

      And who decides what are those cases where the right should be limited?

      I assume you mean this as a rhetorical question, but the same people who protect the rights we are given are the ones who decide the scope of those rights. How else could it work?

      though I do think that it's extremely biased on your behalf to treat the mere presentation of flag as "deport anchor babies

      Among people upset enough about immigration to visibly protest it on school grounds, a disdain for anchor babies is quite common. A sizable number of anti-immigration individuals would like to deport anchor babies along with their parents. There are even Congress representatives who have pushed bills to this effect. This is not some extreme opinion. Well it is extreme, just not extreme for the anti-immigration crowd.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    35. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I assume you mean this as a rhetorical question, but the same people who protect the rights we are given are the ones who decide the scope of those rights. How else could it work?

      For example, by codifying the eligible exceptions into the same document that enumerates the rights, and asserting that anything that is not so codified is not an exception.

      Among people upset enough about immigration to visibly protest it on school grounds, a disdain for anchor babies is quite common. A sizable number of anti-immigration individuals would like to deport anchor babies along with their parents. There are even Congress representatives who have pushed bills to this effect. This is not some extreme opinion. Well it is extreme, just not extreme for the anti-immigration crowd.

      You missed my point. It's not at all clear why the display of a US flag in the context of Cinco de Mayo has anything to do with anti-immigration sentiment. I would argue that such interpretation, in the absence of any other context, is in fact rather bigoted itself (because it assumes that flag = hate).

    36. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      And to further clarify. The problem with exceptions is that as soon as you open the gates, you need some safeguards to prevent your exceptions from growing so numerous as to effectively render the right useless. Which means that you can just allow arbitrary exceptions for free speech, or vague blanket categories that are not protected. It has to be very, very narrow for the original right to remain meaningfully protected.

    37. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The bill isn't banning "all products". It's saying you can't be compelled to do something you don't personally agree with.

      If I walked into a bakery and legally compelled them to bake a cake depicting a same-sex couple that they don't want to bake... aren't I the one imposing my values?

      The bakery offers services to the public at large. If you were a private citizen then no, I can't force you to bake me a cake. If you run a private club that bakes cakes only for members, the same thing applies. But the instant you go into business serving the public -- a situation recognized by the state -- you are obligated to serve the *entire* public equally.

    38. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This bill goes further than that. It allows the cake maker to refuse to make a BIRTHDAY CAKE for Mr. Smith if Mr. Smith is gay.

    39. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the left wants to as well

      Wow, what a convenient, sweeping generalization you just made there. Unfortunately, there are extremists in every group, however, the extremists in the Republican party have taken over and are an ever growing faction of ignorant rubes. While I do admit there are people far to the left that take things too far, none of them have the power to really threaten the rights of the everyone, where the right is a completely unhinged and different story, today and for the last several decades.

    40. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, hold on. As a business you have to be licensed by The State--I use capitals to represent the overarching concept or Federal level. The State has laws AGAINST discrimination in the workplace, as the workplace is a State sanctioned entity, public or private, that must abide by State and local regulations, etc. So, we're talking about the business and not the individual working for or owning the business.

      As an individual, yes, you can refuse to make a cake (or whatever product or service your employer/business supplies) but the business (a.k.a. workplace) cannot discriminate in such ways because The State has laws against such practices; federal laws these jackasses want to nullify at the state level. To me and many others these laws--like the one passed in Indiana--are clear attempts by states to nullify Federal anti-discrimination law, which is unconstitutional and a totally dick move to even have the hint of sanctioning discrimination.

      Now the slippery slope didn't start there. It actually started with marijuana laws, if you ask me, but as a proponent of those measures I am a bit conflicted, and I think this is something that will play out in the courts in the near future, and rightly so. However, the current SCOTUS is full of conservative, activist justices at the moment (by way of observing decisions made recently, whether you agree with them or not the objectivity is clearly skewed) and the outcome of challenging this Indiana law and those like it will have an interesting effect on our union of states, i.e., it could easily unravel into another civil war.

      I fear for the future of the United States as I think the battles coming will leave the states no longer united over things that are ugly in fact and in fantasy. Basically, I want out until this all blows over! If the world's economy was better I'd get a job somewhere else and do just that, but right now I'm stuck in the middle of this mess like 350+ million other people, so the least I can do is try to get along with others; something this Indiana law is clearly against that the marijuana laws don't mess with at the end of the day.

    41. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by ranton · · Score: 1

      You: Finally, I have to disagree that a US flag is somehow like making a political statement about immigration.

      Me: You are more than likely bright enough to realize the students were making a political statement with those t-shirts. They even freely admit it.

      You: So what? Are other students allowed, at other times, to make political statements?

      I am not even sure what your argument is anymore as you change it each post. And BTW, I never said students making a political statement is a bad thing, I was simply refuting your statement that these students weren't making one.

      A "hostile learning environment" is irrelevant: any political speech of any kind is going to offend someone

      It's not the school's job to select which political opinions are OK and which aren't.

      Once again, it has nothing to do with just being offended. It is about being hostile to other students. The extent in which schools should help enforce an inclusive learning experience is simply where people like you and me are going to disagree. I am happy in this case most school districts are closer to my side of the argument, but I don't pretend I approve of every decision schools make.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    42. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Brulath · · Score: 1

      Why do you, and others, deliberately frame this discrimination as though it's some choice someone made? Nobody chooses to be gay, the same way nobody chooses to be black. They are, they can't and shouldn't try to change it, and there's nothing wrong with that. It's not okay to deny someone the same service you provide to others because of who they are. The bakery is required to depict a black man and a white woman, an asian woman and a indian man, or a white woman and a white man, but for some reason it's fine if they don't want to depict two women or two men. Nobody in that list made a decision about who they are, and no conscious decisions were made about who they want to be with, so why should people have permission to discriminate against one group? Because there are fewer of them?

      It's trivial to make any argument sound solid if you frame it in a favourable manner. Inserting arbitrary "values" into an argument about other people's rights is bullshit.

    43. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is it ok for the same bakery to refuse making a cake with a mixed color couple?
      Discrimination is discrimination. Small mindlessness is small mindlessness.
      The baker has the right to be offended, just not the right to discriminate and treat people differently based on his "opinions" of what is right and wrong. We have a code of law to decide what is right and wrong and it is not called the Bible, or the Koran.

    44. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by radarskiy · · Score: 1

      No one is restricted to a single course of action.

      When labor complains about working conditions, they are told that they are free to seek a different job. In this case, when capital complains about working conditions they are also free to open a different business.

    45. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by r_jensen11 · · Score: 1

      Except treat the law isn't put into place for preventing the Baker from having to make gay-themed cupcakes, but allows the Baker to refuse to sell existing, plain ole vanilla cupcakes to a sexual deviant. The question boils down to "What is a protected class?" Given that Indiana (and all states other than Louisiana) follow common law rules, prior cases involving protected classes are relevant. Common law had already established that race and religious beliefs are protected classes. Why sexual orientation has to be a question is something best explained by bigotry and is the whole point of why protected classes are legally exist.

    46. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
      You can speak out against the behavior of Blacks, Homosexuals or Women all you want in the US and no one will bat an eye,

      I'm going to have to call bullshit on that one. You make any statement then you are a racist, misogynistic, homo-phobe. It is considered incredibly anti-PC to call out the various victim groups on their behavior regardless of how obviously it is and how constructive your critique is to the conversation it is without the hoards of angry apologists coming out of the wood work to tear you down over what a bastard you are for "blaming the victim".

    47. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      First, no such implication was made. I might have an objection to making any arbitrary product. It has nothing to do with the person looking to buy. I don't generally have a way of knowing which sexual orientation or national origin someone is, or a way to verify even if they told me.

      Second, you're implicitly assuming that there's some acceptable reason to force someone to do something (at least without any prior agreement/contract). There is not.

      There's no reason to need to know the reason for declining business, unless you're actively looking to be intolerant of other's opinions. I don't generally deny or force someone's business for any reason.

    48. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      "Someone who is Christian can't make eating pork a condition of citizenship." they should also obey this edict as its in their bible as well but they conveniently ignore it but then they do selectively believe bits that conveniently fit their bigotary

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    49. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Or, maybe, they see that discriminating against people for simply being who they are born is not a good thing, even if the discrimination is taught under the guise of religion. That's not too difficult to understand, is it?

    50. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by dave420 · · Score: 1

      You don't understand what "political correctness" is, then. That's the whole basis of your argument - you are confused by a term and have ascribed an incorrect meaning to it, one which (accidentally, I'm sure) absolves you from any and all criticism for any racist/misogynistic/whatever rants you've made. The fact you then go on to explain your "logic" (blaming entire groups for the actions of some of their members), making it patently clear you haven't thought this through at all, and are quite happy to be intellectually lazy and hate on groups of people because that's easier than actually engaging in open, honest, factual debate.

      So no - you are incredibly wrong, but I'm sure you'll blame my post on "liberals" or some other group and hate on them more as if they're a homogeneous group all thinking and doing exactly the same.

    51. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Cederic · · Score: 1

      the opponents of the legislation state to the contrary that you should be required to sell pork products

      Really? I haven't heard anybody state that. Your entire post is based on a flawed misunderstanding - much like your religious beliefs. You're an ignorant cunt on all fronts.

    52. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Cederic · · Score: 1

      I'd say that it would be fine. After all, they have no experience of the porcine form on which to base their cake, they lack the skills in baking pigs to assure a quality product and they can choose not to carry specific products.

      That's very different to refusing to sell a cake to someone purely because you know they had bacon for breakfast.

    53. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Cederic · · Score: 1

      I disagree, it's not the same thing at all.

      Would you sue the local tyre shop for refusing to sell you bacon? I mean, it's a retail establishment, by your logic they're clearly discriminating against you by refusing the stock the product you're after.

      There's a big difference between "I don't stock that product" and "I have an irrational prejudice so I'm not going to serve you"

    54. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Again: You have an old books of fallacies (Marx), we have history. You are wrong.

      You can't equate "left wing" with "Marxism" , even assuming there was one such thing as Marxism. Anarchists, socialists, greens and many others are left wing but in no way Marxist.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    55. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      Can't speak for Muslims, but Jews don't have any problem with pig shapes, just with eating pigs themselves. There would be nothing wrong with making or eating a cake shaped like a pig. Now, if the couple were demanding that the kosher bakery put bacon on the cake, that would be an issue (same as if you demanded a ham sandwich from a vegetarian/vegan restaurant). However, in this instance, the bakery wouldn't be providing one service for one person and not the same service for another person. They would be offering kosher baked goods to anyone that wanted to buy them. If you wanted a non-kosher cake, you'd go to a non-kosher bakery.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    56. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about? How is it "not discriminating" to prohibit free speech?

    57. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      It's not the same issue. If I run a kosher deli, I'm offering the same product to everyone: Kosher meats. I wouldn't be able to offer you a ham sandwich just like I wouldn't be able to offer you a selection of computers to choose from. Would you go into an Apple Store and cry discrimination because they don't stock clothing? It's not discrimination to not stock something, but it is discrimination to stock something and say "I'll sell it to Person X but not Person Y because Person Y is black/gay/a different religion/Irish/etc."

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    58. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      It is about being hostile to other students.

      So it's "hostile" to express a possibly unpopular opinion? What about the students celebrating Cinco de Mayo? How are their actions not hostile to someone who doesn't like that holiday? It's all a matter of perspective. Anything you do is going to offend someone, somewhere. What about if the school has a dance or prom with dancing? That's going to highly offend someone (some Christian sects think dancing is "from the devil"). Should we ban dancing in schools because some wackos are offended by it? They're going to claim that having this dance is "being hostile" to them, and they're right: it is. Having that dance is openly insulting their religious beliefs. The only way you can avoid offending these people is to kowtow to their beliefs. I sure as hell don't want to do that, to limit myself to please some moralistic assholes, do you?

      What if the students have a music appreciation class and get to bring in their own music, and a student brings in some kind of innocuous pop music (I dunno, maybe some Michael Jackson, obviously not new)? Some religious nuts complain that this is "being hostile" to their religious beliefs that music shouldn't have drumbeats (I'm pretty sure there's some wacky Christians out there who believe this). Or that even having the class is "being hostile" to their beliefs because it isn't solely religious music, or that they even have music because their religion says music is evil. Now you're not providing an "inclusive learning experience" because you're offending a bunch of religious people. Obviously, limiting peoples' expression because of some minority is not serving the majority who think music and dancing are OK and worthwhile parts of school.

      So why should these students wearing flags limit their expression?

    59. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Wow, what a convenient, sweeping generalization you just made there. Unfortunately, there are extremists in every group, however, the extremists in the Republican party have taken over and are an ever growing faction of ignorant rubes.

      While I do admit there are people far to the left that take things too far, none of them have the power to really threaten the rights of the everyone

      Well, the "extremists" here won in these school districts, and they even won the case at the SCOTUS level (since the court refused to hear the case). It's now a judicial precedent. So how is this "extreme" when it's the law of the land, and upheld by multiple courts?

    60. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by dywolf · · Score: 1

      The baker in entering the public marketplace gives up certain rights.
      A business operating in the public marketplace must do business with the public, all of the public.

      Also: homesexuality is not a value any more than skin color is a value.

      but then we covered this before: you don't know what you're talking about.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    61. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      [Citation Needed]

      People don't lose their rights just because they get into business.

      No one is obligated to provide any reason for denying service. So what you're really proposing is criminalizing certain reasons for saying "no". We have another name for that: thought crime.

      Also: I never mentioned any particular "value", you're the one who read "homesexuality" into that.

    62. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      the American flag was little different than a slogan saying "deport anchor babies."

      The American flag shirt was a statement saying "You're not Mexican, you're American." In the west, that's a fairly controversial statement.

    63. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      |That said there are still laws and constitutional amendments dealing with similar discrimination issues applying to other groups. If people were being honest in this |debate they would instead seek to make LGBT individuals another protected class under existing law. This I feel is the correct debate to have and given that they |are born that way, much like being born black, Romanian, Jewish, etc. it seems like they should be included.

      I agree this is the real debate. However, I must disagree with your argument that LGBT people who are "born" that way must be included with other protected classes like race, gender, and religion. You could take your argument and easily extend it to other situations. You could say some people are born predisposed to various existing crimes and vices like stealing, gambling, murder, lying, prostitution, etc. Should these be protected classes? I would say no. The problem with LGBT is that whether they are born like that or not, many people hold religions beliefs that these acts are immoral. There is a difference between an act and a physical state of being.

    64. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by dywolf · · Score: 1

      Why should I provide a citation? I provided the citations the last 20 times you said this same exact drivel just a few days ago. But you didn't pay attention then, and I doubt you will now. If you truly care that much and just happened to miss them (several times in a row) try your post history.
      ---

      When you act in the public market you are no longer acting as a private citizen, but as a public accommodation. you are offering goods and services in exchange for money, be it a motel, restaurant, lawyer, or bakery.

      a private citizen acting in a private manner has religious freedom.
      his business does not.
      And denying services for discriminatory reasons IS illegal and is not a thought crime.

      The basic protected classes established under Federal Law are ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P...) :

      Race – Civil Rights Act of 1964
      Color – Civil Rights Act of 1964
      Religion – Civil Rights Act of 1964
      National origin – Civil Rights Act of 1964
      Age (40 and over) – Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967
      Sex – Equal Pay Act of 1963 and Civil Rights Act of 1964
      Pregnancy – Pregnancy Discrimination Act
      Citizenship – Immigration Reform and Control Act
      Familial status – Civil Rights Act of 1968 Title VIII: Housing cannot discriminate for having children, with an exception for senior housing
      Disability status – Vocational Rehabilitation and Other Rehabilitation Services of 1973 and Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990
      Veteran status – Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974 and Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act
      Genetic information – Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act

      In addition some states and cities have recognized other protected classes in addition to the these. For ex, in Washington DC (and a few states) you cannot discriminate on the basis of political ideology.
      --

      And allow me to quote what you said:

      If I walked into a bakery and legally compelled them to bake a cake depicting a same-sex couple that they don't want to bake... aren't I the one imposing my values?

      So not only do you not know what you are talking about, you apparently don't even know what you just said.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    65. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      The ACLU has fought multiple times for Religious freedom in schools. That is, when Christian activities were banned, the ACLU stepped in and fought the schools to get the religious activities back into the schools.

      So think you are confused as to what "left" means or does.

    66. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      The ACLU isn't really "left", they're civil libertarians. The "left's" values only sometimes coincide with social libertarianism. It also depends on which part of the "left" you're talking about: like the right, they're a coalition of different interests who don't always agree: environmentalists, vegans, SJWs, progressives, secularists, communists, etc. are usually associated with the left, but these different groups have different aims and frequently disagree on things. On the right, there's the religious nutters, the big-business pushers, the economic libertarians, the imperialists and war-hawks, etc.

    67. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      Why should I provide a citation? I provided the citations the last 20 times you said this same exact drivel just a few days ago. But you didn't pay attention then, and I doubt you will now. If you truly care that much and just happened to miss them (several times in a row) try your post history.
      ---

      This is a public discussion, i.e. a discussion in the public. For the benefit of me and everyone, I shouldn't need to dig up old conversations on other threads.

      In any event, I don't recall any very convincing sources.

      When you act in the public market you are no longer acting as a private citizen, but as a public accommodation. you are offering goods and services in exchange for money, be it a motel, restaurant, lawyer, or bakery.

      "public accommodation" is very narrowly defined. It does not imply that business is anything but private. Business is by definition only conducted between two parties. No other party is involved.

      define:business: noun
      1. a person's regular occupation, profession, or trade.
      2. the practice of making one's living by engaging in commerce.

      People do not lose their rights just because they get into business. Saying "you didn't have to go into business, you asked for it" is called victim blaming. That is not OK.

      No person ever, in the formation of capital, in their employment, or otherwise, agreed that they could be compelled to serve another person. When the Constitution protect's someone's rights, it doesn't say "People shall have the right to..." no, it says "Congress shall make no law." Not no laws about people, or corporations, or certain races. No law.

      a private citizen acting in a private manner has religious freedom.
      his business does not.

      A sole proprietor is a private citizen acting in a private manner.

      If you do yard work for pay, sell cookies from your own kitchen, or are hired by an employer, that's all sole proprietor business: It goes on your form 1040.

      And denying services for discriminatory reasons IS illegal and is not a thought crime.

      Pray tell, how am I supposed to prove said "reason" that another business declined me service? They don't have to tell the truth.

      You're criminalizing the act of having a bad reason for declining someone's service. Deciding different punishments for the same action, based on a person's purported beliefs, is a violation of due process. The court decided "separate but equal" was unconstitutional a long time ago, catch up to modern times please.

      The basic protected classes established under Federal Law are

      Note the distinct lack of sexual orientation.

      In addition some states and cities have recognized other protected classes in addition to the these. For ex, in Washington DC (and a few states) you cannot discriminate on the basis of political ideology.

      So it would be illegal for a Jewish bakery to decline catering for neo-nazis. Just the sort of thing I want the state doing in my name. ...that last sentence there was sarcasm.

      First, you have to be engaging in interstate exchange, as opposed to intrastate exchange.

      Second, and more importantly, contracts made under duress are null and void. Even when it's the state that is forcing agreement.

      e.g. You can't order a photographer to show up at an arbitrary wedding, and dictate what you'll pay them when they refuse to quote a price.

      And allow me to quote what you said:

      If I walked into a bakery and legally compelled them to bake a cake depicting a same-sex couple that they don't want to bake... aren't I the one imposing my values?

      Are you going to answer that question or not? (I'm looking for a "Yes, I'll answer with this: I concur/dissent because...")

    68. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Yup. No true "whatever". You were the one that brought up "right" and "left". The ACLU is considered left. Radical left, often by those who are pro-gun. When you use words with unique definitions, you are no longer speaking English, and there's no point to discuss anything with you.

    69. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      Did you even bother to read the law? Of course not. You'd know that it's the same one the ACLU and Chuck Scheumer pushed and Bill Clinton signed in 1993. It allows a business to claim the 1st amendment. Not that they would win. This is why the country was founded in the first place. Not for intolerance from the left.

      As it is right now a muslim deli in Indiana could be sued for not selling pork products. They can't claim it's against their religion. There is no freedom problem here. People don't have to use a specific business. They love to use the cake maker example. There are no other cake makers? Of course not, it's BS. Being able to force someone, some business to do something they don't want to do isn't freedom, it's slavery. So why are you for slavery?

      Jefferson called what is going on Despotism

      So speak up, do you want to use the force of government to act against those who have a faith? This hasn't worked out well in history.

    70. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      Every time you come up with an example situation, replace same-sex with black. Does it still feel right to say "legally compel them to bake a cake depicting a black couple is forcing my values on them"? No, it doesn't. Your right to swing your first ends at the tip of my nose. In other words, your right to refuse to bake a cake ends when my nose happens to a be a legally protected attribute, like race or religion.

      The tricky thing here, is not all states legally recognize sexual orientation as a protected class. But that is rapidly changing. People not recognizing that sexual orientation should be fully protected just like race/religion, will find themselves on the wrong side of history in short order.

    71. Re:Fuck so-called religious "freedom" by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      Why stop at "black"? It doesn't feel right for anything:

      • I walk into a bakery and legally compel them to bake a cake depicting a same-sex couple
      • I walk into a bakery and legally compel them to bake a cake for a "Traditional Marriage" group fundraiser
      • I walk into a bakery and legally compel them to bake a cake depicting an interracial couple
      • I walk into a bakery and legally compel them to bake a cake for the Republican National Convention
      • I walk into a bakery and legally compel them to bake a cake for the Democratic National Convention
      • I walk into a bakery and legally compel them to bake a cake for an (unfortunate) child's 10th birthday saying "Happy Birthday Adolf!"

      ... all of these are morally and ethically despicable.

      How do you negotiate a price? You're obligated to provide the provide a product, why not at $10k? Why not at zero?

      What if the good isn't of sufficient quality? Can you demand a refund too?

      There's a term for this: It's called duress, and it produces null and void contracts.

  3. How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I just don't buy iPhones because I don't agree with the poor working conditions in Apple factories. See how that works Tim?

    1. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by mean+pun · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I just don't buy iPhones because I don't agree with the poor working conditions in Apple factories.

      Very principled of you, AC! So which brand of phone do you buy then?

    2. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      The problem is that it doesn't work both ways. Even if I'm not into your imaginary buddy up on the cloud you may still stuff his idiocy down my throat.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How good that you write from a device solely made in the US by US workers with good pay. See how that works?

    4. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean the best factory conditions in China? Who voted this up? Do you know ANYTHING about apple's manufacturer guidelines? Did you know that they are heading up an initiative for better working conditions in their suppliers?

      Oh, you didn't know that. Thanks for posting on slashdot.

    5. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      He probably just doesn't want to have his karma destroyed by the PR craziness going on here right now.

      Come on people! They must only have so many mod-points! Another couple of apples stories and we can get slashdot back.

    6. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fairphone.

      http://www.fairphone.com/

      May not be perfect yet, but at least they're trying.

    7. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Surely all of us still have our trusty Neo Freerunners in our pocket, no?

    8. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 2

      Even if I'm not into your imaginary buddy up on the cloud you may still stuff his idiocy down my throat.

      Given that the Christian god is often portrayed as being male does this mean that you shoving his stuff down my through mean the christian god is ok with homosexual acts?

      --
      Time to offend someone
    9. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Vyse+of+Arcadia · · Score: 2

      So I have a question. If I wanted to buy a smartphone that wasn't made by teenagers handling dangerous chemicals on 16 hour shifts for pennies an hour, what brand phone would I buy, and how much could I expect to pay for it?

      Does there even exist such a smartphone?

    10. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      So I have a question. If I wanted to buy a smartphone that wasn't made by teenagers handling dangerous chemicals on 16 hour shifts for pennies an hour, what brand phone would I buy, and how much could I expect to pay for it?

      Does there even exist such a smartphone?

      A quick google search brings up:

      http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/oct/15/the-phone-co-op-offers-uks-first-ethical-smartphone

    11. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, well, as long as Apple has come up with some GUIDELINES the factory workers have nothing to complain about! Whew, that's a relief.

    12. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      Which do you think is a bigger #, dollars spent improving working conditions in China or dollars spent advertising about improving working conditions in China?

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    13. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by danbob999 · · Score: 1

      Many high end Samsung (and I guess LG) phones are made in South Korea. Working conditions are much better than in China.

    14. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a Moto X, proudly made in the USA.

      Before that I hade a Blackberry, made in Mexico.

    15. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    16. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now, now... timmy is just getting up on his hind legs and making the right politically-correct noises that will help keep him and his company looking shiny to the terminally ill-informed. Blame the lead paint in his childhood creche, not his now-defective brain.

    17. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then you don't have any phone?

    18. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by afidel · · Score: 1

      I don't know about AC but I bought a made in the USA Moto X (1st gen) and a made in South Korea Galaxy S5, both are first world countries with non-deplorable working conditions.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    19. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      So I have a question. If I wanted to buy a smartphone that wasn't made by teenagers handling dangerous chemicals on 16 hour shifts for pennies an hour, what brand phone would I buy, and how much could I expect to pay for it?

      You are ridiculous. In every country in the world you have plenty of teenagers working. Nobody in China is doing 16 hour shifts. Nobody in China works for pennies an hour. Very few people in China handle dangerous chemicals, just the same as in other countries. If you want to be taken seriously, try to describe the situation of workers in China as it is.

    20. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      iPhone is probably your closest bet

    21. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then one should not own a smartphone unless they want to damn their own soul to a lower level of heaven where 'weak' believers end up.

      I forgot though, we killed off God and now watch Kim Kardashian to determine what is right and wrong.

    22. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So I have a question. If I wanted to buy a smartphone that wasn't made by teenagers handling dangerous chemicals on 16 hour shifts for pennies an hour, what brand phone would I buy, and how much could I expect to pay for it?

      Does there even exist such a smartphone?

      probably as good as it gets: http://www.fairphone.com/

    23. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      shillers gon shill

    24. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hello Chinese astro-turfer.

    25. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Samsung of course. the obvious superior choice

    26. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.fairphone.nl/

      there you are - my brother has one - great phone!

    27. Re:How about equality in iPhone sweatshops? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Where do these companies get their materials, though? You might find some deplorable conditions further up the supply chain...

  4. I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by AntronArgaiv · · Score: 4, Insightful
    "Thou shalt not use your religious beliefs as an excuse to be a dick to others."

    Either that, or "Treat others like you would like to be treated."

    Honestly, the self-righteousness of the "religious" is getting to be annoying.

    1. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by Needs2BeSaid · · Score: 0

      Playing Devil's Advocate.... (not, I am not a religious person by any measure): Jesus would want people to act morally but he/she/it would never want a Government to force people to act morally.

      --
      Some things need to be said...
    2. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by funwithBSD · · Score: 1

      Render unto God what is due God, and render unto Caesar what is due Caesar.

      Not exactly separation of church and state, but a recognition that they are not one and the same, and that following the Law (Caesar) is not automatically a sin.

      That said, I really don't understand the controversy. Why should someone be forced to participate in a ceremony that is not something they agreed to be part of willingly?

      Go somewhere else.

      Refusing service at a place of public accommodation is not, nor has ever been, covered by these laws.

      --
      Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
    3. Re: I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course not, Jesus would prefer people to act morally of their own accord.

      He wasn't a fool though, he knew most people were not perfectly moral and was willing to drive the moneychangers out of the temple, so he was not blind to the real world.

    4. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. The self righteousness of (insert group here) is very annoying. Including the gay right movement who have become just as bullying and aggressive as any religious zealot I've ever seen. I've seen groups of gay supporters yell slurs and spit at people who's only crime was having a bible in their hands. Some of the loudest proponents of civil liberties are also the biggest racist I know. Just because you are member of a "minority" does not exempt you from being called out for being racist. Be careful what you goad against lest you become that which you despise.

    5. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      The problem is where do you draw the line?

      Photographer refuses to take photographs at a gay wedding because of religious beliefs. Will take photos of any other ceremony.
      Photographer refuses to take photographs at a mixed race wedding because of religious beliefs. Will take photos of any "pure race" ceremony.
      Photographer refuses to take photographs at a non-white wedding because of "religious" beliefs. Will take photos of any white ceremony.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    6. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The photographer isn't part of the ceremony. So the first step is to stop believing things that aren't true.

      The only person who is part of the ceremony that's paid is the person marrying the two people. And it's disturbing that that's a paid position in religious organizations (often with a mandatory "donation" that's determined by the church).

    7. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      And you know Jesus would feel this way how exactly?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    8. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      A better question. Why would you want someone photographing your wedding that hated you?

      I'd prefer to spend my money on someone else.

      Paraphrasing Ben Franklin. 'Why would you want to shut-up your opponents. Let them talk, encourage them to talk. That way everybody knows they are idiots.'

      The world is a large place, gays will find photographers and bakers. Holy rollers will lose money. It's not 1950, assets are not so closely held and there are plenty of heathens, even in the bible belt.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    9. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      The problem is where do you draw the line?

      Why is there a line to be drawn?

      Photographer refuses to take photographs at a non-white wedding because of "religious" beliefs. Will take photos of any white ceremony.

      And? Can the couple still get married? Can they find a photographer? Pretty sure they can. The photographer's bigotry does not pick anyone's pocket or break anyone's leg. It does not interfere with anyone's rights. Let him turn down paying customers and give opportunity to his competition, it's sort of a self-limiting problem.There is no need for any action here, any more than if a Catholic music composer accepts a commission from the diocese but doesn't accept a commission from the local synagogue (or from the Westborough Baptist Church).

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    10. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      And if the couple happens to live in a small town? What if we expand this past wedding photographers? The local gas station and supermarkets in a small town decide that they don't like "the gays" and refuse to service them due to "religious beliefs." The next closest gas station and supermarket are thirty miles away. Should someone be forced to drive so far away or be forced to leave town due to sexual orientation?

      What if it wasn't sexual orientation but if the small town grocery decided it didn't like "that atheist guy" or "that Jewish guy" because they didn't worship Jesus? Could they deny service based on that?

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    11. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      And? Can the couple still get married?

      From the summary: "Legislation being considered in Texas would strip the salaries and pensions of clerks who issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples — even if the Supreme Court strikes down Texas' marriage ban later this year."

      So the answer, in Texas, might be no they can't.

      Can they find a photographer?

      In a big city? Sure. In a small town? Maybe not. The venues, photographers, etc might decide they don't like "those kinds" and refuse to serve them, claiming "religious beliefs."

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    12. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by Sigmon · · Score: 1

      THIS. Where does one draw the line, indeed? I have my opinion on which of your listed scenarios are reasonable or not.. as do you.. and the next guy. It is likely we all disagree. Which one is 'correct'? Who can say? This is why I would always rather er on the side of freedom when it comes to individuals and privately-owned corporations. What is it to me if person A or company B doesn't want to do business with me? Fine. I'll do business with somebody else... The story is different for publicly-owned corporations and government agencies. People like to trot out the term 'Jim Crow'... But they seldom mention the next word in the phrase... which is 'LAWS'. 'Jim Crow LAWS' were passed by government dictating that business MUST discriminate by having things like separate white and colored water fountains, separate white sections and colored sections in restaurants, etc. FAR from being responsible for these problems - Churches (religious people) got the ball rolling to abolish slavery in the western world... and indeed churches were first and foremost among the leaders of the civil rights movement in the U.S. These 'Religious Freedom' laws being passed bear NO resemblance to Jim Crow or other times of discrimination.

      Anti-discrimination laws are not a problem -IF- the vast majority of the people and the culture already are of that mind-set. This is why legislatures pass them... because the people WANT them. The present quagmire in the U.S. comes from a tiny minority of the population attempting to hijack the court system into getting their preferred anti-discrimination ideas imposed as defacto law without having to win the hearts and minds of the general population. When unelected judges impose their arbitrary will on the people absent representation of any kind - regardless of the subject-matter - bad things are going to happen.

    13. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by topology · · Score: 1

      Photography is something anyone can do, but if there is a single service provider in a region for a service which must be certified, then allowing that service provider to discriminate is no good. For example, the only doctor in a small town refuses to see patients that are gay. Said gay patient must get a doc prescrip for life saving medication. Should they be forced to relocate to the next small town with its own single bigoted doctor?

      Its clear that occupations which provide a necessary service should not be allowed to discriminate at all. Where should the line be drawn on occupations between those allowed to discriminate and those not allowed?

    14. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by mpercy · · Score: 2

      So call him a bigot and give him a bad Yelp review, then find a photographer who is a better person.

      Gay photographer refuses to take pictures at a straight wedding at Westboro Baptist Church.
      Jewish photographer refuses to take pictures at a Nazi-themed wedding.
      Black photographer refuses to take pictures at a KKK wedding.
      Devout Christian photographer refuses to take pictures at a wedding at Westboro Baptist Church because they think that WBC's teachings are not very Christian?

      Different sides of the same coin. I think most people would find these all very valid reasons to refuse service. And any law that allows these photographers to refuse service but forces the former photographer to comply is misguided at best.

      Rationally, either no one can ever deny service to anyone for any reason, or everyone can deny service to anyone for any reason. In between is the road to arbitrary and oftentimes capricious decisions about popular vs unpopular reasons.

    15. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by topology · · Score: 1

      Single doctor serving a small town denying service to someone who is hurt leaves them hurt. Bigotry can definitely cause harm in the denial of essential goods and services. Photography is a luxury and non-essential, but when the only grocery store in town refuses to sell to someone, there is no other grocery store to take their business to.

    16. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Photographer refuses to take photographs at a gay wedding because of religious beliefs. Will take photos of any other ceremony.

      But the photographer probably wouldn't take photos of every other type of ceremony, either. The photographer would probably refuse to photograph a satanic ceremony, for example.

      My wife is a photographer and has shot several gay weddings. We obviously do not find gay marriage or providing services for gay weddings to be objectionable.

      But, I think there's a difference between providing a service and selling a product.

      If you're baking a cake, it's just a cake. You're not baking a gay wedding cake or a straight wedding cake. It's just a cake. And if you refuse to sell it to someone because they're gay, well that's discriminatory based on the sexual orientation of the client.

      But if you sell the service of creating wedding photographs, you are specifically creating photographs that feature a gay wedding or a straight wedding. If you object to gay relationships on religious grounds, you're now being forced to create images the existence of which you find to be immoral.

      There's a difference between refusing to sell a product to someone because you believe their actions are immoral, and refusing to perform actions yourself that you believe are immoral.

      I think a photographer should be allowed to refuse to shoot the gay wedding, and that people should then loudly denounce them for it. But I don't believe they should be forced to do something they think is immoral.
         

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    17. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by Loopy · · Score: 1

      How, pray tell, would a gas pump identify you as gay or Jewish or atheist and then refuse service? How also would a supermarket identify your beliefs?

    18. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      And the cake-baker isn't part of the ceremony. Just bake the cake already. What next - refusing to give blood because the recipient might be gay? So much for the parable of the good Samaritan.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    19. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would a agree if a wedding cake were just a simple cake. But wedding cakes take time and planning based on the desired design and any other things. If a gay couple just wanted a plain cake the baker wouldn't have to know what its for. The problem is that wedding cakes usually go through lots of tastings, the design, multiple meetings.

      It would be like saying a photographer just has to stand around a push a button.

    20. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by funwithBSD · · Score: 1

      The line is drawn by the courts. You don't get automatic protection, you have to go to court to get it.

      If the state can show compelling interest, then they are not protected.

      --
      Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
    21. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should someone be forced to participate in a ceremony that is not something they agreed to be part of willingly?

      Because you want to bend that someone to your will and force them to realize you are superior to them. Tyrants are born every day and need to squish someone else to feel big.

    22. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It has nothing to do with normal commerce, it has all to do with tyrannically forcing others to submit to your will, nothing else. If you disagree with my life choices, I have every right to deny you a job and possibly even life itself until your beliefs are exactly as mine.

    23. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      "I've seen groups of gay supporters yell slurs and spit at people who's only crime was having a bible in their hands" - can't blame them for that, its a book of hatred, hence this whole discussion......

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    24. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Entirely irrelevant. If you are fine with hatred because it's difficult to know who you hate, then you are lost to the world already.

    25. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by dave420 · · Score: 1

      One does not choose to be gay, but one does choose to be a Nazi or Klansman. That rather salient point means your analogies are not at all apt, and the conclusions you've drawn from them should be assumed specious until further support is proffered.

    26. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by AntronArgaiv · · Score: 1

      And you know Jesus would feel this way how exactly?

      The same way everyone else does.

    27. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by AntronArgaiv · · Score: 1
      The problem is that the business is not willing to put their restrictions out in the open.

      If you don't want to bake cakes for gay people, or whatever, just put a sign in the window, or on your web page: "Gay clients not welcome". Stand up for your beliefs. Let the market decide.

    28. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      The world is a large place, gays will find photographers and bakers.

      So racism in Asia, genocide in Africa or whatever is irrelevant, because the people there can just move somewhere else in the world? Cool.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    29. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because other groups want to push their rightness and correctness upon others.

      You are screwed either way, but i generally choose to support the lesser screwing... In this case its the Indiana law that screws folks less.

      I urge you folks to actually read it instead of blather about how wrong it is based on slashdot rants or Huffpo tirades...

    30. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by camazotz · · Score: 1

      Not "different sides of the same coin" unless you're suggesting that being gay is directly equivalent to being a religious hate-monger, being Jewish is directly equivalent to being a Nazi, or being black is somehow directly equivalent to being a bigot with an organization know for hanging blacks. Seriously not equivalent. Almost all of the "we think Indiana is fine with this" arguments are comparing normal apples to hate-filled oranges. A better comparison, which shows how this is idiotic: Should a gay man refuse to take pictures of a normal straight wedding? No. Should a Jewish man refuse to take pictures at a German Oktoberfest wedding? No. Should a black photographer turn down a job at a all-white folk wedding? No. Should a devout christian photographer refuse pictures of an otherwise normal wedding but he heard someone might be gay or atheist? No. See, that was easy.

    31. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by mpercy · · Score: 1

      Agree with all of that.

      Disagree with "Should a gay man be forced to take pictures of a straight wedding. Yes."
      Disagree with "Should a Jewish man be forced to take pictures of a German Octoberfest wedding? Yes."

      Could a devoutly Christian photographer ask her potential wedding clients "Have you engaged in premarital sex?" and then refuse to provide her services for their wedding if the answer in the affirmative?

      If so, is she discriminating against any protected class (or class people wish was a protected class--LGBT not protected class everywhere)? What class might that be?

      Or is she merely exercising her discretion in a fashion similar to--but for different reasons than--she might refuse to participate in a Nazi-themed wedding. And if refusing to participate in the Nazi-themed wedding is a fair refusal (and a right I would argue she surely ought to be able to exercise). After all, the people chose to have premarital sex, just as the Nazi-lovers (Nazi loving lovers?) chose to be Nazi-lovers. The only difference is her thought process in arriving at her decision to refuse service.

      I agree it's bad form to discriminate against gays or black or any for simply being gay or black. OTOH, I'm pretty fine with businesses refusing service to Nazis, KKK, vegans, Greenpeace members, Westboro Baptist Church members, drunks, people with screaming kids,...

      The problem is crafting a law that allows refusing service for *some* approved reasons (Nazis) while prohibiting it for *some* other reasons (gay). And the real kicker is who gets to decide which reasons go into which pile. I'm pretty certain that my list of approved reasons for refusing service (or not being allowed to refuse service) are different from yours.

      A related problem is that the law must be carefully crafted so that false positives are not commonplace. E.g., if is OK by law to refuse service to someone who appears to be intoxicated, I ought not to get sued for racial discrimination for refusing service to a blitzed-out drunk who happens to be black.

    32. Re:I'm pretty sure Jesus said not to do this by Alioth · · Score: 1

      The problem is that the holy rollers won't lose money. Gays are a tiny minority. It is estimated that at most 5% of the population is gay, and only a fraction of them are "out", the rest miserably pretending to be heterosexual to fit in.

      It is entirely possible that there will be *no* photographers in your small town who will photograph a gay wedding.

  5. I hope... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...someone is calling the wambulance.

  6. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by dskoll · · Score: 5, Informative

    Bestiality is illegal. Homosexuality is not.

  7. Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by gstoddart · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you and your religion wish to be able to discriminate against someone on the basis of your religion, then you and your religion should correspondingly lose the legal protection of being discriminated against.

    If you are such a whiny idiot that you think it should be OK to say "we don't serve your kind here", then you should have no legal or moral basis to claim that someone shouldn't be able to do the same to you.

    This is giving religion an extra special place in law ... protected from being discriminated against, while getting a special exemption to discriminate against someone else.

    So either shut up, and accept that you have no other ways you're legally allowed to discriminate against someone ... or accept that it should also be someone else's right to refuse you because of your religion.

    There is no in between, and any claims your religion is so precious as to require you receive rights nobody else has is complete crap.

    Sorry, but the Taliban, Al Qaeda, and ISIL want to have a society based on religious exceptionalism.

    Which makes people who want to have religion be a special thing in law are full of shit, self entitled people, and are actually the enemies of a free and open society.

    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    1. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by funwithBSD · · Score: 2, Informative

      These laws don't give you the right to say "We don't serve your kind here." at a public accommodation. That would be a violation of the law. You are not exempt from complying with laws where the government has a compelling interest.

      What is somewhat amusing is that when the Federal law that provides the same protection as these State laws was passed under Clinton, it was to allow the use of ceremonial drugs in Native American rituals and the Amish to avoid some building codes.

      --
      Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
    2. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Has anyone actually espoused the position you're attacking? I don't see anything here about giving special privileges to a particular religion (which would certainly be unconstitutional). Without that stipulation, the idea seems to be that government should ignore religion altogether - which sounds, on the face of it, a nice principle to strive towards.

    3. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by rwv · · Score: 4, Insightful

      One example I heard about on NPR was a bakery that made fancy cakes somewhere in Colorado. The baker formerly made wedding cakes in addition to regular cakes for things like birthdays and such. The baker currently does not offer the wedding cake service any longer because if he can't turn down people with a particular sexual orientation he is legally bound to turn down everybody. It ultimately hurts choice. It is bigotry and shame on the business owner for not being comfortable enough as a person to tolerate all sorts of different sexual orientations, but is this really the arena that people of that particular sexual orientation should be taking a stand with respect to their rights? The "denied access to see their partner in the hospital" circumstance tugs on more heart strings than "no wedding cakes for anybody until we can get this mess sorted out".

    4. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 2

      "we don't serve your kind here"

      "Huh?"

      "Your druids. They'll have to wait outside."

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    5. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by Hevel-Varik · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No it is not a shame on the business owner for not being comfortable enough to tolerate all sorts of... I imagine he tolerates just fine. What he doesn't want to do is be party to the issue, because he believes in something super-wordly which establishes a system of right and wrong.(Only in modern times has believing in nothing become the height of intellectual attainment but throught human history and still today if you can look beyond the press that belief has gone hand in hand with worldly knowledge. And the business owner is willing to forgo business to accomodate his beliefs. It is a shame on you that you are too small to relate to something like that.

    6. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Canada, the legal principle of fairness (equity) applies to pretty much anything. What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. So these type of discriminatory laws won't go far here, eh.

    7. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by argStyopa · · Score: 2

      Yeah, I just *hate* haters, don't you? /irony.

      You might want to review http://www.cracked.com/blog/5-...

      But here's the key: When a Scientologist (or Muslim, or Christian, or yoga enthusiast) says it works for them, this is what they're talking about. The mythology isn't important -- if these rituals have saved your life and later on a teacher says, "Yeah, this technique works because of the ancient thetans that live in your *******," you're going to shrug and say, "Sure, sounds good." If you tell the lady in yoga class that the reason she feels better afterward is because negative spiritual energies tend to pool in the hip joints, you'll get the same reaction.

      Then if you, as a cool, rational person, butt in and say, "Actually, yoga is just engaging the endonomic nervous system and reducing cortisol levels," all they're going to hear is you replacing a very easy-to-understand explanation with a very complicated one that sounds like gibberish. If you smirk and roll your eyes at these gullible lemmings, then go grab a mirror and smirk at yourself, partner, because you do it too.

      You physically don't have room in your brain to keep track of how everything in your world works (****, you don't even really know how your brain works) so you can feel all superior to a Christian who doesn't believe in evolution, but somewhere there's an engineer who feels superior to you for not knowing how your iPhone works (and you know "endonomic nervous system" is just a nonsense phrase I made up, right?). The reality is that you don't know how your iPhone works because knowing that wouldn't change your day-to-day use of it at all. Likewise, thinking the Earth is only 6,000 years old doesn't make it any harder to have, say, a career-repairing air conditioner. But believing that self-discipline, patience, and hard work are sacred virtues from God definitely makes it easier.

      And if you look hard enough, you'll see that this flaw -- favoring what works to the exclusion of everything else -- encompasses everybody. The compulsive liar got to be that way because it works. So did the bully, the racist, and the greedy bastard. And every single cult, hate group, or political party has figured out that you can ensnare people by gluing the weird parts onto a bunch of common sense axioms that nobody can disagree with.

      --
      -Styopa
    8. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 2

      (after they leave, one clerk says to the other):

      "funny! they don't look druish!"

      (oblig)

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    9. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's wrong with only making one type of wedding cake?
      "I only make cakes with a male and female puppet."
      How is that discriminating?
      Is it discriminating when a porn star says: "I don't do gay porn", or when a website only sells straight porn?
      Why couldn't the couple buy a regular wedding cake?

    10. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by jdavidb · · Score: 2

      If you are such a whiny idiot that you think it should be OK to say "we don't serve your kind here", then you should have no legal or moral basis to claim that someone shouldn't be able to do the same to you.

      Yes, I agree. People should be able to refuse to do business with someone for any reason whatsoever, and vice versa. Religious conviction shouldn't have any special status in law above any other type of preference or desire.

      So either shut up, and accept that you have no other ways you're legally allowed to discriminate against someone ... or accept that it should also be someone else's right to refuse you because of your religion.

      I agree and accept this.

    11. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only in modern times has believing in nothing become the height of intellectual attainment

      Strawman arguments are lies.

    12. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by u38cg · · Score: 1

      Thanks for telling gay people what to think. I'm sure they had no idea how they felt about this issue until you stepped up to the plate.

      --
      [FUCK BETA]
    13. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by macs4all · · Score: 2

      These laws don't give you the right to say "We don't serve your kind here." at a public accommodation. That would be a violation of the law. You are not exempt from complying with laws where the government has a compelling interest.

      Actually, this one does. And it keeps you from suing (successfully) against it. And it allows the State Government to step in (Intervene) (at Taxpayer Expense!) to enforce your "right" to Discriminate.

      Even when there is an express local ordinance forbidding it.

      Read.

    14. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, that is exactly as it should be. If you aren't willing to serve the general public equally, without discriminating against things that are none of your business, you shouldn't be in that line of work, or run a business of that sort.

      If someone volunteers to be a soldier, then claims their religious beliefs means that they can't shoot anyone, or even so much as touch a rifle, should we just say "okay, you can still be a soldier, but you don't have to do any of that?"

      What about a Buddhist that gets hired as a butcher, then says "Oh, by the way, my religious convictions say I can't slaughter or touch dead animals or it'll make me unclean, I can't chop those steaks."

    15. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by Hevel-Varik · · Score: 1

      Oh ye who would remove rhetoric from intellectual back and forth. Human give and take suffers more robustness than a does a compiler. My point is clear as day unless you are a pedant, do you argue that it has not become normal to equate religiosity with intellectual backwardness in modern times. If so then by all means I am sorry to have lied to you.

    16. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One example I heard about on NPR was a bakery that made fancy cakes somewhere in Colorado. The baker formerly made wedding cakes in addition to regular cakes for things like birthdays and such. The baker currently does not offer the wedding cake service any longer because if he can't turn down black and mixed-race couples he is legally bound to turn down everybody. It ultimately hurts choice. It is bigotry and shame on the business owner for not being comfortable enough as a person to tolerate all sorts of different races, but is this really the arena that people of that particular skin color should be taking a stand with respect to their rights? The "denied access to see their partner in the hospital" circumstance tugs on more heart strings than "no wedding cakes for anybody until we can get this mess sorted out".

    17. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SHUT UP. My god, how many of you idiots will keep making that invalid comparison. Almost every thread on this forum has that response with someone else painstakingly taking time to refute it. The best your argument gets in defending this is: "You side is just as bad as ours." REALLY?

    18. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      The logical consequence is if you start discriminating against said religion, you lose your legal ability to compel people to serve you against their will.

      Which means in the end, no one can force anyone to do anything. Which I'm sort of down for.

    19. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      do you argue that it has not become normal to equate religiosity with intellectual backwardness in modern times.

      I do argue that, and you know that I'm right. People who make that equation are widely - and rightfully - called out as self-righteous jackasses. The idea that such people are the mainstream is 100% persecution fantasy.

      However, this backpedaling of yours is beside the point, because what you said was:

      Only in modern times has believing in nothing become the height of intellectual attainment

      Even among the aforementioned jackasses, you cannot find a single instance of "believing in nothing", nor in such belief being regarded as the "height of intellectual attainment". You knew that this wasn't the case when you said it. It was a deliberate distortion of a position you had no confidence in your ability to argue against. In short, yes, it was a lie.

    20. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Masterpiece Bakery is the business and the poor owner is victim of heinous tyranny.

    21. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by Hevel-Varik · · Score: 1

      yes you are a pedant that's fine. yes the height of intellectual attainment was exageration and very obviously so. so there you have it.

    22. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are intellectually deficient. you don't understand your own criticism, nor do you understand its scope. sad.

    23. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by funwithBSD · · Score: 1

      The article does not address or even mention the section about compelling interest of the government.

      8(b)(1) if you even care.

      The government just has to show compelling interest and that the interest is the least limiting.

      "Racism" is pretty clearly a compelling government interest. And in the infamous "Wedding" examples, not being sued for refusing to take part in a private ceremony seems a pretty reasonable action.

      The government, ACA included, should not be compelling actions, but preventing certain actions.
      I don't see how any valid law could or should be used to force someone to participate in something that has no compelling government interest.
      Refusing to deliver a cake, or taking photos, or presiding over a private marriage is not compelling.

      Refusing to serve someone at a public accommodation is a compelling interest.

      --
      Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
    24. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by Hevel-Varik · · Score: 1

      Leftists feel sadness for nobody. You don't exist.

    25. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      You clearly didn't read the law, or have no clue about law. Actually, it doesn't. It allows you to claim 1st amendment. Not that you'd win.

      I'm a white guy. I was refused service, in Maryland just last weekend. I simply moved to another shop. What's the big deal? Gays don't get to shove their homosexuality down someone else's throat? Make someone else do something they don't want to? How would you like it if someone used the force of government to make you do something you didn't want to? Why are you arguing for them to be able to do that?

      You have no clue what you're talking about, that's why.
      Here's the law, not that you'll read it:
      http://www.indystar.com/story/...

    26. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      Why don't you shut up until you understand what you're talking about?
      You clearly didn't read the law, or have no clue about law. Actually, it doesn't. It allows you to claim 1st amendment. Not that you'd win.

      As it is right now, a muslim deli owner could be forced to carry pork products. He wouldn't be able to claim it's against his religion. So why use the force of government to make him carry pork products?

      You have no clue what you're talking about, that's why.
      Here's the law, not that you'll read it:
      http://www.indystar.com/story/...

      Jefferson called what is going on despotism.

    27. Re:Freedom to discriminate == no protection ... by macs4all · · Score: 1

      You clearly didn't read the law, or have no clue about law. Actually, it doesn't. It allows you to claim 1st amendment. Not that you'd win.

      I'm a white guy. I was refused service, in Maryland just last weekend. I simply moved to another shop. What's the big deal? Gays don't get to shove their homosexuality down someone else's throat? Make someone else do something they don't want to? How would you like it if someone used the force of government to make you do something you didn't want to? Why are you arguing for them to be able to do that?

      You have no clue what you're talking about, that's why. Here's the law, not that you'll read it: http://www.indystar.com/story/...

      I happen to live in Indianapolis, and not only have I read (and understand) the article you mention (and many more), but I have read the excellent follow up article in the Star, which has an analysis of the differences between the Federal RFRA and the Indiana RFRA that not only proves everything I am saying, bug is also backed up with the opinion of experts on both sides of the issue more schooled in the law than either of us. Not to mention things like the letter to Gov. Pence signed by FIVE former Governors of Indiana, and another one signed by the CEOs of nine major Corporations admonishing him to stop ruining the State for some political coin.

      And when the original sponsor of the Federal RFRA says that the Indiana Law is different in important (and dangerous) ways than the one he championed (and which he and Obama both supported), then you best listen.

  8. WWJD? by jd2112 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Probably strongly and vocally oppose this bill.

    --
    Any insufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from technology.
    1. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Bill Clinton Passed the original as did all the Democrats at the time

    2. Re:WWJD? by physicsphairy · · Score: 5, Informative

      Jesus, the guy who would always do what you would do.

      Despite an oppressive Roman occupation, Jesus never had much to say about the Romans. He outmaneuvered questions designed to embroil him in the local politics. He refused efforts to crown him as king. He refused to defend himself when he stood accused before them.

      If I may be so bold as to guess, I would say no, Jesus would not vocally oppose this bill. Nor would he endorse it. Jesus did not see government as a means to achieve his objectives. He taught in the synagogues. He clashed with religious leaders. He went to the oppressed and ministered to them directly. He would not be interested in your politics (or mine). But he would be strongly interested in affecting the compassion, selflessness, humility, and general godliness of the people involved.

    3. Re:WWJD? by tnk1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Honestly? Jesus would probably ignore this law, and simply expect people to do unto others.... Effectively attempting to get Jesus to talk about politics is what the Pharisees tried to get him to do, and he wasn't having it.

      Which is to say, he'd expect the people who had the right to treat other people poorly to not use their legal right. You can cast stones, which is your right under the law, but you know why you shouldn't. You can close your doors to people you consider sinners, but you know why you should not.

      Still, if he really did believe that homosexuality was a sin, he would not have minced words about it. There are no direct quotes on that, so we don't know his actual opinion. It may have differed, or it may have been the same as conventional views of that time.

    4. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus wouldn't have bothered. He refused to get involved in the politics in his day, and he would do the same now. He publicly declared God's Kingdom, which would have both the power and the authority to strip every human government of its sovereignty in one fell swoop.

      Any "christian" that gets involved with politics is ignoring their leader's beliefs.

    5. Re:WWJD? by Jhon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "[they] rationalize injustice by pretending to defend something many of us hold dear,"

      Couldn't that be said by BOTH sides of this issue? Wouldn't it be injustice to force a private citizen to enter a private business contract/engagement with another private citizen against their will and against their beliefs?

      I believe It's discrimination to not hire/or fire based on sexual orientation. I do not believe that it is discrimination to refuse to take the money and provide services to someone who wants to you to make a cake for their same-sex wedding. Trust me -- the small business bakery market will weed out those who want to miss great business opportunities and/or sales just because they don't want both figures on a cake wearing pants.

    6. Re:WWJD? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      Yep, especially since he was probably bisexual or just gay. The bible even says so, describing how he hung out with naked young men and lived with his BF for a while. I wish someone could invent a time machine just so we could get pictures of Jesus kissing another guy and force all the extremists to confront it.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    7. Re:WWJD? by MozeeToby · · Score: 1

      And? They fucked up too. What's your point?

    8. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "I believe It's discrimination to not hire/or fire based on skin color. I do not believe that it is discrimination to refuse to take the money and provide services to N*** who wants you to make a cake for their mix-race wedding. Trust me -- the small business bakery market will weed out those who want to miss great business opportunities and/or sales just because they want both figures on a cake being same color."

      Like those many business that gone bankrupt in the south during Jim Crow era, let see in this new Jim Crow revival..

    9. Re:WWJD? by jbssm · · Score: 1, Troll

      Sincerely I cannot understand how this is modded informative. There is absolutely no factual data that supports what you just said. Sure, the bible implies what you described, but well, it's the bible, and the day we'll start to take the bible as "factual data" in Slashdot will be the day logic gets shattered to pieces.

    10. Re:WWJD? by lgw · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm quite amused by your post, as it can be read equally well as an argument for either side of the current debate - well done. Not everyone shares the same values, but everyone is convinced they're in the right, and anyone smart would agree with them. The whole point of a secular state is not to pick a particular group's values and enshrine them in law: that's a theocracy (even if the religion is "progressivism"). Instead, it is to make laws based on the smooth functioning of society, so that people with differing views can work together without violence.

      The few religious leaders I respect want nothing to do with laws, as they also don't support theocracy. Instead, they work to change those deeply held beliefs (which may be a work of generations) so that the conflict vanishes.

      It seems the progressives here want to force your system of values on others through the government's monopoly of force, instead of by winning in the marketplace of ideas (much as the religious right have done in generations past). The religious leaders I respect, from Jesus to the current Dalai Lama never cared for force, but were remarkably. good at presenting and defending their ideas, both to believers and to non-believers, without ever just asserting "I'm just right and to disagree with me is hate speech that should be banned".

      (BTW, of course there was a Jesus, don't be silly. How important he was in his time, vs ideas attributed to him later is hard to say, but Christianity never could have started rolling in the first place without some sort of charismatic leader.)

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    11. Re:WWJD? by Coren22 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Jesus may have said nothing, but the old testament has a pretty clear lesson on it:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S...

      I personally have very little issue with homosexuals. I have a serious problem with gay marriage, as marriage is a religious ceremony, so the state should stay out of it. Civil union is the state sponsored joining, and should be the proper avenue for the state to allow something that religion indicates is wrong. If someone feels that a homosexual couple should share in the benefits a heterosexual relationship enjoys, they should move for equal benefits for the two, not move to change the definition of marriage. However, it has to be understood that most of the benefits of marriage have to do with holding a family together for the benefit of the children, which a homosexual marriage may have some issues in creating.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    12. Re:WWJD? by Jhon · · Score: 1

      Two words:

      Bus Boycott.

    13. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You ask us to trust you, that it will all work out for the best.

      That's a pretty tall order, and what if it's something besides a bakery? What if it's medical care? A lawyer? Police services? A fire?

    14. Re:WWJD? by MachineShedFred · · Score: 2

      You touch on something I was just thinking - you replace "homosexual" with "Jew" and you get pretty close to the Nuremberg Laws of 1935.

      Yeah, yeah, Godwin and all that - but it's remarkably similar in nature, and should be recognized for the abhorrent concept that it is.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    15. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus, the guy who would always do what you would do.

      Yeah... pretty much what you just did.

      Jesus has turned into everyone's Golden Calf. The on-demand, highly configurable God-man. "He represents whatever socio-political planks my belief system endorses." And yet the religious right are the problem here because they don't want to accept and cater to the homo-fascist mainstream of American politics.

      Leftist/Libertarian Politics for 2015: Tolerance for the tolerant.

      Insults, ridicule, thought-policing, legal sanctions, economic sanctions, prison, bankruptcy, and not so veiled contempt for anyone that dares to defy the religion of indifferent tolerance. How..... intolerant. Anyone smell the rotting stench of hypocrisy in the room?

    16. Re:WWJD? by dbrueck · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I disagree that this is about hatred; in fact, I think you have to be calling many people blatant liars to make it about hatred. Granted, on either side there are likely some who are driven by hatred, but that's always going to be the case. It seems that many (and probably the vast majority) of people on both sides are pretty normal people who genuinely feel the way they say they do. Trying to vilify people on one side or the other doesn't help and is disingenuous.

      Personally I can see merit in both sides and I bet if you give each argument and fair chance you would too. And that's why the issue is such a difficult one. It's only through setting up absurd strawman arguments that you can really dismiss the whole debate.

      On the one side, it looks like we're dealing with discrimination all over again. As with racial discrimination, it seems wrong to avoid doing business with people just because of their sexual orientation. Separate but equal never worked and simply wasn't right.

      On the other side, it seems like you have the government forcing people not just to tolerate - but to actively celebrate - something that is deeply abhorrent to them. They would otherwise be inclined to let people live their own lives how they want but when forced to be involved they honestly feel wrong, deeply wrong, about being forced to tacitly condone things like same sex marriage.

      Both sides sincerely feel like the other side is taking away their rights and feel the others' suggested way to deal with it is unfair. Hatred isn't necessarily a part of the equation at all.

    17. Re:WWJD? by Changa_MC · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you think marriage is a religious ceremony, then you have a very poor grasp of human history.

      Every culture has marriage ceremonies, because every culture benefits when 2 people come together and raise their children as a family. Some southern African countries allowed lesbian marriage, some south American countries allowed male homosexual marriage, some south Asian cultures allowed atheist marriage... The only thing all marriages have in common is the bonding of 2 or more people for the sake of bonding their families. Sometimes this is done to provide offspring, sometimes to make peace between warring tribes, and sometimes simply out of love.

      As to your further implication that adopted children are inferior to your own genetic seed, that's pretty much rejected by everyone and you won't find it useful in pushing through any laws. Adoption by homosexuals is hardly something today's foster children fear, rather for many it is their best hope.

      --
      Changa hates change.
    18. Re:WWJD? by horigath · · Score: 2

      The federal bill at least had some motivation behind it that wasn't a specific attempt to trample on minority rights—in fact the opposite. It it intended to prevent the federal government from building on native american sacred lands, or otherwise restricting the access of those who follow indigenous religions to their sacred sites and practices. It applies only to carve out exemptions of federal law.

      On the other hand, in Indiana, this bill explicitly allows private business to act as religious organizations and therefore exempt themselves from all kinds of legal requirements about nondiscrimination. The clause was probably inspired by a court case in another state, New Mexico, which in theory has a similar law on the books—but in which the case of the business that wished to discriminate on the basis of sexuality was rejected.

      So yeah, it's not the same at all.

    19. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If the Christians want to take their ball (marriage) and go home with it, so be it.

      Of course, the problem is that it's not theirs to define. It predates Christian and Judaism by quite some time and enjoyed a variety of different definitions even under their specific purview. Until very recently marriage was specifically a property contract, the trading of goats or sheep for a waste of skin that could produce an heir if you beat it sufficiently. The biblical definition includes a great deal of scenarios not supported by current law or Western social contract.

      But if it shuts up those self-righteous asshats who think that everything on this planet was made for their specific amusement and torment, fine, rip EVERY mention of marriage directly out of EVERY government document and legislation. Replace it with something universally applied and called something that won't offend your tender fucking sensibilities.

      BUT, until you've managed to rip the marriage out of government, you sure as fucking shit are going to have to deal with government in your fucking marriage. You don't get it both ways.

    20. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But what if my chuch/religion says that gay marriage is okay? Shouldn't the government stay out of it?

    21. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's fine, just as soon as you join a campaign to get rid of all of the legal benefits attached to marriage (inheritance, immigration, etc.), then we can consider it a non-issue.

      Until then, you're just a run-of-the-mill bigot.

    22. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      as marriage is a religious ceremony,

      Marriage is the secular ceremony, Holy Matrimony is the religious ceremony.

    23. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I personally have very little issue with homosexuals. I have a serious problem with gay marriage, as marriage is a religious ceremony, so the state should stay out of it. Civil union is the state sponsored joining, and should be the proper avenue for the state to allow something that religion indicates is wrong. If someone feels that a homosexual couple should share in the benefits a heterosexual relationship enjoys, they should move for equal benefits for the two, not move to change the definition of marriage. However, it has to be understood that most of the benefits of marriage have to do with holding a family together for the benefit of the children, which a homosexual marriage may have some issues in creating.

      You do realise that historically marriage was between the 2 people involved - no church nor state. The "definition of marriage" is a union (in this case of people - the word can have other meanings in English that do not apply to living things at all).
      Also, your preference of the Church over the State in this matter is rather laughable, since the Church's involvement in marriage was an attempt to increase its authority over the People and the State.
      Stop trying to hold onto something that wasn't yours alone to begin with.

    24. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This works both ways.

      Many in the gay rights movement were pushing to protest and not patronize Chik-Fil-A because of the owners anti-gay beliefs. The basket ball owner situation was similar. Aren't the gay rights activists actively incorporating and promoting discrimination themselves by telling people not to go to Chik-Fil-A? They refuse to patronize a company because for the sole reason of the of the beliefs of its owner are not the same beliefs as theirs. Why is that socially acceptable to promote that? Is "an eye for an eye" reason for discrimination okay?

      People can

    25. Re:WWJD? by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Sincerely I cannot understand how this is modded informative. There is absolutely no factual data that supports what you just said. Sure, the bible implies what you described, but well, it's the bible, and the day we'll start to take the bible as "factual data" in Slashdot will be the day logic gets shattered to pieces.

      The Bible gives data about the behaviour of biblical characters that is factual in the context of how these characters, as described in the Bible, would behave in a given situation. The grandparent was modded informative for making one such analysis.

      In other words, Bible is a factual description of the World of Bible, which may or may not resemble the World of Average Slashdotter or World of Average American in some important ways. The same is true of all literary descriptions, whether meant as factual in the context of WoAA or not.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    26. Re:WWJD? by Coren22 · · Score: 2

      Exactly what I said. You are just repeating it from a different side. It should be up to whatever religion, and not the government to force it.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    27. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if my personal religious beliefs say it's wrong for a black man to marry a white woman? Go back 100 years and people actually thought that so you can't really dismiss the questions. Where does personal freedom end and discrimination start?

    28. Re:WWJD? by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 2

      Couldn't that be said by BOTH sides of this issue? Wouldn't it be injustice to force a private citizen to enter a private business contract/engagement with another private citizen against their will and against their beliefs?

      No. That question was answered with de-segregation.

    29. Re:WWJD? by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      I may be a bigot in your mind, but you are illiterate in mine.

      Quote from my post above that is relevant:

      Civil union is the state sponsored joining, and should be the proper avenue for the state to allow something that religion indicates is wrong. If someone feels that a homosexual couple should share in the benefits a heterosexual relationship enjoys, they should move for equal benefits for the two, not move to change the definition of marriage.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    30. Re:WWJD? by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      Holy matrimony is A marriage ceremony, not the religious ceremony.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    31. Re:WWJD? by ultranova · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I have a serious problem with gay marriage, as marriage is a religious ceremony, so the state should stay out of it. Civil union is the state sponsored joining, and should be the proper avenue for the state to allow something that religion indicates is wrong.

      The problem is, the state can't recognize marraige without defining it. If you agree that the religious ceremony has no legal significance (that is, married couples also need to get a civil union if they want the state to respect their union), then fine; but if you want your marriage ot mean anything to the state itself, the state can't avoid deciding what it considers a valid marriage - and then carrying the moral and legal responsibility for that decision, if it would happen to put citizens into different categories based on religious beliefs. Indeed, it would be forced to recognize an official religion that gets to choose.

      So, the only way to get the state out of marriage is to go pure civil union route and ignore whatever religious or other ceremony anyone feels fit to add on their own time.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    32. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do not believe that it is discrimination to refuse to take the money and provide services to someone who wants to you to make a cake for their same-sex wedding.

      So, what about refusing to make a cake for a wedding because of the color of the participants' skins? Does that qualify as discrimination?

      <sarcasm>
      I'm considering forming a new religion, let's call it Shoeism. Trust me, invisible sky fairies have spoken directly to me & assured me that anyone with a shoe size > 10 are children of Satan & should NOT be served in any business. I hope everyone with a conscience will cooperate to tell these large-footed monsters how we reject them (& their oversized socks).
      </sarcasm>

      Yes. It really is that stupid.

      I was raised as a Christian. I recall the local youth folk choir used to sing "They'll know we are Christians by our Love". I'm no longer a member of any church & anytime I see a church group the two things that pop into my head are:

      1. 1. Hide!
      2. 2. "They'll know we are Christians by our Hate" plays in my mind

      P.S. Not that it matters, but FWIW I'm straight. However, if I came across a business that discriminated because of anyone's skin color/sexual orientation/shoe size I'd boycott that business on principle.

    33. Re:WWJD? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Trust me -- the small business bakery market will weed out those who want to miss great business opportunities

      You could say the same thing about businesses that refused to sell to blacks ... except they didn't go bankrupt, and racist business practices continued for a century after the civil war, until they were finally outlawed. The "free market" did not, and does not, fix discrimination.

    34. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Couldn't that be said by BOTH sides of this issue? Wouldn't it be injustice to force a private citizen to enter a private business contract/engagement with another private citizen against their will and against their beliefs?

      Nobody is being forced to do anything. If it's against your closely-held beliefs to serve black people in your restaurant, nobody will force you to do so. Your business just has to treat whites the same way you are choosing to treat blacks, i.e. not serve them either. You still have a choice: run the restaurant or not. It may not be the choice you hoped for, but it's a choice nonetheless. You still are free to uphold your beliefs.

      If what you want is a new law giving you permission to act as a bigot without repercussions, well, go fuck yourself. You can't have that.

    35. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus is not a historical person. You can not use fabricated stories to prove your logic. Jesus Christ is all about faith. You can not use logic against faith.

      The stories have been fabricated and have been continually adjusted to make 'Jesus want' what the religious leaders and their followers want.

      In this case, what Jesus would do is push for laws to make it more easy to avoid interaction with none Christians.

      If you don't agree with the current religious leaders, you can still create your own schism, or even better, invent a completely new religion.

    36. Re:WWJD? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      Every culture has marriage ceremonies

      Not all. The Mosuo people do not. AFAIK, they are the only exception to this cultural universal.

    37. Re:WWJD? by DutchUncle · · Score: 2

      Your distinction between religious and civil partnerships is valid; unfortunately, there is too much history of the use of "marriage", "husband", and "wife" in civil law. (Marriage is the one partnership contract under our law that is defined, not in one contract, but piecemeal all over the law.) The very term "civil union" exemplifies the problem, considering that there was ALREADY a clear definition of a "civil wedding" or "civil marriage" performed by civil authority, as distinct from a religious ceremony. The new term was challenged at every opportunity as being not the same, separate and definitely unequal, which led to the insistence on the same term. Besides, marriage is very clearly defined in the Old Testament as being between one man and as many wives as he can afford . . . Oh, wait, we changed that at some point, so simplifying the definition further to being any pair of humans isn't as much of a stretch as one might think.

    38. Re:WWJD? by Jhon · · Score: 1

      I think it's fine for private individuals to shout "Dont go to this business because they don't like gays". I DON'T think it's OK to use the force of government to force a private individual in to a business contract for any reason.

    39. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, there is no law again firing someone for their sexual orientation in about 29 states. You believe the invisible hand of the market will get rid of discriminatory businesses? Based on what fantasy? People often don't like, and would rather not engage "the other." Allow people's bigotry to flourish, and we'll have an even more divided country than already exists.

    40. Re:WWJD? by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Would you be OK with the business owner posting "No Gays Allowed" signs on the door?

    41. Re:WWJD? by Yunzil · · Score: 3, Insightful

      On the other side, it seems like you have the government forcing people not just to tolerate - but to actively celebrate something that is deeply abhorrent to them.

      No, you don't, which is why that side of the argument loses. Nobody is saying you have to celebrate same-sex marriage, just that the sexual preferences of the people involved in a business transactions shouldn't matter. How in the hell are you supposed to determine that anyway? If you own a cake shop do you make all your customers sign an affidavit that they're straight? Force them to reveal the gender of their spouse?

    42. Re:WWJD? by Mr.+Droopy+Drawers · · Score: 1

      Maybe you need to actually READ the Nuremberg Laws of 1935. There were no requirements to serve certain individuals. Most were exclusion rules: i.e. you couldn't marry those of a particularly defined race.

      --

      To Copy from One is Plagiarism; To Copy from Many is Research.

    43. Re:WWJD? by dbrueck · · Score: 1

      Sure you're celebrating it. You're making a cake to honor it, you're having your bed n' breakfast host it, you're taking pictures to commemorate it (to name a few of the most popular examples that have resulted in lawsuits).

      For the sake of an explanation, assume the activity was something sinister, e.g. a KKK rally, and someone saw you baking cakes for it or acting as the official photographer. If you were to later say that you were just there on business and didn't actually support that stuff, a lot of people would find that pretty hard to believe. If you ever tried to run for a political office, your opponent would have a field day with this, don't you agree? Why, because it sure looks like you're acting for the benefit of that cause, that you support it. I hope it's obvious that I'm not at all trying to suggest these two are the same, btw, just illustrating the point that doing these types of things sure looks a lot like advocacy. And that's the rub for these people - there's no way to discretely bow out on the grounds that they feel wrong to be doing things that are akin to advocacy.

      And you're not having to "determine" anything because the sexual orientation of the people involved is inherently obvious. It's not akin to e.g. not selling produce to someone because they are gay - the sexual orientation is not only front and center, it's part of the transaction details. As a cake shop owner you aren't the one bringing LGBT into the picture - you just happen to sell wedding cakes with a boy and a girl on them. If you refuse to create a cake w/ two boys, you can get sued and if recent court cases are any indication, there's a good chance you'll lose.

    44. Re:WWJD? by TheRhinoplast · · Score: 1

      Just a Dora The Explorer is a factual representation of the world of Dora The Explorer. By your definition a fact can be literally anything and of any relative value. i.e. a pointless distinction unless we're talking about a comparison to reality. Which was the OP's point, I believe.

    45. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which was Paul/Saul, rather than Jesus who spoke out against organized religion.

    46. Re:WWJD? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I believe It's discrimination to not hire/or fire based on sexual orientation. I do not believe that it is discrimination to refuse to take the money and provide services to someone who wants to you to make a cake for their same-sex wedding.

      Both cases are exactly the same - you refuse to conduct a trade with someone on account of some trait X that they possess. It's just that in one case you're paying them money in exchange for their labor, and in the other case they're paying you money in exchange for your labor.

      You could argue that people should have the right to discriminate (freedom of association etc). But if you do, then you have to do it consistently.

    47. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it's different, shoot it!!!

      Yah, I know. Government should focus on protecting borders and regulating free trade.

    48. Re:WWJD? by Forgefather · · Score: 1

      That is fine when we are talking about a private contract between two people, but as eleventy billion people on this forum have pointed out it is not ok for a public business to refuse service based on skin color, ethnicity, or sexual orientation. A business is a public facing entity and must abide by the rules of non discrimination.

      --
      "There are lies, there are damn lies, and there are statistics"
    49. Re:WWJD? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 4, Interesting

      but Christianity never could have started rolling in the first place without some sort of charismatic leader.

      At least one popular theory is that said charismatic leader is Paul, and Jesus was just a figure that he appropriated for his purposes (elevating him to godhood status in the process).

    50. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they ask you top put two dudes on the wedding cake they ordered you have a pretty good basis for an educated guess.

    51. Re:WWJD? by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      OP may have been thinking of Brian, not Jesus.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    52. Re:WWJD? by erapert · · Score: 1

      Nobody is saying you have to celebrate same-sex marriage

      They're being forced to participate in the celebration of something they deem deeply abhorrent.

      Rather than forcing someone to do something how about we consider this little concept called liberty and NOT force them to do anything. There are, no doubt, other cake shops in the area where the offended gay couple can go to get a cake.

    53. Re:WWJD? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      You touch on something I was just thinking - you replace "homosexual" with "Jew" and you get pretty close to the Nuremberg Laws of 1935.

      Not at all. Nuremberg Laws placed a large number of state-enforced prohibitions on what Jews can do. These laws do not do such a thing - they enable private discrimination of homosexuals, but they don't enforce it by the power of the state.

    54. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's just a plain Jane chocolate cake, then you're right. But some cakes are incredibly expressive works of art. Using the states monopoly on legitimate force to compel expression just feels wrong.

    55. Re:WWJD? by Forgefather · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This act is clearly targeted at homosexuals. An economic group that has far less influence than the much larger minority, based on percentage, of blacks in Montgomery. Any boycott by homosexuals could certainly be ignored by the businesses of Indiana as they would have negligible impact on the cake industry. Do you suggest that because homosexuals don't have the same economic clout as blacks did on the bus industry in Montgomery that they do not deserve the right to be served like a human being in a public business?

      I would also like to remind you of the LAWS that came about because of that bus boycott to preserve the rights and freedoms of those who engaged in civil disobedience to obtain them, as it is because of those laws that the benefits from the bus boycott still exist today. Namely the lack of "whites only" signs. I would rather not repeat those times with blacks replaced with "fags."

      --
      "There are lies, there are damn lies, and there are statistics"
    56. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep. Legal systems based on the Napoleonic code do just this. Works fine in Germany, France, etc.

    57. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The overwhelming majority of marriage systems have been for the sake of, as you say, two people coming together and raising children as a family. If we're going to accept the idea that the government can manipulate people's personal lives for the benefit of society by administrating a marriage system, then the primary benefit to society is the raising of kids - in which case heterosexual couples should be able to marry (unless they're infertile) and homosexual couples should not (unless they're going to adopt).

      Me, I much prefer the personal-liberty approach: let people do what they damn well please in their personal lives, and don't have government-administered marriage at all.

    58. Re:WWJD? by preflex · · Score: 1

      I believe It's discrimination to not hire/or fire based on sexual orientation. I do not believe that it is discrimination to refuse to take the money and provide services to someone who wants to you to make a cake for their same-sex wedding.

      I believe you don't know the definition of "discrimination".

      Discriminate:
      1. recognize a distinction; differentiate.
      2. make an unjust or prejudicial distinction in the treatment of different categories of people or things, especially on the grounds of race, sex, or age.

    59. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean the legislated into place what they felt was a just decision in response to a court case in another jurisdiction? Color me shocked. I'm with nondiscrimination in that a baker who sells cakes to the public should have to sell a generic cake to anyone who orders one (subject to inventory, etc.). On the other hand, for a commissioned work, which a custom wedding cake would seem to be, the baker/decorator should have the right of refusal on whatever grounds he/she sees fit. Even something as marginal as a photo cake should be able to be rejected if the owner finds the decor inappropriate.

    60. Re:WWJD? by linuxrocks123 · · Score: 1, Informative

      How in the hell are you supposed to determine that anyway? If you own a cake shop do you make all your customers sign an affidavit that they're straight? Force them to reveal the gender of their spouse?

      And that's why YOUR side of the argument loses. These laws won't result in "No gays allowed" signs, because, unlike with race, you can't just look at someone and tell if he's gay. All these laws will result in are things like some bakeries run by very religious individuals not make cakes for same-sex marriages. Which is perfectly fine, because other bakeries will, so no one gets hurt.

      Do you really think it's alright to force a deeply religious baker to make a cake for a gay wedding if the baker is devoutly religious and thinks he's helping the people to sin? Yes, the baker is wrong-headed and should change his mind, but people aren't perfect, attitudes take a long time, sometimes a generation or two, to change. You'd be causing the baker significant emotional distress. Probably, the baker would shut down and get a different job. And what you get in return for harming that baker is that gay couples wanting to marry don't have to type in "gay friendly bakery near Memphis, TN" once in their lives.

      This isn't like racial segregation. There are superficial similarities, but this isn't going to end with gay-only schools and gay-only hospitals and gay-only restaurants. Such a system would be impossible to enforce, and very few people really would want to do that anyway: gays have already been tolerated in Western society for a very long time, since before slavery was eliminated even.

      This isn't about hate. It's about religious freedom. You just think the people who will exercising their religious freedom are stupid and wrong, so you don't want them to be able to exercise it. They are wrong, and likely stupid for some value of stupid. So are the people exercising their freedom of speech to deny the Holocaust. But you don't lose your freedom of speech for being stupid and wrong, and you don't lose your freedom of religion, either.

      --
      vi ~/.emacs # I'm probably going to Hell for this.
    61. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you think employment is? Not a contract to provide money for services tendered?

      And what good is "don't discriminate on hiring" if gays can earn all the money they want but not buy anything with it?

    62. Re:WWJD? by catchblue22 · · Score: 1

      Couldn't that be said by BOTH sides of this issue? Wouldn't it be injustice to force a private citizen to enter a private business contract/engagement with another private citizen against their will and against their beliefs?

      NO! In a democratic society, we should NEVER tolerate intolerance.

      --
      This and no other is the root from which a tyrant springs; when first he appears as a protector - Plato (423 to 327 BC)
    63. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd think the two brides or two grooms as the cake topper would be the give away. Wedding cakes are often heavily customized and so you are effectively forcing an artist to accept a commission for a work he/she does not want to produce. If someone walks in and orders a 3 or 5 layer plane cake or similar, no baker is going to ask, (well, at least if you are not dressed for the gay pride parade). In general, if I was gay, I would not want to patronize a bakery of someone who objected to my marriage anyway.

    64. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, the only way to get the state out of marriage is to go pure civil union route and ignore whatever religious or other ceremony anyone feels fit to add on their own time.

      Sounds great to me. Otherwise, if we simply extend marriage to homosexual couples today, we're going to have to go through the same damn thing to allow polygamous marriages in twenty years, and for incestuous marriages in another twenty. Far better to just abolish the concept of government-sanctioned marriage in the first place.

    65. Re:WWJD? by erapert · · Score: 1

      1 Corinthians 6:7 (NIV)

      7 The very fact that you have lawsuits among you means you have been completely defeated already. Why not rather be wronged? Why not rather be cheated?
      8 Instead, you yourselves cheat and do wrong, and you do this to your brothers and sisters.
      9 Or do you not know that wrongdoers will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: Neither the sexually immoral nor idolaters nor adulterers nor men who have sex with men
      10 nor thieves nor the greedy nor drunkards nor slanderers nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom of God.
      11And that is what some of you were. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God.

    66. Re:WWJD? by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      When you're in business you're no longer acting in your capacity as a private person.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    67. Re:WWJD? by vux984 · · Score: 1

      Not the person you are responding to. And a I agree wholeheartedly with your post. But the situation is a little more nuanced than that.

      Lets say a restaurant hangs a sign "No gays allowed". I think that's discrimination that should be illegal.

      But lets say it were a band. It would think it absurd for the band to try to deny sales of its records to gay people. But suppose a gay-pride parade wants them to play the event. Should they be legally obligated to accept the booking and play the event if they don't want to if their schedule allows it? That strikes me as quite wrong.

      Similiarly a bakery with a sign next to the counter that says "No gays allowed" and refuses to sell a gay person a cookie or muffin would be absurd, and should be illegal.

      But if a gay couple approaches the bakery owner and says we want you to provide a cake as the centerpiece for the ritual cutting of the wedding cake tradition ... and please customize it for this event just-so. Should they be legally obligated to do that too? Its no longer just a cake picked up out of the window; its a specific cake for a specific event, made to order for that event.

      There seems to me to be a grey line between the band example, which I think is entirely acceptable. And the restaurant example which I think is entirely unacceptable.

      The bakery wedding cake scenario is between them, and I really can't decide if I think they should be obligated to provide their service or not. I'm leaning towards not, to be completely honest.

      Because if we do compel them to provide a cake for that... should they be obligated to provide a custom cake for a Ted Cruz's or Hillary Clinton campaign event? Should they be obligated to provide a custom cake for a KKK event? Should they be LEGALLY obligated to provide a custom cake for a religious event? Perhaps a big-tent-revival-festival-megachurch that they disagree with ... are they legally obligated to pvovide custom made cakes just for that event.

      (And if the Satanist's or Atheist's come knocking next week do they have to provide custom or "Long live Satan" or "Fairtytale Jesus" cakes? Surely one can say no?)

    68. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Marriage is a religious ceremony? Really now.. Well I'm an atheist with zero kids, happily married for 20 years. Now what? Your religion has something to say about my marriage since when?

    69. Re:WWJD? by werepants · · Score: 1

      I generally agree that this is repellent, but it's not hard to see where a legitimate problem might arise - many pastors charge a small fee for officiating weddings - are they now obligated to officiate weddings for same-sex couples, which they believe is a direct affront to their religion's principles?

      The thing is, I think that those religious principles are entirely wrong, but I think a pastor should not be legally bound to officiate at a wedding he does not approve of. This legislation isn't the answer, but the opportunity for a conflict like this is real.

    70. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And "if you think gay marriage allows a couple to raise their children, then you have a very poor grasp of reproductive biology."

    71. Re:WWJD? by Livius · · Score: 1

      If you think marriage is a religious ceremony, then you have a very poor grasp of human history.

      It's quite valid in terms of history up until the last few decades.

      However, it is completely, horrendously wrong in terms of contemporary family law in most places.

    72. Re:WWJD? by SillyHamster · · Score: 1

      No, you don't, which is why that side of the argument loses. Nobody is saying you have to celebrate same-sex marriage, just that the sexual preferences of the people involved in a business transactions shouldn't matter. How in the hell are you supposed to determine that anyway? If you own a cake shop do you make all your customers sign an affidavit that they're straight? Force them to reveal the gender of their spouse?

      Does a business owner have Freedom of Speech?

      Say a black family owns a cake store, and some KKK members wants them to bake a cake with various KKK anti-black slogans. The KKK has the Right to their Freedom of Speech to make such a cake.

      Does the black family have a right to decide not to do business with the KKK? Or do you think the government should step in and force them to bake the cake with the threat of losing their business and their livelihoods?

    73. Re:WWJD? by TwoEyedJack · · Score: 1

      It was not about building on any lands. It was about smoking peyote. OK for some, not for others, based on skin color.

    74. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh nice, we'll divorce easily by claiming atheism.

    75. Re:WWJD? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      No Jesus did not get involved with politics. But he has associated with known sinners even though it created a scandal amongst the religious leaders of the day. The thing is that the religious leaders can not separate the difference between accepting someone as a person and accepting the sins of those persons, and this is exacerbated in the the dividing line between religious belief and political belief is being blurred by many of these leaders.

    76. Re:WWJD? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      There are a few distinct differences between that older bills and this new one, even though the title is somewhat similar.

      First, the law applies to for-profit businesses. And religious beliefs can be used as a defense in any private lawsuit. This clause was added because a similar New Mexico law lost a legal challenge for those reasons. The federal law does not have this clause. The original federal law and most of the state laws that copied it, are based upon keeping the government from interfering with expression of religious views (like muslim inmates being allowed to keep beards).

      NExt, the law applies to protections of practices whether or not compelled by a system of religious belief. That is, very fringe practices not justified by the religion are under the protection here. So even if your church has no divinely inspired scriptures telling you to not sell products to gay people, you can still claim that you are protected by this law. Thus the Church of Cannabis has opened in Indiana, with the use of cannabis being a part of their beliefs, using this law as their basis to exist legally.

      The federal law at the time was a relatively benign law, meant to protect things like feeding the homeless in parks. Since then the law has been interpreted differently by several courts and many of the people originally supporting the law in congress have backed away from it. Having a similar title does not make two laws the same thing.

    77. Re:WWJD? by Darinbob · · Score: 0

      And because the democrats supported this push for equal rights, the intolerant segments of the south responded by flipping in very short time over to the republicans. A few could not even bear this indignity and instead created a third segregationist party, the Dixiecrats, but in short order they became republican too. Soon the relative newcomers controlled the party, which previously was a very pro-business and pro-industry party with little in common with southern interests. This is very much analogous to the magnetic poles flipping.

      I find it absolutely ironic that today they love to call themselves the "Party of Lincoln" when for a century the south hated the republicans with a passion. Their famed leaders like Lincoln or Eisenhower have nothing in common with the current party. Even Reagan would be unlikely to be elected today because he'd be seen as too liberal, too pro-tax, and he had too many friends who were democrats. Nixon though they like to distance themselves from, but he's the man who caused the poles to flip with his southern strategy.

    78. Re:WWJD? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      It is political though, since it's all about encouraging the voters.

    79. Re:WWJD? by lister+king+of+smeg · · Score: 1

      That is exactly th solution i would like to see.

      Gay/straight/trans/whatever all get a civil union where 2 people cotractually agree to act as a single legal unit form most purposes.
      Marriage defined as a religious union between X number of people with no legal recognition, so gay straight trans whatever can get it by simply finding a religious group that accepts them as a valid union between them and their deity/being/force/purpose/pantheon of choice.

      --
      ---Saying gnome 3 is better than windows 8 not so much a compliment as it is damning with light praise.
    80. Re:WWJD? by Last+Warrior · · Score: 1

      This is basically what the law says. you can create a private club with private members and you can be as discriminatory or exclusive as you want.

      If you have a business that serves the public then it must serve the public at large. this means a business that is registered to serve the public cannot discriminate against anyone in the public.

      you want to be an asshole and just have a club with your friends that have the same set of panties twisted in the same style of knot in your pants. Have at it.
      We can all point at you and laugh when we see you struggling to walk down the street with your mental burdens.

        If you are running a company in the public square that serves the public, then you need to grow up and treat every single individual equally.

    81. Re:WWJD? by mrprogrammerman · · Score: 1

      Actually Jesus did address homosexual marriage directly. He quoted from Genesis at Matt. 19:4-6 about God putting the man and female together and saying the two should become one flesh. He followed the Law (Matt 5:17-18) and the Law clearly stated that homosexuality was a sin (Lev 18:22). Now homosexual marriage as a political issue, Jesus would have stayed out of that and wanted the same for his followers (John 17:16, 18:36).

    82. Re:WWJD? by Last+Warrior · · Score: 1

      Sure you're celebrating it. You're making a cake to honor it, you're having your bed n' breakfast host it, you're taking pictures to commemorate it (to name a few of the most popular examples that have resulted in lawsuits).

      Sure, someone is celebrating. But the baker isn't celebrating anything the wedding. they are only celebrating the money the get for doing the job. The baker is celebrating as much as mcdonalds celebrates that they helped me to celebrate my morning poop after feeding me breakfast.

    83. Re:WWJD? by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      By your definition a fact can be literally anything and of any relative value. i.e. a pointless distinction unless we're talking about a comparison to reality

      A fact is just a statement of correctness, nothing more, and it can be a fact only in those certain contexts.
      The following statement is factual: "In the KJV book of John, Nicodemus asks Jesus what being born into the Kingdom of God means." The following is not a factual statement: "Nicodemus asks Jesus what being born into the Kingdom of God means."

    84. Re:WWJD? by Last+Warrior · · Score: 1

      They are providing labor to create something for someone elses celebration.
      What is the celebration was for a divorce?
      Or what if it was for the celebration of someones successful sex change operation?

      Only one of these things is specifically mentioned in the bible and it is definitely a no-no in terms of those religions that we all know we are referring to here.
      Yet for the idiots who hold these views, its the one cake in this list that they would not think twice before making.

    85. Re:WWJD? by Last+Warrior · · Score: 1

      Public business. serves the public.
      No exceptions. If you want to make cakes only for your friends, then you can have a private club with membership fees.

      YOU CAN NOT HAVE A BUSINESS THAT SERVES THE PUBLIC AND DISCRIMINATE AGAINST MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC!

    86. Re:WWJD? by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      OP may have been thinking of Brian, not Jesus.

      There's certainly precedent for that happening.

    87. Re:WWJD? by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      NO! In a democratic society, we should NEVER tolerate intolerance.

      So, we should be intolerant of intolerance?

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    88. Re:WWJD? by Last+Warrior · · Score: 1

      You think KKK members would purposely choose to go to a bakery owned by a group they hate and ask them to make a cake depicting that hate?
      I think your scenarios is pretty ridiculous.

      Once again though. a business that serves the public must serve the public.
      The only exception i can think of here might have to do with being asked to create something that depicts something illegal. an illegal act or an illegal organization.

    89. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, if a bakery owner (or florist, or printer, or restaurateur, or haberdasher, or tux rental shop, or bar owner, or limo rental company, or photography shop, or dj etc etc etc) refuses to make money off a gay or lesbian couple who wish to avail themselves of their services, what are the odds that they would employ someone they knew to be gay or lesbian?

      In addition, nowhere in the bible (and I have read it from cover to cover several times) does it say that providing cake or flowers to gay customers is prohibited. If it is, then providing the same services to adulterers (anyone on their second or greater marriage), atheists, infidels, or any manner of other sinners would be equally prohibited, as would be working or operating a business on the Sabbath. If one were a true conscientious objector to doing business with the unclean and unworthy, one would not be in business for long.

      So let's not pretend that this is anything other than what it is. Some people are prejudiced against gays and lesbians and want cover for discriminating against them. The law of the land says they can't, it's illegal, so they are hiding behind a narrowly construed, and very flimsy, argument that forcing them to do business with homos infringes upon their right to free exercise of religion. Never mind that nothing in their religion actually prohibits them from doing business with gays or lesbians (just not marrying or having sex with one) and doing business with gays and lesbians in no way infringes upon their ability to worship as they choose.

    90. Re:WWJD? by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Trust me -- the small business bakery market will weed out those who want to miss great business opportunities and/or sales just because they don't want both figures on a cake wearing pants.

      That depends on how much of peer pressure/boycott there is from your local church congregation and extended to their members to not shop at "gay friendly" stores and buy at stores that refuse gays service. From what I've understood the most successful such peer pressure in the US has been to make mainstream outlets "family friendly". Despite there obviously being a big market for adult material, they've managed to force adult stores out of malls, keep mainstream cinemas showing adult-only movies, video game stores from selling adult only-titles and so on simply by refusing to shop in any business that would touch it with a ten foot pole. You don't think the same can happen to a cake shop? I do.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    91. Re:WWJD? by fightinfilipino · · Score: 2

      I may be a bigot in your mind, but you are illiterate in mine.

      Quote from my post above that is relevant:

      Civil union is the state sponsored joining, and should be the proper avenue for the state to allow something that religion indicates is wrong. If someone feels that a homosexual couple should share in the benefits a heterosexual relationship enjoys, they should move for equal benefits for the two, not move to change the definition of marriage.

      except you keep insisting religion is the only institution allowed to define what marriage is, when marriage did not even start with religion to begin with. the claim that organized religions should be the only ones to define what marriage is is ludicrous.

    92. Re:WWJD? by dbrueck · · Score: 1

      Ok, so go back to the KKK example: you act as caterer for their event and someone snaps a picture of you there and starts making a fuss because you're supporting their cause. Would you try to explain yourself, or distance yourself from their event? Hopefully, yes. If someone you respected saw those photos would you hasten to explain the situation? Probably. If you tried to run for political office, would your opponent be able to use those photos against you? Again, yes.

      Pause and ask yourself why that is. It's because in all of those cases it's a reasonable assumption that your involvement in them denotes some degree of agreement if not outright endorsement of that cause. If you were to deny it, it would sound hollow and people would be skeptical.

      Another reasonable assumption is that if you really, truly objected to those things you'd step aside and choose not to participate. You would still respect their rights and not try to shut them down, you might even go out of your way to help them find some other caterer to handle the job. But since you so deeply object to what that organization represents, you can't in good conscience aid in their event. You're not looking to make some big deal out of it, you just would like to quietly and discretely step away and let someone else cater for their event.

      It seems reasonable that there should be some way to accommodate this type of gentle, conscientious objection. If market forces ultimately put this person out of business, so be it. It just doesn't strike me as completely wrong (or hate-driven as someone earlier asserted) for the caterer in this scenario to decline to participate. They aren't trying to shut the event down, they aren't trying to prevent other caterers from taking the business. Is it so wrong for them to have the freedom to choose to politely decline the job?

    93. Re:WWJD? by SillyHamster · · Score: 1

      You think KKK members would purposely choose to go to a bakery owned by a group they hate and ask them to make a cake depicting that hate? I think your scenarios is pretty ridiculous.

      But still worth answering. Because that's what the people refusing to bake cakes or take photos for gay couples think it is like.

      Better figure out just how far you are willing to coerce someone to do business in a hypothetical situation where no one is harmed, before you start doing it with real people, where harm can occur.

      Once again though. a business that serves the public must serve the public. The only exception i can think of here might have to do with being asked to create something that depicts something illegal. an illegal act or an illegal organization.

      So it follows that you think a black business should be forced to serve KKK customers if the KKK customers demand it.

      Which might include all sorts of legal activities: Catering for a white pride event, baking a cake with racist slogans, and printing and distributing event flyers.

      That might better serve the public good, but have the honesty to acknowledge the costs of it.

    94. Re:WWJD? by rockout · · Score: 1

      Any reason, like the color of someone's skin, or the fact that they're female, or that they're Jewish...... just throwing a few out there, to see where you draw the line.

      --
      I've learned that they're worthless, so I don't read AC comments anymore.
    95. Re:WWJD? by rockout · · Score: 1

      By not allowing the state to intervene when individuals or corporations actively discriminate against homosexuals, isn't the power of the state in this case being used for exactly that purpose?

      --
      I've learned that they're worthless, so I don't read AC comments anymore.
    96. Re:WWJD? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Obviously, the state not allowing itself to intervene is obviously not an exercise of the power of the state - it's an exercise in restraint of said power.

      The actual discriminatory power in this case comes from the individuals and corporations that discriminate - if there are none willing to do so, or if there are few enough and their scale is small, then it's all of no consequence. Even if said discrimination is pervasive, it is still limited to what private entities can legally do - so it's a very far cry from what government-powered discrimination can do (for example, it is not legal for corporations in the USA to summarily round up their customers and murder them in gas chambers; or to incarcerate them because they married a person of a different race).

    97. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except you already can't marry your brother or sister. Or your parent. Or someone who doesn't agree to marry you. Or someone who is already married to another person. Or someone who isn't old enough. Or other family in some places.

      Marriage is clearly defined to be prohibited for some couples and allowed for others. What makes those restrictions OK?

      Meanwhile, any individual can get married, with zero prohibitions, provided he or she chooses a valid partner.

      Why should we make a new exception for gay people? Because gay people are owed a favor? If not, then why? If we do grant this favor, what kindness can we expect in return?

    98. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      New A.C. to this conversation.

      I think there's a fundamental difference between providing a product (a custom cake) and providing a service (by being a photographer at the actual event).

      On the one hand, I assume the bakery can limit their cakes to weddings and such. And if worse comes to worst, charge them double if the groom/bride only comes in attached pairs. Double for the figures, not the for the cake. Other than that, I don't think there is any real issue of why a cake shouldn't be provided.

      Now, if a KKK member wanted a cake, it depends. Is it a wedding cake? Sure, fine. If it's not a wedding cake, but a cake for a special occasion? Does the bakery provide custom cakes for non-weddings (non-birthdays, etc.)? Is this going out of the way for the bakery to provide such a cake that doesn't fit any of their templates? Do they have a right to refuse service if it doesn't fit a wedding, birthday, etc. type template?

      About the photography issue, the photographer is going to be at the actual event. Whether it be a same-sex wedding, opposite sex wedding, or even a KKK rally. Although you can group all wedding, same-sex or not, into one type of service... weddings, the KKK rally can be grouped into any "rally". Providing a service, in person, at an actual event, is a bit different than providing a product someone is going to pick up from your store. What I'm wondering... will the courts rule in favor of the business if a photographer refuses to participate at events he or she doesn't wish to participate at? Unlike a cake, which can be made at any point, a photographer is going to have to be at a given place at a given time, in person, experiencing the event. While we can assume it's not cool to discriminate like that (sex-sex, interracial wedding, nudist wedding, etc.), I do question if we can use the courts to punish the photographer for refusing in these specific instances.

      As for florists, same thing. Make the flowers ready to be picked up at the store, fine. Drop them off at the wedding, that's a delivery service and is fine. But to be present at the event, well, can't think of a reason for that to be so, but you get where I'm going here. That is, when it comes to participating at the event.

      I am not saying that refusing is the right thing to do. But I question where the line is drawn in terms of what the government can do in order to force businesses to provide products/services.

      Too long, didn't read: Maybe the line is where the business must provide the product, but cannot be forced to participate at the actual event.

    99. Re:WWJD? by grcumb · · Score: 1

      NO! In a democratic society, we should NEVER tolerate intolerance.

      So, we should be intolerant of intolerance?

      Of course not! That would be utterly intolerable!!

      --
      Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
    100. Re:WWJD? by linuxrocks123 · · Score: 1

      YES YOU CAN.

      What you can't do is discriminate against a constitutionally or federally protected class. That's a list of things including race but not including sexual orientation.

      Pediatricians can, and have, refused to see the children of gay couples. That's disgusting, but not illegal.

      You want it to be illegal? That's fine. Get a state or federal law passed adding gayitude to the list of things businesses can't discriminate against. Start by not shouting misinformation on the Internet. Because while you're doing that, your opponents have organized in dozens of states and are passing laws opposite to what you want.

      But if you want to stay on the Internet, why don't you tell me why you think my earlier analysis about the impact of these laws you don't like is wrong, assuming you think I'm wrong? Learning to make a coherent argument will help you in your political campaign later.

      --
      vi ~/.emacs # I'm probably going to Hell for this.
    101. Re:WWJD? by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      The fuck I'm not.

      I own a business. I am a business man. I decide who my potential customers are, and who I don't accept as customers. No one can make that choice for me.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    102. Re:WWJD? by Sabriel · · Score: 1

      A group of people walk into a cake shop. One is Jewish. One is Homosexual. One is Colored. One is You.

      The United States Declaration of Independence: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."

      The First Amendment to the United States Constitution: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

      Per the Declaration and the Constitution, these people are Equal before the Law.

      If making a cake is an activity performed as part of a publicly-recognized business conducted under the protection of the laws of the land, then the owner must accept all the laws of the land, not just the ones that can be used to serve their selfish interests and fears.

      Some say it should be "left up to the business owner". I say that's passive-aggressive douche-baggery by hypocrites who can't admit to their own bigotry.

      And if you don't like it, the existence of the First Amendment means that you can speak, assemble and petition for abolishing the First Amendment. I hope you can appreciate the irony.

    103. Re:WWJD? by Gryle · · Score: 1

      The conflict is already here.

      In 2014 a lawsuit was brought a couple who rents their private property to host weddings as side income. A lesbian couple tried to rent the property for the day for their wedding.. Prior to the contract being finalized, the property owners discovered their would-be clients were were lesbians (presumably they had only talked with one partner up to that point). The property owners declined to host the wedding on religious grounds but said they were willing to let the couple use the farm for a reception if they so wished since a reception was non-religious in nature. The lesbian couple sued, won, and the property owners were fined 10-grand and forced to pay the couple $3000 ($1500 to each partner).

      In 2013 the New Mexico Supreme Court ruled a photographer could not decline to photograph a gay marriage ceremony, as declining the work solely on the basis of the sexual orientation of the couple was a violation of discrimination law.

      One the one hand I believe firmly that people should not be forced to give up their religious or moral beliefs just because they happen to own or run a business. On the other hand I believe public business must serve all equally. I see no good resolution to this.

      --
      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not entirely sure about the universe - Einstein
    104. Re:WWJD? by Sabriel · · Score: 1

      "force a private individual"

      What private individual?

      When you're at home, you're a private individual. When you're at work, you're a business representative. If you start a business, and you put up a sign out the front that says "Jhon's Cake Shop", and the shop pays its dues as "Jhon's Cake Shop", and the bank account is in the name of "Jhon's Cake Shop", then when some random stranger walks in to buy a cake, they're not asking you to make them a cake, they're asking "Jhon's Cake Shop" to make them a cake.

      You don't get to eat your cake and keep it too.

    105. Re:WWJD? by dbrueck · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Thanks, that brings up some really interesting questions and points.

      FWIW my whole point in jumping into the discussion was in reaction to someone's comment that this was driven by hate. I really don't think that's the case, for the most part. Also, a lot of people here are quick to paint the "other" side's arguments as outlandish, backward, and bigoted. Again, I don't think that's the case.

      Anyone who is truly interested in coming up with a solution should be able to see at least some merit in the concerns of both sides. Even if we ultimately decide in favor of LGBT and against those with religious objections, we should be able to see that the religious viewpoint has some valid points. I can understand where both sides are coming from, at least to a degree, and that's why there's not a trivial, obvious, winner-takes-all solution.

      The idea of not requiring someone to participate in the actual event is an intriguing possibility. That would still leave some cases that allow for apparent discrimination, but it also seems to address a lot of the "guilt by association" type of concerns - maybe it could work. It reminds me of a local story here - the police department was invited to participate in the Gay Pride parade. In addition to providing security for the event, they were also in the parade itself - you know, riding around on the motorcycles in some choreographed formation like they often do in parades.

      One of the officers felt that being in the parade as a performer was taking it too far, so he asked around to see if someone would swap assignments with him. He was open to taking an assignment to provide security or in a traffic assignment or whatever (which he had also done at a prior year's Gay Pride parade), he just didn't feel right about being a performer in the parade. Anyway, just for asking to see if anyone would swap assignments with him, he was suspended and an Internal Affairs investigation was launched and the department issued a statement that an officer was put on leave for refusing his Gay Pride assignment. The officer ultimately resigned before the investigation completed, but it always rubbed me the wrong way that the reaction was so extreme. He wasn't trying to shut down the event, he offered to participate in a more typical police officer capacity, but because he didn't feel good about being an actual performer it basically derailed his career. There has to be a more balanced and tolerant want to deal with that type of scenario.

    106. Re:WWJD? by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      Then please put up a sign to let the public know. You'll see how many non-LGBT citizens will consider you a bigot and hater.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    107. Re:WWJD? by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      Where did I say I don't have gay customers?

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    108. Re:WWJD? by Jeremi · · Score: 1

      I have a serious problem with gay marriage, as marriage is a religious ceremony, so the state should stay out of it.

      Sounds like you actually have a problem with state-sponsored marriage (gay or straight), but you're only willing to apply your logic to gay marriage.

      Civil union is the state sponsored joining, and should be the proper avenue for the state to allow something that religion indicates is wrong.

      Which religion are you referring to? There are plenty of religions that approve of gay marriage, and there are also plenty of religions that think various straight marriages (e.g. second marriages, or inter-racial or inter-religious marriages) are wrong. It's not clear why any of that is relevant to what the state should or shouldn't do, given that (in the USA anyway), church and state are meant to be kept separate from each other.

      However, it has to be understood that most of the benefits of marriage have to do with holding a family together for the benefit of the children, which a homosexual marriage may have some issues in creating.

      It's actually quite easy for a homosexual marriage to have children. Gays of either gender can adopt, and gay women can get pregnant and give birth. And if you want to play the "it's all about the children" card, you then have to explain why infertile/childless straight couples should be allowed to enjoy the benefits of marriage.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    109. Re:WWJD? by Jeremi · · Score: 1

      I own a business. I am a business man. I decide who my potential customers are, and who I don't accept as customers. No one can make that choice for me.

      That's some good bluster, but if you e.g. post "Whites Only" signs on your doors, you'll find yourself in court in very short order. There you'll find out that your freedom to accept or reject customers is in fact circumscribed by anti-discrimination laws.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    110. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A.C of http://politics.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=7174389&cid=49376359 here.

      Was the police dept. obligated to participate in the parade? I assume someone in the dept. made the decision. If they were to always be obligated to provide performers, imagine, if you will, if the KKK were to hold a parade, something protected by the 1st Amendment. Also imagine if it were a black cop who refused to be a performed in the parade.

      I don't know what kind of contract there was between the officers and the dept. There must be something there as to what their duties are.

      We could turn it around. Imagine a cop who identifies as homosexual. Now imagine there happens to be a Straight Pride parade. Imagine the same scenario with the cop not wanting to be a performer due to not feeling comfortable.

      I don't think there necessarily needs to be any legislation. I'd think the courts would handle it the best. That is, a bakery discriminating against a same-sex couple for wanting to purchase a product. Versus if it's okay for a photographer to refuse certain assignments in which he or she feels uncomfortable with. Assignments that involve being at the event. I think the latter event would come out as okay, perhaps, in court.

      This issue is very polarized. I really, really hope someone brings up the KKK issue on national news.

    111. Re:WWJD? by Barsteward · · Score: 2

      "I don't believe there ever was a jesus, but some of the ideas attributed to hims are quite stellar." - i think you'll find most of the ideas attributed to him were in the public domain long before he was on the scene, its the usual spin by his followers to claim other peoples good ideas to try and drown out the crap hateful ideas put forward by his dad i.e. the bigoted ones these politicians are trying to get in by the back door.

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    112. Re:WWJD? by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      First off, I don't have a storefront. I work out of my home. Many of my customers also do. That does make a difference.

      Second, I am not racist, so would not limit my customers based on their race or skin color. I have clients of many races. I can't say specifically, because quite honestly I don't look at them that way. On a personal note, my wife is not white, my daughter is only half white, and before I met my wife I had dated women of many ethnic backgrounds, including black and American Indian. So kindly put that racist torch back in its bucket, you won't be needing it tonight.

      Third, one of my new clients this month was a nice old man and his partner. They are gay. I don't care, since their personal life isn't my business. Fixing their computer is my business.

      This is all academic, since I don't refuse service to anyone based on whatever group they are in. The last time I refused service was to an old white European guy that was abusive. I told him to never call me again, and the final service call I made would not be billed. No bluster was involved.

      Speaking of bluster, that's what I think you guys sound like.

      "Oh, you better watch out. We'll come after you for not allowing us to pay you money to put your kids through college. We'll insist you let us help you pay your rent, because we need the acceptance of someone who doesn't like us. We'll force you to like us by trying to ruin your business, unless you take this money from our children's college fund."

      Blustery indeed.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    113. Re:WWJD? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Oh I see now - you're not very bright. No one is claiming you don't. They are claiming that your notion that you decide with whom to do business is preposterous, as is clearly demonstrated by putting a "Whites Only" sign on your door and seeing how long your awesome business lasts.

    114. Re:WWJD? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      So it boils down to "this law stops dicks from being dicks". Oh the humanity! The people getting married are celebrating their marriage, and the people making the cakes are not - they are engaged in a business transaction with members of the public. Fuck 'em. This is the 21st century, and they are relics from a long-gone age.

    115. Re:WWJD? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Are you really comparing gay folks with the klan, or is your argument so shoddy that you need to in order to sound like you have a point?

    116. Re:WWJD? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      You clearly do have issue with either homosexuals or logic... If the state should stay out of marriage, then there should be no state-recognised marriage. Civil unions for everyone, and if they want a religious aspect, they can go to a church. Your last sentence is pretty tough on those heterosexuals who can't reproduce for whatever reason, and has absolutely nothing to do with this discussion.

    117. Re:WWJD? by tehcyder · · Score: 2

      Personally I can see merit in both sides and I bet if you give each argument and fair chance you would too. And that's why the issue is such a difficult one. It's only through setting up absurd strawman arguments that you can really dismiss the whole debate.

      Utter bullshit. Not every question is finely balanced between two equally plausible alternatives.

      This comes down to whether you (a) believe religious freedom should be absolute and trump any other consideration, and (b) believe that any government interference whatsoever in your life is wrong. These two extreme views are the only justificaiton for allowing businesses to discriminate against gays.

      You are free to believe both of these things, in the same way that you are free to believe in neo-nazism or paedophilia: you should expect a lot of people to vehemently disagree with you.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    118. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Egads, you librul tolerasts, use logik pl0x.

      It's my cake shop, I can decide not to sell cakes based on something completely arbitrary, say, the way said person walks. Y'know why? Cause it's MY. FUCKING. SHOP.

      It isn't government's shop, nor some company's shop. It's MINE. Which means I can do whatever I like with the cakes, as long as it doesn't include an unwelcome customer used as parts for wedding cake.

      Don't like it? Hell, man, I'm sure there are other cake shops nearby, off you go. Rotten business practice? Yeah, maybe, but it's still my shop, and, as such, my choice.

      To decide not to sell homosexuals cakes is your right, you are free not to like them, you are free to ignore them, cause it's his/hers freedom to fuck with whom he/she wants, and it's your freedom to ignore/be disgusted/join in/what-have-you. As long as you don't go all 'clean-the-society' on 'em...

      This is freedom, this is what YOU and your liberast fellows claim to strive for. Except you really don't. Cause freedom means there will be folks who will not play by your very special rules in your very special kingdom called The Hugbox. My oh my, what a disaster, you fucking nazi.

      Also I do seem to be using word 'cake' a lot. I want some now, minus politicking bullshit please.

    119. Re:WWJD? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I have a serious problem with gay marriage, as marriage is a religious ceremony, so the state should stay out of it.

      Only if you live in some sort of theocracy.

      Here in the UK (for instance), you can marry without setting foot in a church or saying the word god. Marriage is a state approved contract giving specific legal rights, which is why gay people also need to be able to marry.

      Because this is so obviously the case, non-religious people have a hard time believing that opponents of gay marriage are anything other than backdoor homophobes.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    120. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure about your statement that homosexuals have less clout than blacks in Montgomery did. This whole bill started because a bakery in downtown Indianapolis refused to make a cake for a gay wedding (gay marriage wasn't legal at the time, so I guess it was more of a reception). The bakery in question was in a very pro-gay neighborhood, down the street from a gay bar, matter of fact.

      When news about the discrimination hit, a gay-friendly bakery opened up a few doors down, and everybody in the area protested the new shop. They eventually went bankrupt, and closed up shop. I'm no fan of this bill, and I think it won't last long in court, but the intent behind the bill is misguided, at least in Indianapolis. Discrimination against the LGBT community will probably be easier in the more rural areas of Indiana.

    121. Re:WWJD? by rockout · · Score: 1

      Obviously, the state not allowing itself to intervene is obviously not an exercise of the power of the state - it's an exercise in restraint of said power.

      Obviously, that's just semantics - one could just as easily frame it as "the state is using it's power to make it more difficult for individuals to seek redress against corporations that discriminate against them." No matter how you look at it, the state is using its power to make discrimination easier.

      The actual discriminatory power in this case comes from the individuals and corporations that discriminate - if there are none willing to do so, or if there are few enough and their scale is small, then it's all of no consequence. Even if said discrimination is pervasive, it is still limited to what private entities can legally do - so it's a very far cry from what government-powered discrimination can do (for example, it is not legal for corporations in the USA to summarily round up their customers and murder them in gas chambers; or to incarcerate them because they married a person of a different race).

      So what? So because the corporations can't round up people and execute them, that makes this law okay? Your argument boils down to "well, at least Indiana isn't making it legal for corporations to start KILLING gay people, so we should be happy that they're only making it easier to discriminate against gay people."

      --
      I've learned that they're worthless, so I don't read AC comments anymore.
    122. Re:WWJD? by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      Where did I say I don't have gay customers?

      I never said you don't. Just put up a sign discriminating against blacks, mexicans, asians, whatever, and watch how many LGBT citizens will consider you a bigot and a hater. We support the rights of other minorities who are discriminated against.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    123. Re:WWJD? by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      I said that I choose my customers. BarbaraHudson replied with

      Then please put up a sign to let the public know. You'll see how many non-LGBT citizens will consider you a bigot and hater.

      The implication of that last sentence is that I don't allow gay people to be my customers, and that straight people will punish me for that position. So, yes, I'm bright enough to know when some is claiming something about me that isn't true.

      As for the rest, read my response to Jeremi below.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    124. Re:WWJD? by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you did. At least acknowledge you arguments, and admit if they missed the mark.

      Here you are saying that gays will punish my business if I discriminate against non-gay racial groups. So when you said that non-gays will punish my business for a supposed hateful stance, you were saying that would be in response to an anti-gay policy.

      Also, this is in a thread/story about discriminating against gays. You were obviously keeping in line with the thread topic, and not referring to killing baby seals for their fur.

      I have no problem with customers of any particular group. I have friends and family in all of them. I have a problem with people who feel they are owed my services, whether I agree to it or not.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    125. Re:WWJD? by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

      Jesus, the guy who would always do what you would do.

      Despite an oppressive Roman occupation, Jesus never had much to say about the Romans. He outmaneuvered questions designed to embroil him in the local politics. He refused efforts to crown him as king. He refused to defend himself when he stood accused before them.

      If I may be so bold as to guess, I would say no, Jesus would not vocally oppose this bill. Nor would he endorse it. Jesus did not see government as a means to achieve his objectives. He taught in the synagogues. He clashed with religious leaders. He went to the oppressed and ministered to them directly. He would not be interested in your politics (or mine). But he would be strongly interested in affecting the compassion, selflessness, humility, and general godliness of the people involved.

      Jesus would do none of things because he is and always will be a personification of the Sun. He was not a person that existed and had done anything or held any opinions.

      --
      Wanna buy a shirt?
      https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
    126. Re:WWJD? by dbrueck · · Score: 1

      No, both (a) and (b) are incorrect and a mischaracterization of what I've said so far - you're not even arguing against what I said but have instead made up extreme positions and then dismissed them.

      I'm the one talking about finding some middle ground where there is a compromise on both sides, while you are the one advocating an extremist view where one side has to completely lose so the other can win. Your way is the antithesis of what is required to make a functional society. The only peaceful outcome is going to come from both sides giving up some ground.

    127. Re:WWJD? by dbrueck · · Score: 0

      No, what the law probably does is unfairly punish people who would otherwise let bygones be bygones to the point of them rising up and pushing back.

      I just love how tolerance is all the rage and the freedom of choice is paramount - as long as it's tolerance in favor of LGBT and it's the freedom to choose to live an LGBT lifestyle. The moment someone just wants to be left alone and quietly and peacefully do their thing, they are labeled bigots and we call on the government to swoop in and stop them.

    128. Re:WWJD? by dbrueck · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I'm hoping this one was just an outlier and not a trend. I mean, people swap shifts all the time for various reasons, so it seems ominous that he should be suspended for asking around if someone would trade with him, especially since he express a willingness to work the event in some other capacity. The reaction just seems way too extreme.

    129. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did the Internal Affairs investigation ever make a decision, or by resigning did that put a halt to it?

      When I was thinking of a photographer, I was thinking more of an independent contractor-type situation. I think it becomes muddy when we deal with businesses refusing. And if a business accepts, an employee is being employed to do a job, so I don't think they can refuse unless they want to be fired. So I think what I said falls apart if we speak of photography businesses which have employees.

      Well, hmm. Maybe not. I think the question is...is whether the government can compel any business to participate in religious ceremonies. I would love to see something like this make it to SCOTUS, out of intellectual curiosity.

    130. Re:WWJD? by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      No more than you did :-) Read exactly what I wrote.

      Then please put up a sign to let the public know. You'll see how many non-LGBT citizens will consider you a bigot and hater.

      in response to this bs argument:

      I own a business. I am a business man. I decide who my potential customers are, and who I don't accept as customers. No one can make that choice for me.

      When you are offering your services to the public, it's no longer a private affair. Examples - you need to charge sales and other taxes, conform to zoning bylaws, etc., to run the business. You do not get to decide if you want to conform with the rules or not.

      Nobody is saying that you "owe" them your services that's a complete strawman argument. They have to pay for it, same as everyone else. The point being, that when you offer your services to the public, you can't pick and choose who can and cannot buy them on an arbitrary basis that has nothing to do with safety or the larger public interest. If it's legal to sell to them, you better sell to them.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    131. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a serious problem with gay marriage, as marriage is a religious ceremony, so the state should stay out of it.

      Eh? Marriage is a legal construct. Religion has nothing to do with it.

    132. Re:WWJD? by fgouget · · Score: 1

      I do not believe that it is discrimination to refuse to take the money and provide services to someone who wants to you to make a cake for their same-sex wedding.

      What about refusing to sell a bag of bagels to a customer on the basis he's gay? My understanding of the law is that it would legalize that. Can you still claim that would not be discrimination?

    133. Re:WWJD? by fgouget · · Score: 1

      On the other side, it seems like you have the government forcing people not just to tolerate - but to actively celebrate - something that is deeply abhorrent to them.

      How is being forbidden from refusing to sell a bag of bagels to anyone who's polite and pays being forced to actively celebrate same-sex marriage?

    134. Re:WWJD? by dbrueck · · Score: 1

      The scenario with a bag of bagels isn't one of the ones causing an issue, so as an example it doesn't apply. That type of transaction is fine - that the buyer is gay or whatever is irrelevant, it has no bearing on the transaction, it has no reason to come up. It'd be quite a stretch to say that by selling them some bagels you are endorsing them in any way.

      The issue is with scenarios when the sexual orientation *is* relevant in the transaction and where participating in it can be interpreted as endorsement. Should someone be able to politely decline to participate in that transaction? It seems reasonable to allow it, that's all. What if it's a KKK rally? Or a Nazi rally? It could be any number of things that one person finds objectionable and another doesn't. Is the concept of civil liberties so completely eroded that we balk at people being free to choose whether or not they participate in such a thing?

      So a more relevant example would be the wedding photographer. This isn't someone who is trying to shut down the gay wedding, they are not trying to make a spectacle of things. They would simply prefer to not participate and reserve the right to let someone else have that business.

      It seems wildly unconstitutional and not a little ominous for the government to swoop in and *force* that photographer to be a part of it. If anyone's rights are being infringed in that situation, the photographer has at *least* as much claim on infringed rights as the people getting married.

      Obviously, people can disagree with the photographer and boycott his services if they want and let market forces either keep him in or put him out of business. That's fine - he's not asking for any special treatment under the law, so if he goes out of business, so be it. That we're even talking about it being ok for the government to force him to enter into transactions seems ludicrous.

    135. Re:WWJD? by fgouget · · Score: 1

      But what if my chuch/religion says that gay marriage is okay? Shouldn't the government stay out of it?

      The problem is the government is outsourcing of who can get special tax status and other benefits to religions. A religious wedding should have no legal consequence whatsoever. Only the government should decide who enters a partnership with whom. Whether you call that partnership "marriage" or something else like "civil union" to appease the religious types is of little importance.

      Note that it would be fine to have the religious organisations handle your civil union paperwork to make things as transparent as possible, as long as you can file the exact same parperwork directly with the government, and as long as that paperwork is the only thing recognized by the government. But having the law recognize the religious notion of marriage and civil unions separately introduces unneeded complexity and opportunities for inconsistencies.

    136. Re:WWJD? by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      That is the same as I was saying stated another way. The state shouldn't tell any church the definition of marriage. The state should hand over the marriage certificate, the person presiding (and witnesses) signs, and boom you are married. It shouldn't be the state telling the church that they have to marry this couple or be sued...which is where it is heading with the anti religion crowd as the outcry against this Indiana law shows.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    137. Re:WWJD? by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "then the owner must accept all the laws of the land,"

      Agreed.

      "... or prohibiting the free exercise thereof"

      Your point?

      If you force an individual to take part in something to which they have a religious objection how are you not violating the first amendment?

      Can I refuse to sell you cake based on race or whatever? No. Can I refuse to sell you a WEDDING cake, decorating it in a way that is counter to my religious beliefs? I believe the answer to that would be and should be YES.

      Would *I*? No. I don't think it's a big deal. Either way.

    138. Re:WWJD? by RyoShin · · Score: 1

      That's my loose take on it. (Raised Lutheran, pastor's kid, but now lazy atheist.) Paul, formerly Saul, who directed much of the early Catholic Church co-opted Jesus (or the story of Jesus) for his own means. There's a lot said in books ostensibly written by him or sourced through him that are a bit counter to Jesus's largely "peace and love" rhetoric. All from a man who started out as a persecutor of disciples of Jesus.

      I think that Saul figured out that it was easier to control the budding religion by spearheading it, rather than spearing heads. So he had his "vision", used a local believer (was he said to be a prophet? Can't remember) as a patsy, was "cured" of his blindness, and turned to "following" the teachings of Jesus Christ and leading others in the same. Worked out very well for him, I'd say.

      That's all assuming at least some of the Bible is factual, though.

    139. Re:WWJD? by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      I am saying the state just needs to hand out the certificates and let the church decide if they will marry a specific couple.

      Already the Catholic church will not marry a couple that is not intending to have children, gay straight old young, it doesn't matter. The children are required for the marriage. So post menopausal women aren't allowed to marry in the catholic church (though this may have changed in the 12 years since I got married). The church is defining the rules under which they will perform a ceremony. I also don't have a problem with the Methodist church defining marriage as between you, your brother, your mother, your boyfriend (all assuming you are a guy...), it bothers me none. I also don't have a problem with the church of latter day saints allowing polygamy. It should be legal as long as all parties involved agree to it (the existing wife should also approve of the new wife, just as the new wife has to approve).

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    140. Re:WWJD? by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      No failure of logic or issue with homosexuals involved. I agree fully with the rest of your statement.

      Why is poligamy against the law? Who was harmed?

      Why is incest against the law? Who is harmed?

      Why was homosexual marriage against the law? Who was harmed?

      The state shouldn't be restricting marriage, they should be allowing whatever marriage a church will perform.

      Better?

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    141. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget that in Ancient Egypt, marriage could be contracted out for a specific period of time. After the time is up, but both parties go their own way.

    142. Re:WWJD? by SillyHamster · · Score: 1

      Yes, I am.

      Are they not both people with the Right to their Freedom of Speech? Or do you think KKK members should be treated as second class citizens with less rights than gay people?

      Does the Right to Freedom of Speech of one group of people necessitate coercing actions from another group of people?

      It's one thing to prevent people from censoring KKK members; it's another thing to force people to serve them in their business.

    143. Re:WWJD? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Obviously, that's just semantics - one could just as easily frame it as "the state is using it's power to make it more difficult for individuals to seek redress against corporations that discriminate against them." No matter how you look at it, the state is using its power to make discrimination easier.

      Not at all. This is a crucial difference. Note that you can still seek redress against corporations if you want (e.g. by organizing boycotts and such), but it's a different ballpark if you want to seek such redress via courts and other means provided by the state - which meansusing state power to achieve redress. So, again, this isn't state using its power to make it more difficult - it's state withdrawing its power to make it more difficult (because otherwise that power is used to make it easier).

      So what? So because the corporations can't round up people and execute them, that makes this law okay? Your argument boils down to "well, at least Indiana isn't making it legal for corporations to start KILLING gay people, so we should be happy that they're only making it easier to discriminate against gay people."

      At no point did I say that it's okay. It's a bad law, and I think that state power should be used to combat discrimination like that. I just want us to be perfectly clear about what exactly we're doing here - which is using the power of the state to force people to do a certain thing, because the social value of that thing is higher than the negative of infringing on their freedom (of speech and association). I also want to make clear the difference between private discrimination (limited by the fundamental protections the law provides to everyone), and discrimination by the state (which basically has no limits as to how far it can go).

    144. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And "if you think gay marriage allows a couple to raise their children, then you have a very poor grasp of reproductive biology."

      OK, ok, so you think gays are icky and that children are better off dead than adopted by gay people, we get it. Problem is, you're an asshole and your views are worthless.

    145. Re:WWJD? by Changa_MC · · Score: 1

      I much prefer the personal-liberty approach: let people do what they damn well please in their personal lives, and don't have government-administered marriage at all.

      Yeah, you've veered off into forcing "freedoms" onto people who do not want them!

      I like my government-administered marriage just the way it is, and I'll try to fight you shoving your "personal-liberty" on me every step of the way. Don't want a government recognized marriage contract? Don't get one! But don't try to take it away from everyone else!

      --
      Changa hates change.
    146. Re:WWJD? by Changa_MC · · Score: 1

      >It's quite valid in terms of history up until the last few decades.

      No, marriage has always been a civil utility, sometimes administered by the church.

      It doesn't make sense to claim that civil marriage is a recent concept when cultures older than Christianity itself had civil marriage millennia ago.

      Even the USA we've always been able to go down and get a civil marriage license signed without church involvement, and that's how it should remain.

      --
      Changa hates change.
    147. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you force an individual to take part in something to which they have a religious objection how are you not violating the first amendment?

      How is it forcing when said individual CHOOSE to open a business/choose a profession that might put them in situations where they're exposed to things they religiously object?

      And you choosing to find something religiously objectionable was your choice. Society has no obligation to protect you from being offended.

      Can I refuse to sell you a WEDDING cake, decorating it in a way that is counter to my religious beliefs?

      Capitalizing WEDDING doesn't make any difference. It's still just a cake. A bunch of eggs, flour, milk, and other ingredients cooked up together.

      You attaching moral values on to the cake is again your own choice. Society cares not for your own moral values, because nobody has to have them. What society cares about is economic values, because everybody has to participate. When you deny that cake, you're mixing up moral values and economic value. Those eggs, flour, milk, and other ingredients suddenly aren't on the free market any more. They're on some controlled market, gated by you the baker, to only be accessible to the "right" kind of people, not whoever who can offer the best price.

      Thus society gave the baker a choice (again, it's a choice for the baker), either play by the same rules as everybody else on the market, or stop passing yourself off as a business on the open free market.

      If there's anything forced on the baker, it is simply personal responsibility

    148. Re:WWJD? by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "You attaching moral values on to the cake is again your own choice."

      You say "moral". I say "religious". Don't ignore the constitution.

      "How is it forcing when said individual CHOOSE to open a business/choose a profession that might put them in situations where they're exposed to things they religiously object?"

      Ever hear the concept of corporate personhood? The concept dates back early in the 19th century (early in our existence as a nation). I believe it applies. Further, sole proprietorships do not give up constitutional rights when choosing to do business.

    149. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait a minute, can you remind me for a moment which side was the intolerant one? Seriously.

    150. Re:WWJD? by Some_Llama · · Score: 1

      An economic group that has far less influence than the much larger minority, based on percentage, of blacks in Montgomery. ""

      Are you kidding me? As soon as this bill passed all i have seen on TV/radio/internet is a furious storm of outrage over what is perceived as persecution of gays, the Governor of a state has been forced to publicly debate this bill within days of it's signing... a plethora of sanctions have been instantly levied against the state of Indiana.

      How many years of protests and murder happened over civil rights of blacks in the south?

      The power and force of the LGBTt community is incredibly powerful, swift, and easily harnessed to put pressure or punishment against any perceived injustice to that community.

      "I would rather not repeat those times with blacks replaced with "fags."

      Well i guess that's the point of insisting homosexuality is not a choice, because if it was a choice then it wouldn't quite be on the same moral high ground as skin color would it?

    151. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rightly or wrongly, certain religious groups regard homosexual behavior as a sin. No one seems to believe being black is a sin.

      Who, outside of the usual hysterical liberals, cares if a few religious zealots refuse to provide flowers for gay weddings?

      Most people in the real world have more important things to worry about.

    152. Re:WWJD? by camazotz · · Score: 1

      I disagree that this is about hatred; in fact, I think you have to be calling many people blatant liars to make it about hatred. Granted, on either side there are likely some who are driven by hatred, but that's always going to be the case. It seems that many (and probably the vast majority) of people on both sides are pretty normal people who genuinely feel the way they say they do. Trying to vilify people on one side or the other doesn't help and is disingenuous.

      Personally I can see merit in both sides and I bet if you give each argument and fair chance you would too. And that's why the issue is such a difficult one. It's only through setting up absurd strawman arguments that you can really dismiss the whole debate.

      On the one side, it looks like we're dealing with discrimination all over again. As with racial discrimination, it seems wrong to avoid doing business with people just because of their sexual orientation. Separate but equal never worked and simply wasn't right.

      On the other side, it seems like you have the government forcing people not just to tolerate - but to actively celebrate - something that is deeply abhorrent to them. They would otherwise be inclined to let people live their own lives how they want but when forced to be involved they honestly feel wrong, deeply wrong, about being forced to tacitly condone things like same sex marriage.

      Both sides sincerely feel like the other side is taking away their rights and feel the others' suggested way to deal with it is unfair. Hatred isn't necessarily a part of the equation at all.

      Your last sentence seems to be contradicted by the prior paragraph. Also, I think you have not sufficiently demonstrated just how engaging in a neutral business transaction will adequately provide those who find someone different from them "deeply abhorrent" the requisite detection equipment to identify who they are (unless they are preparing a cake, apparently).

      That said, I really wanted to comment on your first sentence: I absolutely am one who says that the supporters for this bill are doing so out of hatred, and are lying. Through their teeth, and possibly to themselves about what their motives are. Painfully obvious when you're not trapped on the inside of this den of lies and hate. PAINFULLY.

    153. Re:WWJD? by camazotz · · Score: 1

      Jesus may have said nothing, but the old testament has a pretty clear lesson on it:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S...

      I personally have very little issue with homosexuals. I have a serious problem with gay marriage, as marriage is a religious ceremony, so the state should stay out of it. Civil union is the state sponsored joining, and should be the proper avenue for the state to allow something that religion indicates is wrong. If someone feels that a homosexual couple should share in the benefits a heterosexual relationship enjoys, they should move for equal benefits for the two, not move to change the definition of marriage. However, it has to be understood that most of the benefits of marriage have to do with holding a family together for the benefit of the children, which a homosexual marriage may have some issues in creating.

      Marriage is not a religious ceremony, it is cultural manifestation of a concept that predates all modern and known archaic religions. Religion did not invent marriage, but it capitalized on it and possibly institutionalized it, and even then marriage existed as a concept thousands of years prior to Judeo-Christian thought, shocking as that may be to you. If your argument were in the least bit sensible then we should have no government endorsement of marriages, and I as an atheist should not have been allowed to get married (and we used a local judge, not a minister, fyi). Also: and to use my own native state as an example (New Mexico) they determined that discrimination based on gender in marriage is not actually supported by the state's laws as written....so guess what, same sex marriage is legally fine and always was in this state.

      The argument that marriage is a religious ceremony is just painful when I hear it, because it really marks the person presenting the argument as very limited in their scope of knowledge and understanding. It's just....hard....to imagine that someone would be so limited in their own understanding of this world they live in.

    154. Re:WWJD? by dbrueck · · Score: 1

      By convincing yourself it's driven by hate, it allows you to brush aside the debate while feeling good about yourself because you've taken some moral high road.

      How exactly did you come to this conclusion anyway? Why are you so convinced that this has to be hate-driven and that there can't be any possible explanation?

      You have zeroed in on a particular motivation and have decided that it can be this and nothing else, and you somehow known even better than the people themselves what is driving them? You don't allow for the possibility that maybe, just maybe, there is an explanation beyond mass dishonesty and/or self-delusion?

      To latch on to something so implausible seems silly. Is the alternative - that some people are being rational but genuinely feel differently than you - too terrifying a prospect to deal with? Why isn't it simply possible for you to accept that the "other side" is not driven by hate?

    155. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Honestly? Jesus would probably ignore this law, and simply expect people to do unto others

      Wow, I guess we could boil down the entire New Testament to just a single verse and call it "done" except for all that messy business like, after feeding the 5,000, the next day he tells them that if they don't believe he's the Son of God (e.g. More than a prophet) that their sins will be compounded upon them. Let's also forget the part where he cast out the exchangers in the temple with a whip.

      Jesus never, ever, ever condoned sin. He forgave sins, he pardoned sinners, but he never told people to "Keep whoring yourself out. What you do between the sheets is YOUR business!" or "Who cares if you're taking advantage of the poor? As long as YOU stay true to YOURSELF!" He said things like "Go, and sin no more" and "Give up all your possessions and follow me".

    156. Re:WWJD? by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      I did read exactly what you wrote. You can hide behind minced words all you want, buy your message was perfectly clear. As I said, this thread and story are about serving gay customers. Stop pretending you were being original.

      And your rebuttal of the phrase, " people who feel they are owed my services", is a stupid argument. Of course I am not saying that they demand free service. When has payment ever been an argument. They feel they are owed my service, which they will pay for, whether I want to offer that service to them or not. In other words, they feel that they are owed my paid service. They feel they have the right and authority to force me to work for them against my will.

      Again, I don't discriminate against any particular group. If they can pay my fee, I will provide my services. That is because I choose to do so. If I choose not to, no one can force me to give that service. Not the state. Not my mother. Not even you.

      And as I also have said above, I have refused service to a former customer for, as you put it, "an arbitrary basis that has nothing to do with safety or the larger public interest. " So, your argument is false, even if you refuse to admit it.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    157. Re:WWJD? by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      You're the one who is mincing words.

      If I choose not to, no one can force me to give that service. Not the state

      The state certainly can when they choose to. Read Title III of the Americans With Disabilities Act. It applies to refusing service to anyone with a disability offering "public accomodations", which includes stores, BAKERIES (because people keep using that as an example), movie theatres, etc.

      So, if you owned a bakery and refused service (or charged an inordinate price) to someone who was so disabled, they will certainly force you - or put you out of business.

      Even many of the states that passed similar laws as Indiana, except that you cannot use religion as an excuse to discriminate against LGBT and other minority groups.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    158. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like how you put it.

      How about this for a situation that's like a religious baker and gay wedding but without religion or people being gay...

      Let's say you're an artist and you make money painting. One day, there's a guy who comes in with the mounted head of a deer he killed and asks you to paint a picture of him with his deer head. ...There's just one problem... You're a card carrying member of peta. Can you refuse to do the painting because you don't like the fact he killed the deer? Or do you have to paint the picture?

      I would think you could refuse to paint the picture, but that's just me.

    159. Re:WWJD? by Man+Eating+Duck · · Score: 1

      I don't believe there ever was a jesus [...]

      Most scholars believe there was "a jesus" (some real historical person) independently of any faith, and that he was in fact crucified by the Romans. Any anecdotes about his life is mostly hearsay, though.

      --
      Are you a grammar Nazi? I'm trying to improve my English; please correct my errors! :)
    160. Re: WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes, and i'm not homopobic

    161. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But he would be strongly interested in affecting the compassion, selflessness, humility, and general godliness of the people

      So why aren't Christians showing these traits?
      What happened about him being called the Prince of Peace? Then why aren't Christians peaceful?

    162. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You say "moral". I say "religious". Don't ignore the constitution.

      Same difference. The constitution isn't ignored under either wording, because your rights haven't been infringed in the first place.

      Your constitution rights protects you from GOVERNMENT. If government wants something that conflicts with your religion, then government has to move around you and accommodate. That's why the Hobby Lobby case was in favor of the religious. That was a case of government vs an individual business. Government had to back off.

      In the bakery case however, it wasn't government who wanted a wedding cake. It was a couple of individuals.

      Individuals have no obligation to move around you to accommodate your religion. It's your religion, not theirs. If your religion teaches you to be offended, that's your problem with your own religion. Take it up with your church, not the state. The homosexual couple's religion doesn't teach them to be offended at bakeries or even certain religions that really really hate homosexuals. That's kind of why they had no problem walking into one and wishing to do business there.

      When the bakery refused, it was the homosexual couple who was forced to change their behavior (they would have had to find another bakery). They have been damaged, and thus government came in to make them whole again.

      "Forcing" the bakery to make corrective action for the harm they've done to another individual isn't an infringement of that bakery's or baker's rights. It's simply holding that bakery up to personal responsibility. Now that's how corporate personhood applies here. A business ia like a person? Sure. A person has personal responsibility. If you, be you a business or corporate person, harms another individual, you own up to the responsibility of compensating them, lest you be punished in some way. Thus, bake the cake (compensate) or give up being a business (punishment)

    163. Re:WWJD? by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "Same difference. The constitution isn't ignored under either wording, because your rights haven't been infringed in the first place."

      How can the force of law which absolutely "prohibit(s) the free exercise thereof" their faith be Constitutional?

    164. Re:WWJD? by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      Wow. Now you're throwing the ADA at me. You are getting desperate to prove a point. Go on, sue me for ADA violations. When I park my car in the handicapped spot, and push my wife into court in her wheelchair, maybe while mentioning my military disability (which I have already proven in court to avoid other legal action), I don't think the judge is going to give you much leeway.

      Just for you, I will modify my policy of not discriminating against any particular group, and incorporate this into my company policies:

      I am not biased against any particular group of people, and so do not discriminate against anyone who wants to pay me for my services. However, recently I am being forced to add one exception.

      From this point forward, no matter what group you may want me to classify you with, if you have the political belief that the state has the authority to force me to perform work for you against my will, and you wish to force that belief on me as a citizen who runs a business, I do not want you as a customer. You are not invited into my work area, and are not authorized to call me about business. If you do intrude into my business, I am giving notice that that will be construed as trespassing. I reserve the right to take legal action against people who trespass in this manner.

      If you have the political belief mentioned, but choose to never force your belief on me personally or as a business owner, I still welcome you as a valued customer, since none of my customers have all the same political beliefs as I do, and as such it would make no sense to discriminate solely on the basis of differing beliefs.

      Thank you and have a nice day.

      There, now I have to discriminate against people like you. Not because of what you are (white, black, disabled, gay, democrat, communist, christian, muslim, illegal alien, or any other defined group people are placed in), but because of what you think. It's not simply that you think the state does have the power to force me to do business with a particular group of people, it is that you believe the state should have the authority to force me to perform professional work for any particular group.

      I don't like to discriminate against people, which is one reason I don't do so. But if I am being threatened with legal action despite my non-discrimination, I find it sensible to avoid business dealings with people who are insisting on that threat even though I don't discriminate.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    165. Re:WWJD? by Forgefather · · Score: 1

      Yes, plenty of well deserved outrage mostly from non-homosexuals. Assuming the group was not the benefit of a mass movement how do you propose that 3.8% of a population[1] can significantly impact a local economy or business?

      The reason that so many people leap to the LGBT communities defense is because they correctly surmise that a threat to freedom and just anywhere is a threat to freedom and injustice everywhere.

      [1]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGBT_demographics_of_the_United_States

      --
      "There are lies, there are damn lies, and there are statistics"
    166. Re:WWJD? by Forgefather · · Score: 1

      I don't give a damn what they think their religion says they are entitled to. Unless that can prove that the existence of homosexuality actually harms their rights they can limit their bigotry to speech and not legislation.

      --
      "There are lies, there are damn lies, and there are statistics"
    167. Re:WWJD? by Forgefather · · Score: 1

      blacks are over 56% of Montgomery's population[1] while gays are less than 4% of the national population.[2]

      [1]http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/01/01101.html
      [2]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGBT_demographics_of_the_United_States

      --
      "There are lies, there are damn lies, and there are statistics"
    168. Re:WWJD? by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      You made a very specific claim - "I own a business. I am a business man. I decide who my potential customers are, and who I don't accept as customers. No one can make that choice for me.

      I've provided one example where that is absolutely not true. In other words, your statement was a lie. If you have a problem being proven wrong, that's your problem, not mine. :-)

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    169. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How can the force of law which absolutely "prohibit(s) the free exercise thereof" their faith be Constitutional?

      The force of law absolutely did no such thing.

      Free exercise does not mean free from consequence.

      The baker's so called free exercise actually harmed others - homosexuals would have to take additional time/effort to find another bakery. As such, the state used its power to force corrective action. That's not a violation of rights, that's balancing your rights with the rights of everyone else including homosexuals under Rule of Law.

      Or put it more simply, you were free to swing your fists as free exercise of your faith. But the moment it hit somebody else's face, it is completely within the power of the state to force you to compensate.

    170. Re:WWJD? by david672orford · · Score: 1

      If you force an individual to take part in something to which they have a religious objection how are you not violating the first amendment?

      How is it forcing when said individual CHOOSE to open a business/choose a profession that might put them in situations where they're exposed to things they religiously object?

      And you choosing to find something religiously objectionable was your choice. Society has no obligation to protect you from being offended.

      If he opens a resturant, yes gay people will come in and he will have to serve them even if he finds it distasteful. The market convention for that type of business is that he will serve anyone who walks in the door and can pay. Nobody could possibly believe he is endorsing or participating in the views or behaviors of the paying customers sitting in his dining room.

      But it can be different when the goods or services are order specifically to support a particular activity. Businesses routinely refuse to perform services which they believe would support an improper cause or hurt the reputation of the business. A lawyer might refuse to represent a particalar corporate client in what he regarded as a meritless and oppressive lawsuit. A printer might refuse to print a brocure containing what he considered to be hate speech. A video streaming service might refuse to host material they considered degrading to women. A public relations firm might refuse to design a campaign for a religious organization. They refuse because, while acknowledging that these activities might be perfectly legal, they do not wish to participate and do not want their names associated with them.

      The bakers and photographers in these cases appear to be willing to provide the first kind of service, but not the second. They almost certainly regard the gay community the way you seem to regard religion: as a misguided and harmful social movement. In their minds they are not discriminating against gays as persons, they are refusing to participate in a rally (i.e., the wedding) for a movement they do not agree with.

      Similiarly if you refused to make a promotional video for a christian treatment center where they claim to cure homosexuality, you likely argue that you were not discriminating against christians, but rather refusing to participate in a something you found abhorent. What if they wanted some photos for their website? What if they wanted a cake with a congradulatory message for someone who was "cured"? At what point would your connection be weak enough that you would provide the service? Would you accept a catering contract for the party?

      I would not tell a religous person that he "chooses" to believe that homosexuality is a problem. Would it be reasonable or helpful to tell someone that he "chooses" to believe in global warming or that he "chooses" to believe that tobacco smoking is harmful to health? It doesn't matter if the view is right or wrong, telling someone that he is at fault for believing there is a problem will only convince him that you are in denial.

    171. Re:WWJD? by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Just a Dora The Explorer is a factual representation of the world of Dora The Explorer.

      And would be a perfectly factual source for someone trying to figure out what Dora The Explorer would do. Yes. You're getting it.

      By your definition a fact can be literally anything and of any relative value.

      No, I'm saying that people usually say "what would Jesus do" as shorthand for "what would Jesus, as depicted in the Bible, do, based on these depictions".

      a pointless distinction unless we're talking about a comparison to reality.

      And what is that? Was Jesus a real person who's life Evangeliums record or an entirely fictional character? Luckily, we don't need to know this in order to answer the question "what would Jesus do?" We can simply assume a place, called "the world of Bible", and assume everything we know about the guy is true there. The price of this unified treatment for two mutually exclusive worlds is that the concept of "fact" becomes more complex with the addition of context: in which worlds is the fact true?

      Not that you can avoid that complexity, since the very concept of imagining is really just a process of making these alternative worlds with different sets of true facts.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    172. Re:WWJD? by fgouget · · Score: 1

      The scenario with a bag of bagels isn't one of the ones causing an issue, so as an example it doesn't apply. That type of transaction is fine - that the buyer is gay or whatever is irrelevant, it has no bearing on the transaction, it has no reason to come up. It'd be quite a stretch to say that by selling them some bagels you are endorsing them in any way.

      Indiana's senate bill 101 does not make it clear that it does not apply in this case (I'll grant you it does not make much clear at all though). Do you have a reliable source that explains why this case is not relevant?

    173. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it can be different when the goods or services are order specifically to support a particular activity.

      No, whether it can be different depends on the particular reasons, not the particular activity.

      Activities on their own tell us little. It's the reasons behind the action that affect the consequences.

      John killed Jane. It could be murder. It could be manslaughter. It could be legitimate self defense. It all depends on the reasons surrounding the activity.

      Businesses routinely refuse to perform services which they believe would support an improper cause or hurt the reputation of the business.

      Note the wording you used: a "cause". A cause is a reason, not an activity. If a business has good reason of to disagree with the reasons of the potential customer, sure they can refuse with minimal consequence

      If their reasons are found unacceptable, then the consequences will be different. Anything from simple customer boycott to the government intervening is possible, depending on the reason.

      And the second part: reputation of the business. It's your business that is at jeopardy for accepting service. Not your beliefs. Not your morals. Not your faith. Not your religion.

      Saying something will harm your business is a completely different reason than saying something goes against your faith. Different reasons, ergo different consequences.

      They almost certainly regard the gay community the way you seem to regard religion: as a misguided and harmful social movement

      How did I seem to regard religion as a misguided and harmful social movement? I'm only disagreeing with them. Disagreement is not the same as contempt.

      In their minds they are not discriminating against gays as persons, they are refusing to participate in a rally (i.e., the wedding) for a movement they do not agree with.

      So if "in my mind" I'm doing no wrong, it's ok for me to go Heath Ledger Joker on society? "In my mind" I'm not harming people. I'm just liberating their minds! Showing them the truth on how pointless everything is! Why so serious?

      We live in a society based on Rule of Law, not based on what's "in the minds" of people of one particular faith or another.

      Similiarly if you refused to make a promotional video for a christian treatment center where they claim to cure homosexuality, you likely argue that you were not discriminating against christians, but rather refusing to participate in a something you found abhorent.

      No, not similarly. If I refuse a job, it would be based on reason, not faith.

      I would not tell a religous person that he "chooses" to believe that homosexuality is a problem.

      Good for you. Doesn't mean the statement isn't true.

      Would it be reasonable or helpful to tell someone that he "chooses" to believe in global warming or that he "chooses" to believe that tobacco smoking is harmful to health?

      Apple and oranges. Global warming and tobacco smoking are not religions. Well, they shouldn't be... there certainly are people out there who believe or disbelieve in global warming as if it was a religion.

      It doesn't matter if the view is right or wrong

      I didn't argued whether one view is right or wrong. I'm arguing that just because you're free to hold your world view doesn't mean you're free from the consequences when you practicing your world view affects other people.

      telling someone that he is at fault for believing there is a problem will only convince him that you are in denial.

      I'm not telling anyone they're at fault for believing there is a problem. I'm telling them they are at fault for ACTING out on those views that resulted in harming others

      You're free to believe whatever you want. It's when your actions affect others that society gets involved. Society examines the reasons behind why you did it, and depending on those reasons, will dish out appropriate consequences.

    174. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Individuals have no obligation to move around you to accommodate your religion. It's your religion, not theirs. If your religion teaches you to be offended, that's your problem with your own religion. Take it up with your church, not the state. The homosexual couple's religion doesn't teach them to be offended at bakeries or even certain religions that really really hate homosexuals. That's kind of why they had no problem walking into one and wishing to do business there.

      But I have an obligation to move my religion around to accommodate others?

      When the bakery refused, it was the homosexual couple who was forced to change their behavior (they would have had to find another bakery). They have been damaged, and thus government came in to make them whole again.

      THEY were the ones who attempted to start this whole thing in the first place. Say the bakery didn't make frosting in exactly the right shade of blue that they wanted. They would have had to find another bakery, and yet there is no damage. So why is finding another baker for any other reason 'damage'?

    175. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your understanding of the law is wrong and probably only taken from sensationalizing headlines.

    176. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But I can't call the artist a bigot unless the other party is gay!

    177. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since the bill makes no mention of homosexuality at all do you have a reliable source that explains why a bag of bagels is relevant?

    178. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From what I recall there was a florist who was sued because she didn't want to participate (at a remove) in a gay wedding. Funny thing is that the couple in question were customers of hers for years (and yes she knew their sexual orientation). She was happy to provide them with flowers for birthdays and other celebrations which have nothing to do with their sexual orientation.

      Does her hate pain you?

    179. Re:WWJD? by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "homosexuals would have to take additional time/effort to find another bakery."

      I think you'll find that most constitutional scholars would argue that does not rise to the legal definition of "harm".

      Were they to refuse service based on their sexual orientation, THAT could be argued to be discrimination. To force service that involves producing product that violates their faith would violate the baker's first amendment rights.

      Example:

      (A) "I will not sell you this generic cake because you are gay" could be strongly argued to be discrimination.

      (B) "I will not make you a cake for a gay wedding with two grooms (or brides) on it because it violates the precepts of my faith" could be strongly argued to be correctly exercising their first amendment rights.

    180. Re:WWJD? by david672orford · · Score: 1

      So you are you saying that your views on homosexuality are based on "reason" whereas oposing views are based on "faith" and therefor are not valid a basis to refuse to provide expressive services (such as photographs or a video). But because your views on the same subject are objectively valid they can serve as a valid basis for refusing to provide expressive services and society should respect that. Do I understand that correctly?

      You also seem to be saying that gays are harmed when people who disapprove of gay weddings refuse to bake cakes for them or to come and take pictures. But are they really harmed or merely offended? As you said earlier, "Society has no obligation to protect you from being offended."

      How would you balance the right to equal treatment with free speech rights? At what point does the harm done to gays outweigh the free-speech rights of their critics?

    181. Re:WWJD? by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      So you are falling back to your first fallacy, thinking the state has the power or authority to make me serve someone. The state also thinks it has this power, and the authority to enforce its belief.

      And, again, you are talking about the power and authority to force me to provide services to people I already provide services to. My willingness to serve someone just isn't good enough for you; I must knuckle under and admit the state can force me to do something that I would otherwise do from common decency. If my actions are done from my own choice, you can't accept it.

      As an aside, I do find it humorous that you and others keep insisting that to prove my point, I have to change my policy and deny service to a protected group, so that the state can crack down on me. By your logic, the proper way to prove I don't kill random strangers by my own choice, as opposed to by state law, is to go out and kill a stranger. Then I 'll see how much power the state has over my choice to not kill people. It is a ridiculous example, but it logically follows your argument.

      This argument from you isn't whether the state has a certain law, which of course the laws you are referring to exist. You keep mentioning them, and I keep dismissing them, since they have no bearing on my actions. You need me to acknowledge that the state has this power over my personal choice, even though it would not change my personal choice. I don't acknowledge that power, because it does not exist, because the law does not make me change my actions or choices.

      Where your argument really falls apart is if I were to live in a country that does not have this plethora of anti-discrimination laws. My choices of who I would offer my services to would not change one bit. Therefor, my choice now to offer my services to everyone is not forced or constrained by any law that establishes protected groups.

      So, in a nutshell, you are so upset you are arguing with a stranger on the internet because, while he is perfectly willing to provide services to anybody, he has the gall to insist that the choice to provide service to everybody is not made by the government.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    182. Re:WWJD? by Sabriel · · Score: 1

      My point is that "free exercise" cuts both ways. You say you should be free not to sell cakes to gays. Gays say they should be free to buy cakes from any cake shop. You want Congress to pass a law that says someone's freedom is more important than someone else's freedom. You want a class system. Congress is constitutionally forbidden to do that, and with good reasons.

      The laws of the United States are (supposed to be) founded firmly on a strong and high wall of separation between the Church and the State. If you want to do _business_ in the United States, you're (supposed) to do it with everyone equal under the law.

      Otherwise you end up with your temple full of money changers.

    183. Re:WWJD? by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      Again, you claimed that nobody can force you to serve anyone. I proved that, legally, this is wrong.

      This argument has nothing to do with whether do serve them IRL, so please stop confounding the two.

      If you were to decide tomorrow to change your stance (people do change their minds) and stop providing services to protected groups, you could be forced to.

      Here is a perfect example of your bogus reasoning:

      You need me to acknowledge that the state has this power over my personal choice, even though it would not change my personal choice. I don't acknowledge that power, because it does not exist, because the law does not make me change my actions or choices.

      Just because you always, say, obey the speed limit doesn't mean that the state doesn't have the power to enforce speed limits on you or anyone else.

      Or drivers licenses. Just because you have a drivers license doesn't mean that the police can't stop you to check if you have a valid drivers license. Or just because you don't drive drunk doesn't mean the police can't pull you over and demand a breathalyser test.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    184. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "[they] rationalize injustice by pretending to defend something many of us hold dear,"

      Couldn't that be said by BOTH sides of this issue? Wouldn't it be injustice to force a private citizen to enter a private business contract/engagement with another private citizen against their will and against their beliefs?

      I believe It's discrimination to not hire/or fire based on sexual orientation. I do not believe that it is discrimination to refuse to take the money and provide services to someone who wants to you to make a cake for their same-sex wedding. Trust me -- the small business bakery market will weed out those who want to miss great business opportunities and/or sales just because they don't want both figures on a cake wearing pants.

      Discrimination is discrimination, not matter what form. And that includes the war against illegal immigrants. Illegal immigrants sustain the USA, as a third class residents, not entitled to benefits. Religious descrimination is manifested by Islam. Kill the infidel. And the recent Indiana and Arkansas laws are moving some of society to that direction.

    185. Re:WWJD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not a protected class. Not a problem I think.

    186. Re:WWJD? by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      A cake with anti-black slogans would, by its' very nature, be discriminatory against blacks, so in this case the baker can refuse.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
  9. Religious freedom laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Are stupid.

    Religion is not something innate, like sexuality or race, and it's not something that people have no choice over (disability, for example). It's something people have a choice about, and if they choose to be religious, they should have to deal with the consequences of that. Generally, I think religious people are closed minded and less intelligent, and if they were more open minded, they wouldn't obey a book blindly or believe in things that have absolutely no basis in reality (for example, God created the world 6000 years ago). It should not be a protected class like something like race is.

    In short, people choose religion, so people should be able to choose discriminate against people because it.

    1. Re:Religious freedom laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In short, people choose religion, so people should be able to choose discriminate against people because it.

      You choose to put your dick in a butt. Unless you think it's a compulsive thing, you can avoid it.

    2. Re:Religious freedom laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sexuality is the only thing you mentioned which is not innate. You can argue that tendencies and desires are genetic, but there is no argument that some people change their preferences over time and you also cannot argue that for most interactions, there is no reason to know what someone's sexual preferences are.

      The only way someone can be discriminated against for their sexual preferences is if that information is shared, and there are good laws against asking about that for most situations. This is only an issue because people with a sexual preference that others don't support want to force other people to do things they believe are immoral.

      If you think something is immoral, then your neighbor shouldn't have a right to force you to do it. There are exceptions and we have a national code of laws to address those exceptions.

      You could try to get a national law that matches the CA stance that people who believe some sexual practices are morally wrong should be forced to produce goods endorsing that behavior. You could try, but IN would be part of the majority that would overwhelmingly prevent such laws.

    3. Re:Religious freedom laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And your dad chose to put his penis in your mom. But I suspect that most people would have a problem with outlawing penetrative sex.

      No that would not end the human race. Turkey basters still exist.

    4. Re:Religious freedom laws by Opportunist · · Score: 2

      Yeah, you could go without sex. Let's take a look at the Catholic Priests and see just how well that works.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    5. Re:Religious freedom laws by misexistentialist · · Score: 1
      Religion seems to arise in all societies, there is something innate about it

      I think religious people are closed minded and less intelligent

      So they intellectually disabled and you hate them for it?

    6. Re:Religious freedom laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, just to be clear, you think discrimination against atheists should be legal? That's as much a choice as religion is, after all.

    7. Re:Religious freedom laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Sexuality" is a choice when used in the manner that you use it for your post.

      Sexuality where you are born male or female or some mix of the two, you are correct, that is how you are born. Sexuality in who you choose to have sexual relations with is just that, a choice, and birth has nothing whatsoever to do with that choice.

      You, born as a man, want to pretend to be a girl, or decide you want to play with other men, that is your choice, however, that choice has no protection in the Constitution or Bill of Rights.

      Freedom of religious expression IS protected by the Constitution via the Bill of Rights.

      Bill of Rights trumps personal choice every day of the year.

    8. Re:Religious freedom laws by cephus440 · · Score: 0

      Close... Grown people choose religion and usually after much "soul searching". We indoctrinate our children into religions which we rarely fully agree with ourselves in a hope that they will understand the religion. We do this because we believe we're going "what is right" and helping the child to a more pure life. However we probably do more harm than good in that they grow up believing "well if my parents believe this shit, that I need to as well." If only we could be honest with our children instead of playing the parent's role all of the time.

    9. Re:Religious freedom laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You, born as a man, want to pretend to be a girl, or decide you want to play with other men, that is your choice, however, that choice has no protection in the Constitution or Bill of Rights.

      One could argue that certain elements here are, in fact, in the Bill of Rights.

      Let's take cross dressing as an example. That can be covered as a first amendment issue, typically interpreted as the freedom of expression. The entire thing could be argued to be covered by the ninth as well.

      And, in fact, anti-discrimination laws in and of themselves may be unconstitutional. Reading the first amendment:

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press [...]

      One could argue that forcing a religious people to act against the tenets of their religion is prohibiting the free exercise of that religion. Personally, I don't see how it could be interpreted any other way.

      What if the government were to pass a law requiring everyone to eat bacon once a month? The Muslim population would go nuts, and rightly so.

    10. Re:Religious freedom laws by ArhcAngel · · Score: 1

      But I suspect that most people would have a problem with outlawing penetrative sex.

      The Shakers have not been doing it for thousands of years.

      --
      "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
    11. Re:Religious freedom laws by asdfman2000 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you could go without sex. Let's take a look at the Catholic Priests and see just how well that works.

      Are you implying that going without sex turns people gay? If so, you're making the grandparent post's point.

    12. Re:Religious freedom laws by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      If you think something is immoral, then your neighbor shouldn't have a right to force you to do it.

      Nobody is saying that the people who are against gays should be forced to become gays, same as nobody is forcing the anti-abortion side to get abortions. You have no more right to discriminate based on your religious beliefs than they do on you. So bake the darn cake and put two guys on top - it won't give you gay cooties. Not doing so is an attempt to impose your religious beliefs on others.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    13. Re:Religious freedom laws by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      You do know that the constitution is not the only law in the land, right?

      You, born as a man, want to pretend to be a girl ...that is your choice.

      So much ignorance, so little time ...

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    14. Re:Religious freedom laws by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Nope, just that it makes them look for outlets. If legal, great, if not, well, hormones beat laws.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    15. Re:Religious freedom laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's something people have a choice about, and if they choose to be religious, they should have to deal with the consequences of that.

      I don't think religion is a choice for many people. Much like any other mental illness.

    16. Re:Religious freedom laws by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      " they wouldn't obey a book blindly or believe in things that have absolutely no basis in reality" they generally don't obey the book blindly, they obey the bits that suit their biggotted ideas, simple example - how many christians still eat pork, prawns etc when their book says not to..., they no longer throw rocks at people for working on a sunday etc

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    17. Re:Religious freedom laws by Cederic · · Score: 1

      This law allows discrimination against people based on their sexuality, not on whether they have sex.

      Lesbians tend not to pick their dick anywhere. Many gay men don't want anal sex - either as giver or soft warm recipient.

      They're just as discriminated against as the guy that's leaking into his knickers and yet the straight man that just fucked his wife in her rectum is just fine.

    18. Re:Religious freedom laws by Cederic · · Score: 1

      So they intellectually disabled and you hate them for it?

      Hmm, interesting question.

      I don't necessarily hate the individuals, and I'm perfectly fine with them dressing up a bit and getting together every Sunday, having a bit of a sing, maybe share a pot of tea and reassure each other than they're all going to some mythical la la land when they die.

      I hate them for trying to impose their beliefs on others. I hate them for abusing children. I hate them for trying to subvert the law towards their archaic superstitions.

  10. How can one be considered tolerant? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    How can one be considered "tolerant" when one does not tolerate intolerance?

    How can one be considered "non-discriminatory" when one discriminates against discrimination?

    1. Re:How can one be considered tolerant? by ubergeek65536 · · Score: 2

      "If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them." - Sir Karl Popper

  11. Blow back by Hevel-Varik · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is blow back for overreach. When we as a society conluded that we cannot employ common sense to indentify and negotiate grey areas (BECAUSE THERE ARE NO GREY AREAS!!!) like the difference between a religious wedding service provider declining to service to same-sex 'marriages' and a coffee shop refusing service to a same-sex 'couple,' people decided to legislately protect their human agency, and we may well wind up the worse for it.

    1. Re:Blow back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 'scare quotes' you put around 'words' like 'marriage' and 'couple' indicate your right-wing 'political affiliation' quite 'clearly'.

    2. Re:Blow back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hear Hear, that is the most correct thing I've read yet today on this issue. One side feels it can bully others to their point of view, and won't even think of negotiating or compromise. So we have to have a law, how sad. Laws just serve to point out error.

  12. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Fuck yeah I'll waste one on your happy ass, Trollerific AC. I've got 15 (now 14) to burn in 3 days, I'll never use 'em up in time.

  13. For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by headhot · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A free market solution never worked in the Jim Crow south and it wont work now. Sure if you live in a big city or town, if one shop refuses to serve you, you can go to another, but what happens to a person who is in the minority who lives or visits a small town that is predominantly made up of religious bigots? There may be one gas station, one food market, one diner? Should the minority have to leave town to protect the rights of the bigoted religious majority?

    Also, will the religious rights head explode when Muslims try to use their faith in the same way the Christians are trying too?

    1. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      A free market solution never worked in the Jim Crow south and it wont work now.

      Uhm you realize that the buses wanted to allow blacks because they wanted their business right? The Jim Crow shit was a product of THE GOVERNMENT that you worship so dearly. If it had been up to the buses, blacks and whites would have been equal.

    2. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by Jason+Levine · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Also, will the religious rights head explode when Muslims try to use their faith in the same way the Christians are trying too?

      Already happened. Awhile back, some state legislature passed a law allowing discussion of religion in public schools as a means of promoting Christianity (though they didn't come out and say that). They then were shocked, SHOCKED that this law was used to allow discussion of Islam. HOW HORRIBLE!!!!

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    3. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But CA laws aren't about protecting people from discrimination; they're about forcing people to provide a service which they believe is morally wrong. There is a difference between discriminating against a person and refusing to do an action you believe is immoral. In CA they have decided to ignore that difference.

      IN is trying to protect against the insanity of the CA situation where people are being forced to take a specific action they believe is immoral.

      It is ironic that the CA situation means a baker would have to create a cake that endorses a KKK wedding and the IN law would allow the baker to decline and people think IN is the problem.

    4. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by MightyMartian · · Score: 2

      Oh bullshit. There was general social consensus in the Jim Crow states that blacks needed to be segregated, that contact between the races should be minimized as much as possible. The governments of these states were doing precisely what the majority in these states wanted.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    5. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      I bet the really shocked ones where the teachers once the students 'expressed themselves'. They likely never did that again.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    6. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize that the Jim Crow analogy doesn't work in this case, right? Jim Crow was government enforced segregation, not just some racist businessman refusing to serve people he didn't like.

    7. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      Just to correct my own comment, it wasn't discussion of religion in public schools. It was vouchers for religious schools - diverting public dollars to religious schools. They were SHOCKED to see the money going to Muslim schools.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    8. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by Sigmon · · Score: 1

      There is another word that belongs behind 'Jim Crow'... that word is LAWS. Jim Crow laws were passed by GOVERNMENT for force people and business-owners to discriminate - against their will. The business owner didn't have a choice but to have separate water fountains for white and colored people. THAT is NOT a free-market. Educate yourself.

    9. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And someone who bucked segregation in the South would find themselves out of business very quickly. They would likely be driven from town, and their business could be subject to arson.

      Even if there were competing businesses, the one that decided to serve the "wrong" race would be wiped and they would know it.

      Anti-discrimination laws are just one piece of an entire effort to eliminate a legal system and a culture where an entire class of individuals were subservient labor.

    10. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's hilarious watching Mosques operating call-to-prayer over loudspeakers keeping entirely within church-bell ordinances and the locals getting all up-in-airs about it. An Arizona muni almost went so far as to ban all of the above just to spite the Muslims, but then the Christians got all pissed off that they couldn't have their church bells so it got tabled. Religious freedom by fucking ass.

    11. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it's immoral to bake a cake ?

    12. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      "The Jim Crow laws were racial segregation state and local laws enacted after the Reconstruction period in Southern United States that continued in force until 1965 mandating de jure racial segregation in all public facilities in Southern U.S. states (of the former Confederacy), starting in 1890 with a "separate but equal" status for African Americans. " via Wikipedia

      In what world is legally mandating discrimination a "free market"?!?

    13. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by Maltheus · · Score: 1

      Right. That's why the Bill of Rights put restrictions on the government, rather than the people. Only government can force you to do anything. If there's a market and it's legal, someone will service it.

    14. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the Muslims will just chop off the Christian heads. Simple solution.
      Gays are treated really well under Sharia.

    15. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      A free market solution never worked in the Jim Crow south and it wont work now.

      Uhm you realize that the buses wanted to allow blacks because they wanted their business right? The Jim Crow shit was a product of THE GOVERNMENT that you worship so dearly. If it had been up to the buses, blacks and whites would have been equal.

      Riiiight ... and the bus drivers never made them sit in the back or give up their seat for a white person. They wanted the money, but they didn't deliver the same level of service because they were bigots

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    16. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      It is ironic that the CA situation means a baker would have to create a cake that endorses a KKK wedding and the IN law would allow the baker to decline and people think IN is the problem.

      People keep throwing cakes about the KKK - proof that it's actually been a problem of you're full of it.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    17. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by LoyalOpposition · · Score: 1

      A free market solution never worked in the Jim Crow south and it wont work now.

      A free market solution never worked in the Jim Crow south because a free market solution was never tried in the Jim Crow south. Jim Crow laws refer to a set of laws that governments created and that determined what businesses could and could not do. A free market solution is free because it's free from government intervention. The Jim Crow south was not free from government intervention because government intervened in what businesses could and could not do.

      ~Loyal

      --
      I aim to misbehave.
    18. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe, but you can't stop them anyway. You can require them to "technically provide service" to someone they hate, but that doesn't mean they can't hurl verbal abuse, provide shitty service, etc.. to the point where the person won't go there anyway.

      Anti-discrimination laws for private businesses are silly and serve no purpose other than to make people feel better about themselves.

    19. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      And how was a minority population viewed as subhuman, terrorized by both legal and extralegal organizations supposed to participate in the market? Jim Crow was only one aspect of a century of segregation and persecution of southern African Americans. Your perpetuating this fantasy that it was all the legislatures' faults, when every historical indication was that the majority of Americans in the Jim Crow states had absolute no problem with the laws, or with the idea that blacks and whites should not mingle, even in the market square.

      Again, I will repeat, business is not some separate entity, some creature that exists in a vacuum. It exhibits the same prejudices that the wider society does, because it is simply a facet of that society. The Jim Crow laws weren't forced upon all southerners, they were forced on blacks by a majority of southerners who wanted to make sure they stayed at the bottom of the pole.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    20. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no the bus companies were all for second class citizens as it meant they could take the black persons fare and if the bus was full throw them off and take a second fare for the same seat from a white person.

      Ie. they were all for double dipping!

    21. Re:For those wanting a 'free market' solution.. by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      Not forced by a majority of southerners, forced by Democrats. Like Governor Wallace. Check it out, all those laws were from the Democrats. Eisenhower famously sent in the army to stop it. Somehow the Democrats lied enough to fool people into thinking they are helping them. I know, truth hurts.

  14. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by beelsebob · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I wonder if a cinema owner should be forced to sell tickets to black men.

    Oh wait, I don't wonder that at all, because I'm not a bigoted idiot.

  15. I discriminate all of the time. by trout007 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I choose who I do business with or have over my home all of the time. It's not based on religion I just don't do business with people I think are jerks.

    --
    I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    1. Re:I discriminate all of the time. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I choose who I do business with or have over my home all of the time. It's not based on religion I just don't do business with people I think are jerks.

      You are not a business open to the public. There are different laws that apply to businesses than apply to individual citizens. This is why "Whites Only" and workplace discrimination isn't supposed to exist anymore, and why people are up in arms about this.

    2. Re:I discriminate all of the time. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      bear witness to the lack of people furthering this comment. This really has more to do with net neutrality than anyone will admit. Common carriers are different from joe carpenters who make 10 chairs a year and get to decide which friends to sell to and for how much, based on any ridiculous or wise arbitrary reason in the carpenter's head. Hillary Clinton doesn't want you to see the connection between her personal email server, and how 'network neutrality' has ramifications for ISP terms of service that prohibit such behavior on the part of mere internet peons. Even Google Fiber by legal contract tries to be the master of the definition of 'improper' behavior on the internet. Everyone would love to be able to discriminate everything to the maximum they are able. Go watch Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda and other series. It's about shaping the universe in the image you want to see it.

  16. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by Needs2BeSaid · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I'm pretty sure it's not illegal in every states. However, I will not Google this as I am at work and don't need another reason to talk to H.R.

    --
    Some things need to be said...
  17. Identical to the 60s Racial Discrimination Laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Before people start with the "a business should be able to choose who it does business with" arguments, just remember that those arguments formed the basis for voluntary racial discrimination in the South. The only reason anti-discrimination laws exist is because there was a consistent record of abuses that could not be solved with community action alone.

    1. Re:Identical to the 60s Racial Discrimination Laws by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Really? You mean that there were other laws on the books saying that blacks or whites who sympathized with blacks were unable to start their own businesses?

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
  18. Hobby Lobby decision is worse by OzPeter · · Score: 0

    IMHO the Hobby Lobby comes down to

    Workers have to submit to the religious beliefs of the company's owners

    And that was a decision by the Supreme Court.

    --
    I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
  19. Disagree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Strongly held religious views should be protected here. Private businesses are not public accommodations.

    1. Re:Disagree by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      If they are open to the general public it ain't so clean cut.

      Your home, yes. No questions about it. If you don't want any gays, Jews, blacks or Christians in your home, there's nothing anyone could say. I'd still consider you an asshole for discriminating people for something they have little control over (well, except the Christian maybe), but it's your private space and it should be your prerogative to decide who may and may not enter it.

      It's different if we're dealing with a place that can (and by its very definition and the general idea behind it should) be frequented by visitors and other strangers you have no direct connection to, i.e. a business. What do you think would happen if someone made a "White only" restaurant? Or how about "Muslim only"? Think that would sit well?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    2. Re:Disagree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry Charlie, but you are wrong in totality.

      Remember that little court decision that granted citizenship to Corporations? Remember that "money" is speech?

      Guess what, a "privately held corporation" has chosen to "speak" by not allowing the insurance to provide for contraception / birth control based upon their following their religious beliefs and practicing what they believe, which is also protected by the Constitution through the bill of rights.

      That privilege is granted in totality to the corporation until such time as SCoTUS reverses their decision.

    3. Re:Disagree by drooling-dog · · Score: 1

      Private businesses are not public accommodations.

      But that's exactly what they are, if they do business with the public. When you incorporate a business, the government grants you special rights, like being able to protect your personal assets from the liabilities of your business, and having access to a stable legal system to enforce the contracts that you make. In return, you have certain responsibilities about how you conduct your business; e.g., things covered by consumer protection laws, the way you keep your accounts, and not discriminating against classes of customers and employees out of your own bigotry. You want the advantages and protections of an incorporated business without having to follow the rules of a civilized society? Tough shit.

    4. Re:Disagree by kqs · · Score: 1

      My religion says that anyone who enters my business is subject to sharia law. I should move to Indiana now!

    5. Re:Disagree by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      That country is fucked up.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    6. Re:Disagree by tsotha · · Score: 1

      It's different if we're dealing with a place that can (and by its very definition and the general idea behind it should) be frequented by visitors and other strangers you have no direct connection to, i.e. a business. What do you think would happen if someone made a "White only" restaurant? Or how about "Muslim only"? Think that would sit well?

      I'd be perfectly okay with it. I think the right to choose with whom you associate should trump group rights.

  20. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by headhot · · Score: 1

    The separation of church and state is way more clear in the constitution then wording of the 2nd amendment.

  21. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by Rik+Sweeney · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Your analogy is completely wrong. Of course a pet store owner would be within their right to refuse the sale of an animal to a person that's going to abuse it.

    A better example would be a shop worker refusing serve a gay man because the shop worker's religion says that homosexuality is a sin.

    Religious Freedom is about the freedom to practice your religion, not to use it as an excuse to be an asshole to people.

    Unfortunately, that's exactly what religion is about these days.

  22. a question by steak · · Score: 3, Insightful

    if the government can compel companies to do business with people they don't want to, how long will it be before the people are compelled to do business with companies they don't want to?

    1. Re:a question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how much wood could a woodchuck chuck? how do shepherds count their flock without falling asleep?

      this is the comment thread to ask non-relevant questions, right?

    2. Re:a question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh?

      I am already compelled to do business with companies I don't want to... for example, my tax money is used to subsidize Goldman Sachs.

    3. Re:a question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are a couple hundred years of common-carrier-type laws, so a couple hundred years. Unless you include natural monopolies, in which case it happened long ago.

    4. Re:a question by Moof123 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You mean like Comcast in many areas?

    5. Re:a question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It has already happened. It is called the ACA (Obama-care). I was/am forced to purchase a product I do/did not want (I HAD great insurance up until the ACA was passed and I got a cancellation letter from my insurance company because my deductible was not HIGH enough!) Now I pay over $100 more a month and get less coverage (but I can now go in and get an abortion for free, or put on the pill.... if only I were not a man who already paid for his vasectomy....)

    6. Re:a question by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      I am split.

      The free market in my wants the government to back off as I see abuse. A gay can be verbally abusive to me and my other customers but he can claim it was I singled him out because he is a minority BS etc.

      However, if you want the benefits of no lawsuits and or taxes by being a limited liability corporation then expect demands to be met for this privilege. I can see this. If you do not like then be a sole proprietor where you can freely discriminate against. Just do not come whining when the lawyers come after you and the IRS wants to see 1/3 of your income.

    7. Re:a question by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      how long will it be before the people are compelled to do business with companies they don't want to?

      That boat has already sailed.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    8. Re:a question by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      I ask this honestly: would you have used the same argument when "those people" were blacks who didn't believe in "separate but equal", or is this your new opinion that only applies to gay citizens? Suppose I own a hamburger stand, that I am a white man, and that I dislike blacks and gays. By your words, it would seem that you'd be OK with me selling hamburgers to white men but not black men. If I am incorrect, what distinction do you draw between a black man and a gay man that would compel me to do business with the former but not require me to serve the latter?

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    9. Re:a question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what is your point on abuse? Blacks, disabled, veterans, Chinese, Native Americans, and gays can do this today... this law changes it so that gays can't.

    10. Re:a question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like Blue-Cross. Thanks Obamacare.

    11. Re:a question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or Obamacare exchanges? (under penalty of fine by the IRS)

    12. Re:a question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's pointless. You forget that you or any business owner can also say whatever you want to a customer. So if you don't like them (for any reason) you can just verbally abuse them until they leave.

      So these laws don't really do much. You always have the final right of free speech to tell your customer what you think of them, and how many are going to stand for that? If they get unruly you can kick them out, but most will leave after you sit there and hurl verbal abuse at them.

    13. Re:a question by Howitzer86 · · Score: 1

      A good example is the Affordable Care Act. Because you're alive, you are compelled to do business with private health care insurance companies. If you don't want to pay health insurance, you can either pay a fine or get in trouble with the IRS. ERs had to service everyone by law. A several years later, this became economically unsound and patients had to buy health insurance. Like gays, sick patients are a bullied minority and frequently taken advantage of, and like sick patients, there can be an economic impact based on the choice the state makes on the issue.

      No matter the choice, you're using a law to enforce some sort of outcome if the thing ever comes to trial. In pro-gay states, gays win in court. In anti-gay states, gays loose in court and are discouraged from even trying. The only thing that matters to me is what people want, and what economic impact it has. Does a society feel they need to protect a group or protect the people who hate or take advantage of a group? Which is least harmful to an economy? They can then find the right answer and work from there.

    14. Re:a question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      whaaa fucking whaaa.

    15. Re:a question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody forces you to do business with Comcast. They just force others not to do business with you in Comcast controlled areas and forbid you from offering a service in the area.

      You're completely free to choose no internet or telephone over Comcast.

    16. Re:a question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean like healthcare?

    17. Re:a question by Howitzer86 · · Score: 1

      After some further thought, I've decided the religious conservatives were right on this issue. If society were dealing with a Jim-Crow styled situation but focused on gays, I can understand some outrage with this bill. But that's not the case and it changes nothing on the ground anyway. So opposition to the bill appears to be a little over the top after all. If I could delete my previous posts on this issue I would, because I'm embarrassed that I was so easily wound up over it.

  23. Hmm by koan · · Score: 1

    The real issue is not freedom of religion, the real issue is freedom from religion.
    In this case they may find it backfires and opens the doors to extremes such Sharia Law, as an example, or even some high growth perversion of Christianity leading to another Crusade.

    Stupid right? I just think religion opens too many of the wrong kinds of doors, it should be "Freedom From Religion".

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    1. Re:Hmm by BeemanIT · · Score: 1

      Yes religions opens wrong kinds of doors. Adolf Hitler was apposed to religion and killed about 11 Million people in the process. Then you had the SS doing their weird cult like practices.

    2. Re:Hmm by Yaztromo · · Score: 1

      Yes religions opens wrong kinds of doors. Adolf Hitler was apposed to religion and killed about 11 Million people in the process. Then you had the SS doing their weird cult like practices.

      Nazi Germany was not opposed to religion -- they were very specifically Christian. Hitler himself said: "We tolerate no one in our ranks who attacks the ideas of Christianity ... in fact our movement is Christian.". 94% of the German population at the time of the war were Christians, as was the bulk of the Nazi party members.

      Indeed, the SS specifically did not permit atheists in their ranks; the SS Oath went like so:

      What is your oath?
      – I vow to you, Adolf Hitler, as Führer and chancellor of the German Reich loyalty and bravery. I vow to you and to the leaders that you set for me, absolute allegiance until death. So help me God !
      So you believe in a God?
      – Yes, I believe in a Lord God.
      What do you think about a man who does not believe in a God?
      – I think he is overbearing, megalomaniacal, and foolish; he is not one of us.

      Hitler wasn't opposed to religion -- like many despots, he was opposed to potential political threats against his interests. There is a significant difference between the two.

      Yaz

    3. Re:Hmm by LoyalOpposition · · Score: 1

      Nazi Germany was not opposed to religion -- they were very specifically Christian.

      Hitler and Nazi Germany were opposed to religion. Hitler's problem was that Germany was, as you so clearly stated, 94% Christian, so they couldn't be seen as being opposed to Christianity. Thus, the quote you found.

      ~Loyal

      --
      I aim to misbehave.
    4. Re:Hmm by Yaztromo · · Score: 1

      Hitler and Nazi Germany were opposed to religion.

      I have many more than just one quote. Hitler refers to the Christian God and Jesus many times in his various speeches; at one point the Nazis even tried to setup their own church. There were attempts to evict those Christian sects that were felt to be insufficiently Germanic, but the Nazis in general were a Christian group.

      A more telling quote from historian Richard Steigmann-Gall is more telling:

      "What we suppose Nazism must surely have been about usually tells us as much about contemporary societies as about the past purportedly under review. The insistence that Nazism was an anti-Christian movement has been one of the most enduring truisms of the past fifty years.... Exploring the possibility that many Nazis regarded themselves as Christian would have decisively undermined the myths of the Cold War and the regeneration of the German nation ... Nearly all Western societies retain a sense of Christian identity to this day.... That Nazism as the world-historical metaphor for human evil and wickedness should in some way have been related to Christianity can therefore be regarded by many only as unthinkable."

      The Nazis used the writings of Martin Luther in particular to support their beliefs; the party even held mass celebrations in support of his 450th birthday.

      Also inarguable is the fact that 95+% of Nazis were brought up in Christian households with Christian values. None of which apparently did anything to stop them from perpetrating the worst injustices of the modern age.

      I'd be careful using Wikipedia as a reference here. There are unfortunately many writings both for and against Hitler's belief or disbelief in 'God'; however the Nazi regime was much bigger than just Hitler. And as Mr. Steigmann-Gall alludes to in the above quote, many historians and writers since the end of WWII have tried to paint Hitler as being non-Christian, as they are unable to conceive how a Christian person could commit such atrocities, in "No True Scotsman" fashion. Regardless, Hitler wasn't brought up as an Atheist with modern Humanist values, and he certainly wasn't opposed to religion -- at the very least, everyone can pretty much agree that he was more than happy to use it as a useful tool in advancing his agenda.

      Yaz

    5. Re:Hmm by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      are you trolling? Adolf Hitler was a devout catholic and being a good catholic he hated the Jews as had been the practice for quite a few hundred years previously as they supposedly killed jesus. All nazi soldiers had "god is with us" on their uniforms

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
  24. Good thing Cook doesn't make law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good thing Cook doesn't make law. Religious people have the right not to have their faith mocked by being forced to admit into their midst people that do not share their beliefs.

    1. Re:Good thing Cook doesn't make law by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Why? Why do they have "the right not to be mocked"? Does that idiot that searches corn circles while wearing a tinfoil hat so he won't be controlled by the Illuminati have the right not to be mocked?

      I'm forced to live among people who have imaginary friends, and not only that, they let their imaginary friend dictate what they can do and who they may speak with! Where's my right to be left alone by those loonies?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    2. Re:Good thing Cook doesn't make law by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      No one has the right not to be mocked.

    3. Re:Good thing Cook doesn't make law by dskoll · · Score: 1

      Religious people have the right not to have their faith mocked...

      Oh really? Perhaps you could provide a citation of the law granting this so-called "right"?

  25. Nonsense by clonehappy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is all just a distraction and pandering to a political base. No business that likes money and wants to continue making money will be discriminating against anyone. Big corporations surely don't care who or what you sleep with in bed at night if you want to give them money. Small businesses can't afford to lose a sale. And if a small business decides to put their own religious beliefs in front of making money, then so be it if they go under.

    This is another "look over here; be outraged!" political move by the establishment to make sure no one is looking at any of the important issues facing us on the world stage while at the same time furthering the "left/right" political divide and causing more animosity amongst the LGBT community that the "straights" are trying to oppress them (even though no one, straight, republican, or otherwise actually supports legalized discrimination).

    1. Re:Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "even though no one, straight, republican, or otherwise actually supports legalized discrimination"

      really? http://thinkprogress.org/lgbt/2015/03/28/3640221/indiana-business-owner-admits-discriminating-lgbt-people/

    2. Re:Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, there was this case in New Mexico, which a photographer refused to photograph a same-sex ceremony, and was sued. This lawsuit eventually resulted in a ruling against the photography studio.

      Arizona and other states started creating bills to defend "religious freedom", of which this was one. Arizona, btw, ended up vetoing the bill in question.

    3. Re:Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, why should anyone care what Tim Cook thinks?

      Yup, he's a CEO. Yup, he's rich. So what? There's lots of rich CEOs with an opinion. I have an opinion too. Do I get a news story?

    4. Re:Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Woolworth called, they'd like their lunch counter back.

    5. Re:Nonsense by under_score · · Score: 1

      "No business that likes money and wants to continue making money will be discriminating against anyone."

      False. As a business owner with two business partners, we have refused to engage clients a few times. We do not do work for other companies that are involved in sex trade (e.g. porn producers), alcohol (e.g. bars), or gambling (e.g. gov't run lotteries). We do this for the reason that we think these things are damaging to society and we aren't willing to put money before the wellbeing of society. As a business this has been tough for us from time to time since we have to refuse revenue.

      Other businesses might have other ways of discriminating. In fact, there are federal laws that enforce certain types of discrimination. For example arms trade to restricted countries. The people in those countries did not choose to be citizens there yet they are restricted from access to the best of American arms manufacturing. Shame on the U.S. for discriminating.

      Fundamentally, we all discriminate. The only question is how much of that discrimination (and what categories) are embodied in our legal frameworks and in our social mores.

    6. Re:Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OF COURSE it's all bullshit. I could not agree more strongly.

      It's just another example of how the right wing in the US has to pander to the anti-intellectualism that they've fostered for decades amongst their base. Does anyone here really think that every single right wing politician is 100% against abortion, thinks climate change is "a hoax", etc.? I don't believe that for a second. But I do believe that they've done the basic game analysis and said, "If I don't say X, I have zero chance of being nominated or winning, because the base will support someone else or sit home on election day. If I say X, I'm at least in the game, and once nominated I can try to walk it back and chip away at the people in the middle I alienated during the primary."

      All the right wingers in the US do is find ways to trigger the daily two minutes of hate and feed the confirmation bias and tribalism of the extreme portion of their base.

      If enough voters wake up and start saying, "You think you know better than the national science academy of every country on the planet when it comes to climate change? You're not fit for office," then this pandering to the right wing's base will end faster than you can say "bipartisanship".

    7. Re:Nonsense by sjames · · Score: 1

      So those no blacks signs we see in old photos are all airbrushed in?

    8. Re:Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, not nonsense.

      A small business owner could probably drum-up a lot of support (and money) from a sympathetic crowd by publicly proclaiming that they don't want to provide services to gay people, but because they are being FORCED to, their religious beliefs are being violated. (And I think a surprising number of business owners genuinely believe what they're saying, to the point that they're willing to lose money for their beliefs.)

      Even if the small business really doesn't make more money by doing that... they may not lose a lot of money, either. That's part of the problem here. Businesses WON'T go-under for refusing services to persons based on religious beliefs. We already know this from past experiences.

      When a business operates in the U.S., the business must make certain concessions as part of the agreement to operate that business. Serving the public without discriminating based on certain qualities is one of those concessions. This is a well-established concept, and attempts to weaken this concept are inane.

      This is not a distraction. This is a legitimate issue. (And besides, do we think that we really need this religious freedom law? Like, are Christians really a persecuted class in need of protection?)

      By the way, that was pretty glib of you to slip-in that comment that "no one" actually supports legalized discrimination. That's a really nice subtle troll, and I applaud you for managing to smoothly work it into your dialog as if it's a supported fact.

    9. Re:Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No business that likes money and wants to continue making money will be discriminating against anyone.

      Well gosh, it's good to know the whole Jim Crow era was just a figment of my imagination!

    10. Re:Nonsense by hey! · · Score: 1

      Oh, yeah. The rational actor theory. But by the same postulates that underly that theory there should be no human being who eats unhealthy, boozes or gambles excessively, or picks fights he obviously can't win.

      I have an alternative theory which states that going by actual behavior most people discount their future welfare to zero when there's an immediate reward, even a trivial one. It's almost impossible to resist an immediate burst of pleasure a nasty habit's got you hooked, whether it's a relaxing smoke or that glow of self-righteousness you get when you act on your bigotry.

      People will literally kill themselves for a little short-term reward. Forgoing a little profit is nothing compared to that. If you look at places where segregation was historically sanctioned, you'll see you're entirely right: it's economically irrational. That didn't stop people from doing it.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    11. Re:Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Large business certainly do care who you are and what you buy, and your email, personal address, landline number, and cellphone when you want warranted service for that $5000 you bought with a credit card.

    12. Re:Nonsense by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      In fact, there are federal laws that enforce certain types of discrimination. For example arms trade to restricted countries. The people in those countries did not choose to be citizens there yet they are restricted from access to the best of American arms manufacturing. Shame on the U.S. for discriminating.

      Please, please, please say that was a joke.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  26. Republicans are Awesome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Finally, I can write software and demand that it not be used by Republicans or sue my employer over religious freedom laws. For my religious text "No Talent Ass Clown's Manual" :

    Thou shalt not write ones nor zeros for leaders who have passed religious freedom laws.

    And that, my fellow Ass Clowns of Zero Talent, is God's word.

  27. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Not a fag by any stretch (don't even like seeing dudes in my porn), but a Pagan. Religion is protected by the first amendment. Not only Christian Protestant religions, but MINE TOO! These laws allow the Protestants (Catholics aren't, on average, even as closed minded as these fuckers) to trample over my Religious Freedoms, which by their very definition goes against the First Amendment. Fuck you! Fuck the Horse you Rode In On! And Fuck your Mother and Father for even conceiving your happy ass! You do not have the right to infringe on my freedoms you stupid fuck!

  28. Stop buying Apple products by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Companies like Apple are turning America in hell...

  29. Different conceptions of harm? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think something irreligious non-libertarians miss in these discussions is the notion of harm.

    I'm guessing that they see clear harm to a gay person in having a business refuse to perform a particular service for them.

    But they see no harm in forcing a religious person to choose between being faithful to God and making their living.

    In reality, gay people can usually find another place to get a cake decorated, and religious people can actually write the requested message on a cake. But irreligious people are making the value judgment that the former is less tolerable than the latter.

    As far as I can tell, that prioritization is itself a religious judgment. It's saying that it's more wrong to refuse to blaspheme, than to blaspheme. That strikes me as very much an Enlightenment era notion of morality.

    1. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by Imazalil · · Score: 1

      It's fun to make this just bout a cake. But what happens when all on staff nurses/doctors in an ER refuse to help 'the gay' or the local utility company - aka someone with a monopoly - decides that they won't deal with 'them' at all?

      What about state/municipal services. It's not too far fetched to think that all the clerks in the whatever-departments-hands-out-business-licenses would refuse a gay person services so that they could start their own gay-friendly bakery.

    2. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by jittles · · Score: 1

      I think something irreligious non-libertarians miss in these discussions is the notion of harm.

      I'm guessing that they see clear harm to a gay person in having a business refuse to perform a particular service for them.

      But they see no harm in forcing a religious person to choose between being faithful to God and making their living.

      In reality, gay people can usually find another place to get a cake decorated, and religious people can actually write the requested message on a cake. But irreligious people are making the value judgment that the former is less tolerable than the latter.

      As far as I can tell, that prioritization is itself a religious judgment. It's saying that it's more wrong to refuse to blaspheme, than to blaspheme. That strikes me as very much an Enlightenment era notion of morality.

      Now replace every instance of "gay person" with "black person" or "religious person" and ask people how they would feel on the subject. There is absolutely no reason to treat these law abiding citizens as second class citizens in places of business.

    3. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      I agree, it's a slippery slope. I'm not sure what the right answer is.

    4. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 2

      There is absolutely no reason to treat these law abiding citizens as second class citizens in places of business.

      I think you're perhaps missing part of my point.

      I agree entirely that there are downsides to allowing business owners to make such distinctions. The point about black Americans is very valid.

      But my point was that your dismissing a certain notion of harm, as perceived by religious persons. They consider themselves to be held accountable to God for their choices.

      You're correctly arguing that gay people suffer a certain kind of harm by a business refusing to do a certain kind of business on their behalf. I'm saying that you're dismissing the harm done to religious persons by demanding them to violate their consciences and/or their obedience to God (on their view).

    5. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by jittles · · Score: 2

      There is absolutely no reason to treat these law abiding citizens as second class citizens in places of business.

      I think you're perhaps missing part of my point.

      I agree entirely that there are downsides to allowing business owners to make such distinctions. The point about black Americans is very valid.

      But my point was that your dismissing a certain notion of harm, as perceived by religious persons. They consider themselves to be held accountable to God for their choices.

      You're correctly arguing that gay people suffer a certain kind of harm by a business refusing to do a certain kind of business on their behalf. I'm saying that you're dismissing the harm done to religious persons by demanding them to violate their consciences and/or their obedience to God (on their view).

      Hmmm. Which part of the bible would serving a gay person violate? The part that says love your neighbor as yourself, love the sinner but hate the sin, do unto others as you would have them do unto you, or the judge not lest you be judged part?

    6. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      Encouraging them in their sinful behavior. A gay wedding is a celebration, which I take as an affirmation that the thing being celebrated is good and worth of encouragement.

      On some Christians' view, that's like having a celebration of giving a 6 year old a loaded gun. It puts them and those around them at heightened risk of death.

    7. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nurse here.

      If at any time your sexual preferences become an objective fact to me, I will absolutely refuse to provide care, gay or hetero or otherwise. Sometimes it's being discriminatory. Others its you injecting your sexuality where it doesn't belong.

      Unless you agree also to indulge my fetish for short girls with large butts with you, keep your sexuality to yourself.

      Also, since the medical community has already had to contend with eugenics previously, it's standard practice for any medical staff to be able to refuse any care on moral or religious grounds.

      See how that works?

    8. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by jittles · · Score: 1

      Encouraging them in their sinful behavior. A gay wedding is a celebration, which I take as an affirmation that the thing being celebrated is good and worth of encouragement.

      On some Christians' view, that's like having a celebration of giving a 6 year old a loaded gun. It puts them and those around them at heightened risk of death.

      Last time I went to a wedding the photographers, caterers and other workers were not celebrating anything. They were in no way supporting or encouraging the people in their activities. The workers have absolutely no control over the celebrators actions. You're not actively making them gay or less gay. You're just pointing a camera. I don't think any rational person assumes that a person passing out cake at a wedding is in open support of the married couple. In fact, one would assume that if they knew the married couple, they would be celebrating the wedding, and not working it. That's just absurd.

    9. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But they see no harm in forcing a religious person to choose between being faithful to God and making their living.

      Last I checked no one was putting a gun to their head and forcing them to be in a particular line of work. And the Republican party, which supports this bill, takes a very blase attitude about people being unable to make a living in other circumstances. Republicans do not demonstrate this sort of concern for people with injuries or disabilities that *literally* prevent them from making their living, but we're supposed to believe that they are suddenly a bunch of bleeding hearts where it concerns people who do not want to do certain work because of religious reasons? Please.

      As far as I can tell, that prioritization is itself a religious judgment.

      It doesn't strike me that way at all. This sort of legislation rapidly leads down a very ugly rabbit hole: either the government accepts "It's my religion!" as an excuse for any violation of law, or the government starts defining what religions are real and what religions aren't. One does not have to strain very hard (particularly if one is familiar with Indiana's culture) to imagine someone claiming their religious beliefs forbid them from selling to black people -- are we going to support that and usher in a new Jim Crow era? Or are we going to expect the government to step in and say "Oh, no, *your* religion isn't real, so it doesn't count"? Surely people who value a strong defense of freedom of religion can see the perils in government being able to define what is a real religion.

      The reality is that the above and other arguments make a very strong case for defining freedom of religion as: You have the right to believe whatever you wish, and no one (not even the government) has the right to force you to believe otherwise or to practice a religion that is counter to your beliefs. Beyond this -- to say that reality must be forced to conform to your beliefs or that your beliefs are a defense for violating the law -- lies madness.

      Finally, if I may, a litmus test: Do you think a Jehovah's Witness or Christian Scientist should be allowed to practice medicine while refusing to perform procedures that violate their beliefs?

    10. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's has little to do with harm per se. It is certain people having a sense of entitlement to goods or services, which in my experience seems to reside mostly with the left.

      It's not even a question of discrimination, as long as you discriminate for the right reasons and against the right groups. Campus bake sale charging white males more? Perfectly acceptable. Women's only gyms? Also perfectly acceptable.

      The notion of demanding service from people against their judgement or morals is obscene, regardless if society judges those reasons as acceptable or not.

      For Mr. Cook to couch this as a religious issue is laughable when Apple restricts its products to select vendors.

      Oh but insuring Apple has price uniformity is far more important than religious beliefs.

    11. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      I don't think any rational person assumes ...

      I disagree. I think that some rational persons, in particular many religious persons, consider themselves accountable to God for all symbolic activity in which they engage.

      This view is supported in the New Testament in 2 Corinthians 5:20, which calls Christians to be ambassadors for Christ. Engaging in a form of symbolism is an act of speech.

      The Old Testament / Hebrew bible is full of strictures against engaging in symbolic support of claims that the Lord is not in charge of everything and worthy of exclusive worship.

      Thought experiments involving role-reversal are useful for everyone in this kind of discussion. Would you consider it okay for the law to compel a Muslim-owned advertising company to write "Islam is wrong. Mohamed was a militant con artist" all over a city's billboards? If not, why not?

      Or would be okay, on your view, to force a Jewish-owned movie-making company to produce and promote a movie claiming that the Jews had it coming in the Holocaust, if it could somehow be shown in court that the submitted script was a guaranteed money-maker for them?

      My contention is that some Christians consider writing messages counter to their theology to be objectionable in the same way. And that the very debate about whether or not it's sufficiently a matter of compelled religious speech is itself a question whose answer depends on one's religious viewpoint.

    12. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by jittles · · Score: 1

      I disagree. I think that some rational persons, in particular many religious persons, consider themselves accountable to God for all symbolic activity in which they engage.

      This view is supported in the New Testament in 2 Corinthians 5:20, which calls Christians to be ambassadors for Christ. Engaging in a form of symbolism is an act of speech.

      The Old Testament / Hebrew bible is full of strictures against engaging in symbolic support of claims that the Lord is not in charge of everything and worthy of exclusive worship.

      Thought experiments involving role-reversal are useful for everyone in this kind of discussion. Would you consider it okay for the law to compel a Muslim-owned advertising company to write "Islam is wrong. Mohamed was a militant con artist" all over a city's billboards? If not, why not?

      Or would be okay, on your view, to force a Jewish-owned movie-making company to produce and promote a movie claiming that the Jews had it coming in the Holocaust, if it could somehow be shown in court that the submitted script was a guaranteed money-maker for them?

      My contention is that some Christians consider writing messages counter to their theology to be objectionable in the same way. And that the very debate about whether or not it's sufficiently a matter of compelled religious speech is itself a question whose answer depends on one's religious viewpoint.

      I don't think any rational person assumes ...

      I disagree. I think that some rational persons, in particular many religious persons, consider themselves accountable to God for all symbolic activity in which they engage.

      This view is supported in the New Testament in 2 Corinthians 5:20, which calls Christians to be ambassadors for Christ. Engaging in a form of symbolism is an act of speech.

      The Old Testament / Hebrew bible is full of strictures against engaging in symbolic support of claims that the Lord is not in charge of everything and worthy of exclusive worship.

      Thought experiments involving role-reversal are useful for everyone in this kind of discussion. Would you consider it okay for the law to compel a Muslim-owned advertising company to write "Islam is wrong. Mohamed was a militant con artist" all over a city's billboards? If not, why not?

      Or would be okay, on your view, to force a Jewish-owned movie-making company to produce and promote a movie claiming that the Jews had it coming in the Holocaust, if it could somehow be shown in court that the submitted script was a guaranteed money-maker for them?

      My contention is that some Christians consider writing messages counter to their theology to be objectionable in the same way. And that the very debate about whether or not it's sufficiently a matter of compelled religious speech is itself a question whose answer depends on one's religious viewpoint.

      Oh I see. So creating a wedding cake that has two men on the top instead of a man and a woman is the same as plastering billboards all over town that degrade a religion? Or the same as making a movie in favor of the holocaust? You're just showing the fact that you're not being rational about the situation.

      2 Corinthians 5:19 says that you should not be holding peoples sins against them. The next verse does not say that you are allowed to treat sinners as second class citizens. In fact, the message of Jesus Chris says the exact opposite. So how do you construe that verse into allowing discrimination? Some people believe that black people are sinners - that their skin is the curse and taint of Cain. Does that mean that I can use 2 Corinthians 5:20 to avoid doing business with them because they're black? No. The verse says that you should be an ambassador of Christ. The same Christ who went to lepers, to prostitutes, and other second class citizens of the bible and healed them. Did all of those people become his followers? No. But he di

    13. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      In reality, gay people outside of large Metropolitan areas will indeed be unable to get a cake decorated. Because Jane's wedding shop is not decorating "gay" cakes, Sue's wedding shop, who is providing "gay" cakes will be out of business very soon, as only gays will do business there. The rest of the population goes to virtuous Jane and will leave Satan Sue without much business. So soon there will be no cake to have, nor eat, for gay people. Tyranny of the majority.

    14. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      I see most of your point.

      But by this ruling, no Christian cake baker anywhere in the country (or in that district? I forget the scope of the court) has the freedom to avoid this act of compelled religious speech and still make their living.

      This was my original point: there's an argument over what constitutes harm. I think irreligious people are inclined to not see this as a matter of forced blashphemy, or to not care. Some religious people, depending on their theology, are inclined to see it as such, and to have a big problem with it. I.e., the two sides see the debate as being very differently framed.

    15. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      I don't think you're calm enough to have this discussion at the moment.

    16. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      As far as I can tell, that prioritization is itself a religious judgment. It's saying that it's more wrong to refuse to blaspheme, than to blaspheme. That strikes me as very much an Enlightenment era notion of morality.

      Anti-discrimination laws discriminate against discriminators in the same way that anti-rape laws discrimiante against rapists.

      It is indeed a moral judgement.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    17. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      But my point was that your dismissing a certain notion of harm, as perceived by religious persons. They consider themselves to be held accountable to God for their choices.

      But unless they can prove to non-religious people that God exists, that is a meaningless argument. It's like me thinking aliens are sending me coded messages about the Apocalypse in the TV supermarket ads.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    18. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by camazotz · · Score: 1

      That's a tough call, but we're running into an interesting wall here. If their beliefs make them call into question their own conscience and morality for associating with or condoning gay behavior, but other secular beliefs strongly condemn those who would use an arbitrary religious proscription for conduct, then who wins here? Ultimately, the group that is actually correct in their assessment should prevail. At least partially because I strongly condemn abuse, and the religious faith of these individuals is abusive....not only to gay people, but to the believers themselves for forcing them into such terrible ethical fictions. It's back to the parable of the flying spaghetti monster all over again: you are establishing a precedent based on a truth that only you can assert, for which no reality outside of your mental construct exists. You have put yourself into this conundrum, and it is the right of all others to question why we should support your own self-abuse, especially if it then spills out and affects others.

    19. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by camazotz · · Score: 1

      There is absolutely no reason to treat these law abiding citizens as second class citizens in places of business.

      I think you're perhaps missing part of my point.

      I agree entirely that there are downsides to allowing business owners to make such distinctions. The point about black Americans is very valid.

      But my point was that your dismissing a certain notion of harm, as perceived by religious persons. They consider themselves to be held accountable to God for their choices.

      You're correctly arguing that gay people suffer a certain kind of harm by a business refusing to do a certain kind of business on their behalf. I'm saying that you're dismissing the harm done to religious persons by demanding them to violate their consciences and/or their obedience to God (on their view).

      Hmmm. Which part of the bible would serving a gay person violate? The part that says love your neighbor as yourself, love the sinner but hate the sin, do unto others as you would have them do unto you, or the judge not lest you be judged part?

      Damn your response was much better than mine.

    20. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by camazotz · · Score: 1

      Heightened risk of death.....hyperbole, or care to elaborate on just how a gay wedding leads to heightened risk of death?

    21. Re:Different conceptions of harm? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      I think you've got a good point. It's interesting to read through your post and see which of your conclusions are supported without the presumption of the falsity of the religious beliefs in question.

      We at least agree on one point: whichever beliefs are actually correct ought to triumph. But the problem, to which I think you alluded, is that we're looking for a form of governance which is workable even when we cannot come to an agreement about whose world view is actually correct.

      It's a frustrating problem to be sure. Each world view entails some notions of what's a just government. And while we'd like to be considerate of people holding views different than our own, we can't get around the need to have some particular form of governance. And that's guaranteed to violate someone's conscience, unless we all happen to be on the same page, which just isn't going to happen.

  30. Here's the thing by Totenglocke · · Score: 0, Troll

    Everyone discriminates. You choose physical / personality traits that you require in someone to date / marry / have sex with. You choose your hobbies, bands, etc. You say "I love McDonald's" or "I hate White Castle". EVERYONE DISCRIMINATES.

    Business owners are supposed to (and used to) have the right to refuse service to anyone that they didn't want to work with. Then with the Civil Rights movement, they decided that for blacks to have equal rights, business owners had to lose their rights (yeah, I don't get the logic either). This issue came up recently with the cases of both a photographer and a baker being forced, under threat of fine and jail, to work for gay couples getting married when the business owners were against gay marriage for religious reasons. This law was written because of the fact that other governments in the country have been forcing people to work for others against their will. If people didn't have to be afraid of being forced to do something they find immoral, then there wouldn't have been demand for a law to protect them from it.

    Instead of just allowing businesses to operate how they want and customers deciding who succeeds and who doesn't (can you imagine how fast Walmart or McDonald's would go out of business if they put up "No blacks allowed" signs?), people want to decide that by opening a business, you lose any right to decide how you live your life and who you associate with. It's idiotic, to say the least. The only reason that people currently are opposed to the "religious freedom" law is because they don't like THAT religious view. However, when this law is used to allow a black business owner to tell KKK members to go to hell and he won't serve them, maybe you'll realize that it's a two-way street.

    --
    "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    1. Re:Here's the thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. I am opposed to the "religious freedom" law because it protects the right to discriminated against protected characteristics.
      http://www.equalityhumanrights.com/private-and-public-sector-guidance/guidance-all/protected-characteristics

      They are protected because generally they are characteristics that the person has no say over; that is why is it always unfair, immoral and wrong to discriminate against gay people. No-one has any right to find serving gay people immoral.

      Everyone discriminates - they have preferences, yes. But to discriminate against someone because of a characteristic they have no control over is bigoted and wrong. That's not my opinion - it's a simple fact.

      Now, of course there are conflicts of interest - religion is a protected characteristic (while it is something people can choose, the fact that their family and community may have assigned them a religion at birth means essentially they do not) which may have problems with gay people - so it gets complicated. This laws does not help that situation - it gives 'religions' more rights than 'gays'.

    2. Re:Here's the thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your rights ends where my feelings begin.

    3. Re:Here's the thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you have no problem with the only ambulance company in town adopting a "no queers" policy? Or maybe the Teamsters saying "We ain't hauling shit for no god damn Jews"? Where do you draw the line between "Religious freedom" and good old-fashioned persecution?

    4. Re:Here's the thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >(yeah, I don't get the logic either).
      That's because you are retarded and don't actually know anything about history.

    5. Re:Here's the thing by u38cg · · Score: 1

      Let me guess. Straight white male?

      --
      [FUCK BETA]
    6. Re:Here's the thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      can you imagine how fast Walmart or McDonald's would go out of business if they put up "No blacks allowed" signs?

      In 2014? Yeah, they wouldn't last very long. In 1964? They'd probably do just fine.

      Now, replace "No blacks allowed" with "No gays allowed". In 2014 would this kill a business? No, they'd probably get by. But in 2064? They won't last very long (I'm hoping).

      Without the government stepping in an forcing businesses to do the right thing, Jim Crow would probably still be around today and without the government saying you cannot discriminate against homosexuals today, there will likely still be discrimination tomorrow. And that should look as ugly tomorrow (and now) as racism looks to (most of) us today.

      On a side note: I just don't understand the religious issues with gays. So, because some old reference in the bible condemns the act, therefore it is intolerable then, now, and forever? There are many references condemning usury in the bible, but apparently that's completely fine now. Strange how things go isn't it? Actually, no, not really.

    7. Re:Here's the thing by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      A government is different from a private company. It's sad that I have to point that out. A private business that chooses to be assholes will not stay in business for long unless they happen to be located in a very bigoted part o the world.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    8. Re:Here's the thing by Totenglocke · · Score: 0

      You mean the most discriminated against group in the US? Let's check all of those discrimination laws saying things like anyone but a straight, white male gets priority for getting into college...or priority for getting a job...gets special scholarships, etc.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    9. Re:Here's the thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a difference between declining to do a thing and discriminating against the person. If you say "I refuse to create greeting cards celebrating circumcisions because I believe it is morally wrong" and you have a greeting card company, then you're violating the ideas behind the recent decisions in how California laws apply.

      Other states have realized that courts tend to follow the trends of other courts even where precedent isn't binding unless the state laws explicitly specify a different choice. Thus, you have states reacting to California's new law interpretations by creating laws that never needed to exist before.

      California courts have apparently decided that being gay is something that society must not only accept, but actively endorse.

      As a baker, it is not sufficient that you make cakes like you make for everyone else, you must now create cakes that feature an endorsement of gay marriage or you're in violation of the law.

      Imagine you're a doctor who believes circumcision is morally wrong, but the law now required you to perform that operation on defenseless children anyway. Wouldn't you want a law to preserve your right to refuse to do take an action you've never taken before because of your moral objection, no matter how many people in society disagree with you?

      Imagine you're a painter and you live in Spain where bull-fighting is considered morally acceptable. How would you feel if you were forced by a new interpretation of the law to create paintings endorsing bullfights?

      I have no objection to the idea that society should try to prevent discrimination where it means that you offer the same services to everyone regardless of their physical characteristics. I think the step of forcing people to perform a special activity they find morally objectionable goes too far.

      California is like that destructive kid in school with the ultra-involved mother. They force everyone to create extra rules just to prevent the crazy from spreading.

    10. Re:Here's the thing by u38cg · · Score: 1

      Wow. Enjoy being clueless, son. Clue: those things exist for a reason.

      --
      [FUCK BETA]
  31. Replace "religion" with "social justice"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Replace "religion" with "social justice" in your comment, and it still makes exactly the same point.

    The pro-homosexuality tyrants are just as bad as the anti-homosexuality tyrants, and vice versa.

    Both exhibit a total lack of tolerance, just about different things.

    Both also exhibit discriminatory tendencies, just toward different things.

    Those of us who aren't on either side of this think it's all pretty fucking pathetic.

    1. Re: Replace "religion" with "social justice"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The smartest answernin the whole bunch!

    2. Re:Replace "religion" with "social justice"... by dave420 · · Score: 1

      People are born gay, whereas no one is born religious. That fact alone means your desperate attempt to paint this as bad is completely devoid of any logical basis.

      The fact you think social justice is bad makes you look like a scared, tiny-minded child who feels threatened by anyone who is not like you. Social justice includes things like not being a sexist muppet, not hating on gay folks simply because they exist, and not being a racist. If you find fault with those ideas, you might want to get some help.

  32. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by Needs2BeSaid · · Score: 0

    Abuse is a matter of perspective. Anyone can claim any action (or inaction) is a form of abuse.

    --
    Some things need to be said...
  33. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Lol, idiot much? Religion is NOT protected in the constitution, as a matter of fact the founding fathers try their best to EXCLUDE religion from all government affairs and ensure that there is no discrimination based on faith. Also, the first amendment is about protecting your freedom of expression. Noone is trying to get that from you, just get keep your barbaric traditions from public spaces you worthless piece of ignorant scum

  34. I think it's very clear... by LoyalOpposition · · Score: 1

    I think it's very clear that the only way to ensure tolerance is that we have to make people practice toleration. We have to force people to sell things to people they don't want to sell to, lend things to people they don't want to lend to, allow patronage to people that they don't want as patrons, accept donations from people they don't want as doners, and, in general, to let any protected class to have any transaction that they desire. I think it behooves us to make government bureaucracies that enforces tolerance. I think that no intolerant person should be permitted to be on the bureaucracy, because otherwise intolerance will creep in, which will allow intolerant people to do intolerant things. In fact, that's true of all government. No unprotected class should be permitted to hold any office in the legislature, executive, or judiciary. Those people are intolerant, and we can't allow their intolerant beliefs to pass intolerant laws, enforce intolerant acts, or made intolerant decisions. Only the tolerant people should be able to force their views on others. The intolerant people have views that can be dismissed out of hand. Those views shouldn't be allowed a forum in the media, on the internet, or anywhere in public. Only tolerant views are permissible. Tolerant views should be mandatory, and anything not mandatory should be forbidden.

    ~Loyal

    --
    I aim to misbehave.
    1. Re:I think it's very clear... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're jesting (and not very good at it--don't quitcher dayjob), but there is actually something to this. This is the same essential problem with the BSD vs GPL license zealots. I come down on the side of the GPL for the simple reason that without "freedom zero" the BSD code will be much more vulnerable to, if not inevitably overtaken by, the kind of behavior Theo de Raadt complained about vis-a-vis corporate uptake of OpenSSH.

      Furthermore, you are committing a fallacy here by saying that we must tolerate discrimination. Toleration is a method, not a belief; intolerant beliefs are not a method. This is akin to saying "Logical, rational people must accept irrational epistemological methods, or they're not being logical and rational and they're hypocrites!" See the problem yet?

    2. Re:I think it's very clear... by LoyalOpposition · · Score: 1

      (and not very good at it--don't quitcher dayjob)

      My post was intended for those who understand satire.

      I come down on the side of the GPL for the simple reason that without "freedom zero" the BSD code will be much more vulnerable to, if not inevitably overtaken by, the kind of behavior Theo de Raadt complained about vis-a-vis corporate uptake of OpenSSH.

      Freedom zero is needed because of the length and strength of copyright and trade secret (and to some extent, patent). If those were eliminated or severely limited then freedom zero would be superfluous.

      See the problem yet?

      No, because it's entirely logical for me to tolerate intolerant people--by allowing them to sell cakes only to heterosexuals, for example. But it's contradictory for a logical person to use illogical inferences.

      ~Loyal

      --
      I aim to misbehave.
    3. Re:I think it's very clear... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't see the parallels, do you? Put it this way: Freedom Zero is one specialized case of "your right to swing your fist ends where your neighbor's face begins."

      I can see a whole lot of disingenuous bullshit about this law upthread, a gaggle of Randroid "but but but MUH FREE MARKET" and "the invisible middle finger of capitalism will solve this." No, no it won't. 100+ years of anti-black discrimination after the civil war and the Free Market didn't make things better for blacks.

      The disingenuousness here is the bald-faced, slimy-mouthed, god-damned LIE that every group has an equal chance and equal economic, political, etc. clout. They do not. They demonstrably do not. We have "protected classes" because, without this type of Freedom Zero, sneaky sons of bitches like this will de facto exclude them from participation in economic and civil life even though de jure this is illegal, as they will simply find passive-aggressive ways to do it. Like what happened between the end of the Civil War and the passage of the Civil Rights act.

    4. Re:I think it's very clear... by camazotz · · Score: 1

      Interestingly you sound like a real, actual Christian there.

  35. This is why laws are the wrong solution by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    I think this issue illustrates perfectly why laws are the wrong solution to the problem of prejudice. You cannot legislate people's morals and, where the law deviates from their moral beliefs, they will find a way around it. The way to tackle these sorts of issues is through education: you cannot just tell someone that discriminating against person X because they do, or are, Y is wrong you have to give them the full picture and let them come to that conclusion on their own - or sadly not as the case may be.

    Obviously this takes time but ultimately it leads to a long lasting, more fundamental change in society and is far more effective than trying to force someone to behave in a particular way through threats of imprisonment or fines. All the latter does is makes (figurative) martyrs to the cause and further strengthens the resolve of those who disagree with the law making the problem worse, not better. If you disagree think of a law closer to Slashdot's field: copyright. Many see nothing morally wrong with format shifting material which is legally purchased and yet many a nation's law say otherwise. Has that affected your moral beliefs and/or your behaviour when it comes to format shifting?

  36. WWJD by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Well, Jesus ate with lepers... and unlike them, the gay ain't infectious...

    But then again, how could I expect Jesus to be considered a role model by bigoted assholes?

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:WWJD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, Jesus ate with lepers... and unlike them, the gay ain't infectious...

      But then again, how could I expect Jesus to be considered a role model by bigoted assholes?

      Jesus CLEANSED lepers. What about gays? Oh wait, Romans 1 states the homosexuality is a possible symptom of an inward rebellion against God. I guess gays don't want to be "cured". And that's great, good for them; but I don't need THEM, telling ME, what to believe or how to act.

    2. Re:WWJD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How exactly does someone rebel against an omniscient, omnipotent, eternal, time-transcendent, absolutely-sovereign God? Romans has a lot of problems with this too, not to mention its false analogy with clay pots. The entire thing is incoherent.

      But do go on, explain to me how there can even be human free will in the presence of a God with the above attributes.

    3. Re:WWJD by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      But you feel entitled to tell people how they should act and whether they should grovel in front of your imaginary buddy?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  37. Re: Does this law protect puppies? by nedlohs · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You are ignoring that homosexuality is between consenting adults (the type that is legal anyway - homosexual rape isn't legal for example). Whereas bestiality and pedophilia are not. Which is a pretty significant difference making your "only difference" claim absurd.

  38. Message bodies in the subject by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Are stupid.

  39. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by seepho · · Score: 1

    I'm glad that what you feel "Needs2BeSaid" doesn't require any fact checking.

  40. Time to bring freedom to the USA by johanw · · Score: 0

    And free the population of the religious oppression. Hey,that worked well in the middle east as well, didn't it? Now it's time for the ISA to be bombed.

  41. How about freedom for all? by Maltheus · · Score: 1

    I've always believed that gay people should be free to live the way they want and that they shouldn't have to ask anyone's permission to get married. I also believe that people should be free not to associate with them (or anybody else), if they'd prefer.

    If everyone is required to think the same way, they you're not actually free. It seems though, that many people have a passionate desire to save bigots from their own bad business decisions, and would rather just give them their money blindly, without making the decision to shop elsewhere on their own. If businesses want to attempt to discriminate, in this day and age, then let them try and watch them go out of business. Prevent them from discriminating and all you're doing is saving them from themselves.

    1. Re:How about freedom for all? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      no, you do NOT DESERVE any such 'freedom' to hate people based solely on a religious reason.

      the idea of civil rights was to step in when businesses were NOT self-policing. time and time again, business owners do the wrong thing (they think they are gods and untouchable) and when society finally gets pissed off enough, then laws are enacted to force bad actors to behave.

      except, in this case, they went the wrong way. it was not the will of the people, but the will of a very small minority who demands that everyone play by their 2000 year old set of rules; or at least how they think those rules should be understood and followed.

      you know what's right and what's wrong. we don't have to teach you that. you know, in your heart, that discrimination like this is very wrong; but you use some twisted congnative dissonance to convince yourself that its 'a form of freedom to be able to hate anyone you want'. I guess it is, but there's a bright line between hating someone for their belief system and denying them service in a public store or setting. you can hate them all you want - till the cows come home. that's your freedom right there. you are not forced to party with them, befriend them, marry them or go to church with them. that's all allowed in a free society.

      but the line stands when you deny them basic rights. it does not take much for a small town to band together and LOCK OUT sales of goods to people who are different from them. and this is exactly where we are headed if this set of laws is allowed to stand.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    2. Re:How about freedom for all? by LaurenCates · · Score: 1

      I find that my opinion on the matter is increasingly unpopular: I say, let 'em tell us who they are. Don't make it hard for me to come to the realization that you aren't someone I want to do business with. Make it perfectly clear why I shouldn't give you my money. Make my life easy and spare me the time to do research if I should feel it's necessary. Since I hate surprises, don't let them hide something that might shock or irritate me.

      Granted, while I think "religious freedom" laws are likely unconstitutional (or at least, ethically and morally questionable), I kind of don't mind that certain groups are feeling a little freer to tell me why I should take my business elsewhere.

      --
      Some people don't believe in fairies. I don't believe in The Patriarchy.
    3. Re:How about freedom for all? by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      That's all very well until you open a business.

      Privately you can believe what you want, but if you run a business you have to follow various rules - for example, signs saying "no blacks" are typically frowned upon. As it happens, currently "no gays" is actually not illegal (making the indiana bigotry law unnecessary anyway).

      You're not required to think the same way, you're just required to follow a certain set of minimum criteria when running a business that interacts with the public.

    4. Re:How about freedom for all? by Maltheus · · Score: 1

      Since everybody is required to do business to survive, you're effectively saying that nobody has rights. Where in the Constitution does it say that we lose them when engaging in business? I can accept that for corporations, who are making a bargain in exchange for limited liability, but not for partnerships and proprietorships.

    5. Re:How about freedom for all? by Maltheus · · Score: 1

      Civil rights was, first and foremost, about repealing laws that mandated discrimination. Businesses couldn't "self-police" back then because it wasn't even legal. Most businesses only care about the color green.

    6. Re:How about freedom for all? by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      Since everybody is required to do business to survive, you're effectively saying that nobody has rights. Where in the Constitution does it say that we lose them when engaging in business? I can accept that for corporations, who are making a bargain in exchange for limited liability, but not for partnerships and proprietorships.

      Well Citizens United says that corporations are people, so really there's no distinction.

      Either you agree with the civil rights act or you don't, but the fact remains that it is in place to ensure that the "every man is equal" part of the constitution is upheld, hence the inability of a business to turn away black people. What this bill seeks to do is ensure that if homosexuality becomes a protected class that business owners who are bigoted won't be sued.

      Also, your first sentence is a huge, huge non-sequitur. There is no "requirement to do business" to survive - you can work for someone else if you want to, and even have your religious beliefs upheld (for example, if you work in a store you can ask to not handle pork as a Jew or a Muslim). The fact that you think that if a bill specifically designed to protect religious people's ability to discriminate is removed means that "none of us have freedom" is just laughable.

  42. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Shakrai · · Score: 3, Informative
    --
    I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
    We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
  43. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by random+coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Its so clear then please point out in the constitution where it says "separation of church and state." I'll wait go and find it.

    Having trouble finding it? Here is a link to the constitution I'm still waiting for where "separation of church and state" in the constitution. When you find it let me know how that is more clear than "Shall Not Be Infringed" in the second. Oh you think its in the Bill of Rights well go look and let me know where. Show me the quote.

    Conversely you can let me know how respecting the religious views of others (i.e. not " prohibiting the free exercise thereof") is Congress making a "law respecting an establishment of religion."

    If you ask very nicely I may actually tell you where the phrase "separation of church and state" comes from, but if/when I do the whole quote will undermine your beliefs.

  44. Exactly where does it protect discrimination? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, among all this fracas, can someone where this actually enabled discrimination?

    Also, show of hands, how many knew that 20 or so other states already have the same or very similar law on teh books, and that Clinton signed the same law on the federal level.

    Anyone? Anyone?

    How them puppet strings feel?

  45. So doe sthis mean I can... by Moof123 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So does this mean that as an anti-theist I can refuse service to those who practice religion?

    As a Pastafarian can I refuse to serve noodles to those not wearing a colander?

    As a Dude-ist can I refuse service to those that don't abide?

    Seriously, I am curious to know how much these wingnuts have thought about the possibility that non-Christians might use this crap against them. Imagine the uproar is a Halal butcher turned away some Catholics, or a Jewish deli turned away some Baptists on religious grounds. Faux News would have an outrage-gasm.

    1. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Straif · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I would say go ahead. Refuse to service whoever you want for whatever reason you want, it's your right and should remain your right whether you run a business or not.

      Unless you are using the government to restrict others from competing against you, if you choose to be intolerant of any group then someone will most likely come along to provide a similar service to those you exclude. If enough people find your actions offensive than your new competitor will most likely run you out of business. That's the way things are suppose to work. The markets will usually find an answer unless the government steps in to prevent them.

      --
      Of course that's just my opinion...... you could be wrong!
    2. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by LoyalOpposition · · Score: 1

      Seriously, I am curious to know how much these wingnuts have thought about the possibility that non-Christians might use this crap against them. Imagine the uproar is a Halal butcher turned away some Catholics, or a Jewish deli turned away some Baptists on religious grounds. Faux News would have an outrage-gasm.

      I'm going to assume that you really meant it when you indicated that you want a serious answer, while realizing I'm on very shaky ground making that assumption...yes. I would permit you the ability to deny doctoring me, feeding me, painting my house, or whatever. You could put up a sign saying, "No Christians need apply" and I would grant you had that right. As far as Fox News goes, yes, I expect them to report it, and I expect that's a very good thing.

      ~Loyal

      --
      I aim to misbehave.
    3. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So does this mean that as an anti-theist I can refuse service to those who practice religion?

      In a word, YES. What is so bad about being free to do what you want? Why should anyone be forced to deal with people they don't like? The sad part is that we need laws like this to protect people from bastards who think that they can enslave anyone who doesn't agree with them.

      It's OKAY if someone uses this "crap" against me, by the way. It's better than the alternative.

    4. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Kohath · · Score: 1

      Can a Jewish deli owner refuse to serve a guy with a swastika tattoo? Why shouldn't he have that choice? Why shouldn't everyone simply be free to choose who they do business with without the government bullying them?

    5. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      when the vast majority of your population is Christian the blow back is barely a fart in the wind. Indiana has about 80% Christians (of various sects). Those other stores couldn't afford to turn away that many and remain in business.

      So its economically feasible to turn away non-Christians and economic suicide to turn away Christians.

    6. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I would say go ahead. Refuse to service whoever you want for whatever reason you want, it's your right and should remain your right whether you run a business or not.

      Jesus fucking Christ. What backwoods school did you go to that didn't teach American History? The rules you're protesting have been the law of the land for 51 years now and somehow we've persevered. Your opinion is wrong. We took a vote and decided, almost half a century ago. You lost.

      Yes, I'm angry. I'm having a hard time believing the among of ignorant bigotry I've seen pouring into Slashdot very recently. Where the hell did you guys come from? Were you here all along, and just recently felt brave enough to come out of your hateful little closet?

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    7. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Maltheus · · Score: 1

      I couldn't find any hate or bigotry in Straif's post, but plenty in yours. Why can't both sides be free to live their own lives?

    8. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is not who you are serving it is what you are supposed to do. You can refuse to make a Cross, Buddah, etc. As a Dude-ist you wont be required to stay sober while blogging. As a Pastafarian you wont have to take off your colander while serving females.
      You won't have to do something you find repulsive. You will have to sell your normal wares to whomever.

    9. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Straif · · Score: 1

      You may be unaware but there are people who live outside of the US, I happen to be one of them.

      I think you also have anger issues since nothing I said implied or stated any bigotry, just an understanding that it's a bad idea to try and regulate behavior. If a person wants to not provide service for someone else I say go ahead because it's not societies job to make you a good person. As long as the government isn't involved with artificially propping you up and creating barriers against competition, if you treat any group of people unfairly the laws of supply and demand will eventually lead to someone else moving in to take up that slack; especially in today's internet age where Amazon or similar companies can get you almost anything next day.

      That's not to say there can't be some laws about how your business operates, but when it comes to choosing clientele that should be left up to the owner and let the people in the community decide if they want to patronize their establishment or not.

      I happen to have a little more faith that in general, communities can fix their own problems if left to themselves but I'm sure your way works well too, since nothing bad has ever happened when big brother decides to put their nose in peoples business.

      --
      Of course that's just my opinion...... you could be wrong!
    10. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 2

      Why can't both sides be free to live their own lives?

      Recently, because of stupid laws like Indiana's RFRA which would prevent a minority chunk of their population from living theirs. "Opposition to bigotry" is not "bigotry".

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    11. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      You may be unaware but there are people who live outside of the US

      So you're not American and you're unfamiliar with American law, but feel compelled to comment on a case involving one particular American state. Allow me to give you a quick introduction: your opinion is explicitly opposed to American case law. Feel free to speculate as much as you'd care to, but understand that from a US point of view, you are completely wrong.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    12. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. If you can make the case in court. Remember the law requires you to prove that your position is a sincerely held one. You're unlikely to be able to to that in these examples.

    13. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Close.

      In Indiana, an anti-theist baker may refuse to create Christian themed cakes, but in California an anti-theist baker must create Christian cakes if asked or be subject to huge fines.

      In Indiana a Pastafarian may refuse to create Passover noodles, but in California a Pastafarian must create them if asked or the business will be bankrupted.

      In Indiana a Dude-ist must ... what does the Dude actually do? I'm pretty sure the Dude already must accept and assist people with the opposite beliefs as part of his own belief. It's a weird belief system, but I can kinda get behind that one. Anybody that loves their rug that way has something going for them I've failed to fully grasp in my own life thus far.

    14. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      Your argument breaks down when enough people find the act of 'inclusion' offensive in its own right. Say I do start a wedding shop that caters for gays somewhere deep in bigot land. Although on the surface I'm serving a larger potential market, the religious bigots will avoid my business as the plague, simply because I also serve a group they don't like. They will also refuse to do business with anyone that dares to shop at my place. Because I'm Satan. Net result, I only get custom from the few gays and libs that dare to confront the majority, and I'm bankrupt in a few months. Status quo is maintained and will not be broken due to the tyranny of the majority. Study segregation a bit to see how this works.

    15. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Moof123 · · Score: 1

      Could a German deli put up a "No Jews Served Here" sign and it be all Kosher?

    16. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Kohath · · Score: 1

      If you believe in freedom for everyone involved, then that means everyone. If you believe in forced association, then you want the Jewish deli owner imprisoned or fined or put out of business for discrimination.

      Or you don't, because you want to pick and choose which discrimination is OK and which isn't -- micromanaging force to be used for whatever whimsical objective you feel good/bad about on a particular day. No one is ever free to choose any different than you. Penalties for unapproved choices will be severe.

    17. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      "Refuse to service whoever you want for whatever reason you want, it's your right and should remain your right whether you run a business or not." so if every business in that town did the same for the same reason the person discriminated against would have to leave the town ?

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    18. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm having a hard time believing the among of ignorant bigotry I've seen pouring into Slashdot very recently. Where the hell did you guys come from?

      I haven't seen any bigotry in these comments, and I think it's disingenuous for you to say so. What I have seen is people arguing for personal freedom - which, yes, some people will use to be bigots. To take a similar example, I certainly don't approve of Holocaust denial, but I believe in free speech nonetheless.

      What I have seen a rise of on Slashdot is unfounded accusations of bigotry, like yours.

    19. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been wondering that very same thing, and hoping that the user numbers would be in the millions and therefore indicate a recent influx of bigots and half wits, but alas. It seems that the arseholes were arseholes all along, they've just become more vocally right wing in recent years, to spite the imagined threat of the feminazis if nothing else.

    20. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      I haven't seen any bigotry in these comments, and I think it's disingenuous for you to say so.

      Arguing that we should have the right not to do business with groups we dislike, which was precisely the excuse given in the 60's by people who didn't blacks in their restaurant, is not-so-thinly veiled bigotry. It's painful listening to those who don't know history trying to repeat it, desperately hoping that this time it will be different and they'll be allowed to show "those people" who's in charge.

      For the record, I'm not black, gay, or liberal. But things like this are exactly the reason why I'm no longer a Republican. I just can't go along willingly with the Attempt Of The Week to make this a hyperconservative theocracy. When someone inevitably comes along and wants to deny my right to fully participate in society, I hope we'll have built the momentum to shut it down.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    21. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If bigotry is the simple action of disagreeing with lifestyle choices (there actually is zero empirical evidence from credible studies proving otherwise), then I'm the biggest bigot alive since I refuse to interact with alcoholics, drug addicts, and gang members. At full disclosure, I am bisexual, and I still don't agree with the manner at which the LGBT goes about "promoting" equality. Furthermore, I also am religious, and I have yet to actually experience any hatred or actual bigotry within the religious groups I interact with when the subject of homosexuality arises (as it does quite frequently with the media attention the subject gets). To say that the religious community, as a whole, is bigoted is nothing more than ad hominem. They could, for the most part, care less if you're homosexual or not. What the religious do have a problem with is the fact that the LGBT movement is hypocritically attempting to force everyone to accept their actions and throw the "bigot" and "intolerant" cards whenever they're met with opposition by those who refuse to support the lifestyle. Refusing to support a lifestyle is not equatable to being a bigot.

      To call the LGBT movement as something on par with the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (despite sexual orientation NOT being a federally protected class) is asinine since there are no civil rights being violated by government or business. Last I checked, you can still be employed and do whatever you want whenever you want (so long as you're acting within legal limits) regardless of sexual orientation. People only care when you start forcing things on them, which is exactly what the LGBT movement sets out to do under the guise of promoting equality (even though equality, for all legal intents, already exists) while claiming that all of religion (and laws protecting religion) is bigoted and opens the gateway to discrimination even though there is no language to even suggest that.

    22. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What language specifically is used in Indiana's legislation that prevents this "minority chuck of their population" from living their lives?

    23. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are either lying about being bi or you are the one single lucky guy who's never had to deal with discrimination. Since you call your own sexual orientation a lifestyle choice, which essentially no LGBT person would agree with, I don't believe a single word you wrote.

      Your attempts to discredit the movement by claiming to be a part of it are transparent and no one is fooled.

    24. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I choose to engage in bisexual activity. I do not choose the chemical attraction. There is a subtle, but important difference. Regardless, not everyone experiences blatant discrimination like those vocal enough about would have you believe. Do I go around flaunting being bisexual? No, because frankly it's not everyone's business and I don't expect everyone to agree with me when I choose to engage in sexual relations with my same gender. Those that I have told don't really care since they were good friends to begin with even though they disapprove when I choose to play around with random guys. When you go around drawing attention to something, that opens the door to discrimination. I don't, therefore I don't experience this blatant hatred and homophobia that everyone else who comments on it seems to experience. It's not luck.

    25. Re:So doe sthis mean I can... by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      You are watching the real faux news. The manure salesmen sold you a big load this time. Read the law - http://www.indystar.com/story/... .

      What it means right now is a muslim deli could be sued for not selling pork products. They can't claim 1st amendment without that law. So why should someone be able to force a business to do something they don't want to? Could give you a gay example. Flower shop. They could have gay clients, sell to them for years. Even discuss it for years. They go to get married. The business owner says - I can't attend the wedding, it's against my religious beliefs. I can sell you the flowers, I just can't be there. Right now they could be sued unless they go against their religious beliefs. Why would you be for using the force of government to make them do what they don't want to? I don't think you would. You were lied to by the media again.

  46. as a religious person by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i am vehemently opposed to these laws. if i was still a business owner, i would slap a big sign on my door that says "All are welcome". just cause you might sin differently than i do, doesn't make it ok for me to treat you differently

    1. Re:as a religious person by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You would permit panhandlers in your establishment?

    2. Re:as a religious person by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      Good for you, though you'll soon find out that your simple act of tolerance will be deemed offensive by the majority of your clientele. Bye-bye business.

  47. Did I miss something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did I miss something? Haven't we been all through this before? Did the Civil Rights Act of 1964 just vanish? It's pretty clear that Federal Law prohibits discrimination. Trying to dress up discrimination as Religious Freedom is farcical.

    1. Re:Did I miss something? by mpercy · · Score: 0

      The Civil Rights Act of 1964 outlawed discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.

      Right or wrong, LGTB is not in there. Nor is LGBTQIA. And certainly not LGBTTQQIIAA (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Transexual, Queer, Questioning, Intersex, Intergender, Asexual, & Allies).

      Nor, for that matter, are fat, tall, short, ugly, smelly, smoker, tattooed, pierced, a protected class under CRA of 1864.

    2. Re:Did I miss something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did I miss something? Haven't we been all through this before? Did the Civil Rights Act of 1964 just vanish? It's pretty clear that Federal Law prohibits discrimination. Trying to dress up discrimination as Religious Freedom is farcical.

      Federal law prohibits discrimination only for a set of certain named circumstances.
      Admittedly those are broadly defined, but there's no "you can't discriminate nowhere in these parts".

    3. Re:Did I miss something? by macs4all · · Score: 1

      Did I miss something? Haven't we been all through this before? Did the Civil Rights Act of 1964 just vanish? It's pretty clear that Federal Law prohibits discrimination. Trying to dress up discrimination as Religious Freedom is farcical.

      That would be true, if Sexual Orientation was a "Protected Class" under the 14th Amendment (or a similar State Statute/Constitutional Amendment); but, at the Federal Level, and at the Indiana State Level, that is not the case.

      In fact, if Indiana would add Sexual Orientation to its State-Constitutional version of the 14th Amendment (don't have time to look it up), like Michigan apparently did, there wouldn't be this kerfluffle.

      But it didn't. And, as long as Mike Pence is in the Governor's office, it won't. He made that abundantly clear yesterday on This Week.

    4. Re:Did I miss something? by EzInKy · · Score: 1

      The Civil Rights Act of 1964 outlawed discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.

      Right or wrong, LGTB is not in there.

      If sex isn't the issue, then what is?

      --
      Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
    5. Re:Did I miss something? by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      The Civil Rights Act of 1964 outlawed discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.

      So, I guess transsexuals have been a protected class for decades because you can't discriminate on the basis of a person's sex :-) Ditto Intersex.

      (actually, the Canadian courts have long held this position, that discrimination based on birth sex is illegal because it's discrimination against someone based on sex.)

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
  48. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by misexistentialist · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How many Eddie Murphy movies should the owner be forced by law to screen?

  49. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The separation of church and state is way more clear in the constitution then wording of the 2nd amendment.

    Actually the separation of church and state bit is a whole lot more vague it originally wasn't vague but interestingly enough they felt that it made the 2nd amendment too vague and changed a lot of the separation of church and state bit in ways to actually strengthen the 2nd amendment. Check out the original text of the 2nd amendment which included a religious exit clause so you didn't have to own guns if you were religious, they changed it so that not only is anyone allowed to own guns but the government can actually force you to own guns even if it goes against your religion.

  50. This is about being accepted - nothing more by bjdevil66 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Gay advocates talk about freedom. They call it the civil rights issue of our time, invoking the Constitution, equal rights, etc. No matter what they say, however, that's all just a legally palatable cover for their real motivation: Feeling normal.

    They just want the gay jokes to disappear. They just want the unspoken snarls or looks of disgust when people see them to vanish. They just want people to pause to gather the PC thing to say in social situations when they find out someone is gay. They'd probably even remove the word gay from the human lexicon altogether if they could. "We're not any different than you."

    The only way that can happen is to completely tamp out any social mores that say that being gay is wrong. "Wrong" has to be made "right". "Immorality" has to be made into "equal rights". That requires rewriting millenia of fundamental religious dogma - and a very heavy, persistent, and fascist jackboot to accomplish it.

    1. Re:This is about being accepted - nothing more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want to be accepted, suing people, attacking their deeply held personal religious beliefs, and legislating against their core morality is not the way to do it.

    2. Re:This is about being accepted - nothing more by jo_ham · · Score: 0

      How did this tripe get moderated "interesting"?

      Unless by "interesting" the moderators felt "so divorced from reality as to be an interesting view into the out of touch mind".

    3. Re:This is about being accepted - nothing more by kqs · · Score: 1

      that's all just a legally palatable cover for their real motivation: Feeling normal.

      Well, that, and they'd kinda like to not be fired from their job because they are gay, beaten (sometimes to death) because they are gay, not be able to adopt because they are gay, be able to inherit from their life partner and be able to make and-of-life decisions for their life partner, etc, etc, etc. But sure. feeling normal is way more important than all that.

    4. Re:This is about being accepted - nothing more by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      However, if you want to change the way you are treated, it's probably the only way.

    5. Re:This is about being accepted - nothing more by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      The only way that can happen is to completely tamp out any social mores that say that being gay is wrong.

      The belief that being gay is wrong is just a social belief. No scientific proof. There are hundreds of species that do the same-sex thing. Heck, when a dog is horny, he'll hump anything of any sex or species that he can get his paws around. If you choose to be offended by what most people feel is normal behavior, you might have a problem. Part of that is probably from the realization that you're no longer in the majority.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    6. Re:This is about being accepted - nothing more by Indigo · · Score: 1

      Uh. Yeah. Being a cunt, nigger, faggot or kike hasn't worked too well historically, either. So, what exactly do you suggest?

    7. Re:This is about being accepted - nothing more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You realize that we've heard that exact same argument before, in the 1960s, only with "gay" replaced by "black", don't you?

    8. Re:This is about being accepted - nothing more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sex is for making babies. Gays can't do that and defy a natural order. End of subject.

    9. Re:This is about being accepted - nothing more by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      Sex is for making babies. Gays can't do that and defy a natural order. End of subject.

      So let me get this straight - the only time people should have sex is if you want to have a baby and it's the right time in the woman's cycle?

      If you expect anyone to believe that, you're crazier than me!

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    10. Re:This is about being accepted - nothing more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Sex is for making babies.

      It's a trick by Mother Nature, making it pleasurable so we'll procreate whether we decide to or not.

      Since we enjoy sex anyway, thank God we figured it out and found ways to prevent pregnancy. God gave us brains for a reason-- he's got plenty of other critters to mindlessly procreate, and we've done an admirable job already (7 billion of us! in every corner of the globe!) so there's not really a need for those babies.

  51. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by TWX · · Score: 1

    No, abuse is usually defined by the actual vitcimization of someone. "The Very Idea" of something is not a form of victimization. I'm not victimizing Jews and Muslims by eating bacon. I'm not victimizing Christians during this season of Lent by eating bacon on Fridays. I'm not victimizing Hindus by having a bacon cheeseburger. I'm not victimizing Hindus by eating beef.

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  52. Re: Does this law protect puppies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Both children (teenagers at least) and animals are sexual creatures. They can most definitely enjoy a sexual experience, even with an adult human. Half the time they initiate, like with a dog humping your leg or a teen chasing after that cool 20 year old. There's no reason to make these acts illegal by default.

    If it's a case of manipulation or abuse, then prosecute. But it should be done on a case by case basis to see if there was any harm, not just a blanket law that makes all adult-children or human-animal sexual relationships automatically illegal.

    Posting AC for obvious reasons...

  53. Political discrimination? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can a songwriter refuse to write (or have a song played) for a political campaign they don't like?

  54. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You dead-ender bigots no longer have a place in America. Your impotent flailing is entertaining, now that the rest of us have moved away from bigotry.

  55. Re:(election time) Christian Theocracy by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Seriously not flamebait, but bigots typically heavily vote Republican.

    They are tired of this black muslim socialist and want a return to the days of Bush. So put amendments and put records like these will give pastors great sermons on who God approves to run their country come election day. It works as the religious right is THEE most powerful group in this country. Even more powerful than the NRA and those who want lower taxes.

    No I am not saying you are a biggot if you are a Republican moderators. But I do say the religious folks are 85% are registered republicans thanks to Jerry Falwell and Reagan who tried to persued them to leave Carter and the democratic party behind.

    It works it is time get ahead at any cost including taking away the rights of others. Racist governors did the same to Blacks too to bring supporters to the polls

  56. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by OzPeter · · Score: 5, Funny

    How many Eddie Murphy movies should the owner be forced by law to screen?

    Torture is also illegal

    --
    I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
  57. This is the wrong battle by sideslash · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Good grief, so many people are piling on and hating Indiana for this, but they are mistaken. This is not about saying "we don't serve your kind here". This is about establishing guidelines for government to avoid reflexively punishing religious individuals over their scruples of conscience.

    If you want to talk about brainless and/or dishonest liberal media, today would be the day, because the NYT, CNN, and any number of other outlets are acting like this is something new and unnecessary that Indiana is doing, when in fact the opposite is true. There has been a very similar federal law on the books since Chuck Schumer proposed it and then-President Bill Clinton signed it into law. The only reason Indiana enacted a state law equivalent is that courts have determined that the federal law doesn't protect religious individuals from non-compliance with certain local laws.

    This is not to allow the local deli to refuse to serve gays, and in fact will not allow them to do so. This is to prevent bullies and jerks from picking on people who happen to be small business owners over their religion.

    Example: if a Christian goes to a kosher bakery and asks for "holy cross" themed rolls for an Easter party, and the proprieters kindly offer to refer them to the secular baker down the street, should the Christian sue those dirty Jews for all they've got, and attempt to bankrupt them and destroy their business over this scruple of religious conscience? No, of course not. The Christian would be a jerk in that case. So why are so many gays being jerks about the exact same kind of thing?

    1. Re:This is the wrong battle by bjdevil66 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      So why are so many gays being jerks about the exact same kind of thing?

      Because it's not about freedom, civil rights, or some crusade to make our country a better place. It's about them feeling accepted. While some gay activists are level headed, others would stomp on the Constitution itself if it would help them accomplish that goal of being accepted.

    2. Re:This is the wrong battle by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      The thing is, the law as signed by Clinton was also wrong, and he was wrong for signing it.

      This Indiana law, which goes further than the Clinton law by some margin, is designed precisely to discriminate against gay people. The primary author of the bill has said so on the record.

    3. Re:This is the wrong battle by sideslash · · Score: 1

      Nonsense. You are spreading misinformation about the law and about the reason for the law.

      Nobody should be able to force an artisan out of business because they refuse to accept commissioning for a creative work, where the work itself is specified so as to violate the artists or artisan's religious convictions. Anyone who is fairminded can see the difference between creative works (like cake design and photography) versus general services like food at the deli or buying a ticket at the movie theater.

      Unfortunately, the gay lobby is not always fairminded. They want to bankrupt and destroy small business owners who refuse to be bullied.

    4. Re:This is the wrong battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The thing is, the law as signed by Clinton was also wrong, and he was wrong for signing it.

      This Indiana law, which goes further than the Clinton law by some margin, is designed precisely to discriminate against gay people. The primary author of the bill has said so on the record.

      You have no idea what you area talking about. The purpose of the existing laws is to prevent government (whether it be federal or state) from imposing laws and regulations that would violate religious beliefs. It is not meant to be applied to only citizen vs citizen. Even the Indiana governor admits that.

      This has nothing to do with gays not being able to get flower arrangements for a wedding.

    5. Re:This is the wrong battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But those people do not have religious freedom in this country so we shouldn't have laws to protect them. There is not Constitutional right to freedom of religion so these laws are unconstitutional.

    6. Re:This is the wrong battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      religious individuals SHOULD reflexively be punished over their scruples of conscience when their religion negates some one else rights. Either we all have rights or no one should have special case rights!

      In which case do away with the 'hatred' laws and the freedom of religion legislation. After all it doesn't matter if I deliberately burn 10 Christians alive because they are Christians , the state would still charge me with murder.

    7. Re:This is the wrong battle by sideslash · · Score: 1

      OK, my dear AC. Do you have the right to go to Brooklyn, find a kosher bakery run by Orthodox Jews, and demand that they create "holy cross" themed and decorated rolls for an Easter party? If they decline and ask you to contact a different bakery, should you have the right to sue them and ultimately bankrupt them and drive them out of business if they continue to follow their religious scruples?

      To be consistent, you'll have to agree that the above is just as legit as the current Gay lobby's bullying. So my next question -- why do you hate Jewish people?

    8. Re:This is the wrong battle by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      This is not about saying "we don't serve your kind here".

      Yes, it is.

      This is about establishing guidelines for government to avoid reflexively punishing religious individuals over their scruples of conscience.

      No, it isn't. There was an amendment offered by the Democrats that specifically added non-discrimination language to the bill. It was shot down.

      The Christian would be a jerk in that case. So why are so many gays being jerks about the exact same kind of thing?

      Congratulations, you're an idiot. There's a difference between refusing to serve someone because they're asking for a product you don't sell and refusing to serve them because they're Christian, or Muslim, or black, or gay.

    9. Re:This is the wrong battle by sideslash · · Score: 1

      I hope you clean up that sarcasm you dripped all over the floor. ;)

    10. Re:This is the wrong battle by DutchUncle · · Score: 1

      Example: if a Christian goes to a kosher bakery and asks for "holy cross" themed rolls for an Easter party . . .

      ... which they might well do because a kosher bakery's products will be 100% suitable for vegetarians and, if specified as "pareve", 100% dairy-free. The kosher bakery would probably make them. You want smiley faces, you want curls, you want crossed lines, whatever, it's just icing.

    11. Re:This is the wrong battle by sideslash · · Score: 1

      Congratulations, you're an idiot. There's a difference between refusing to serve someone because they're asking for a product you don't sell and refusing to serve them because they're Christian, or Muslim, or black, or gay.

      No, you're just in denial because I made a point you don't have an answer for. If you ask the kosher bakery for rolls decorated with a traditional Jewish symbol or Hebrew letter, they might be happy to comply. But if you ask for rolls decorated with a cross, they have objections because they disagree with your religion.

      If heterosexual wedding planners ask a Christian cake decorator for a wedding cake topped with husband/wife figures, the bakery is happy to comply. If a gay couple ask for husband/husband wedding topper, the baker declines and asks them to contact a different bakery.

      You tell me, what's the difference, genius? (And why do you hate Jewish small business owners and want to see them bankrupted because of their religion?)

    12. Re:This is the wrong battle by sideslash · · Score: 1

      It's admittedly a hypothetical. I can't say whether orthodox Jewish bakery owners would knowingly apply a Christian symbol to their product. People are different. Maybe all of them would. Maybe some would, and some wouldn't. My point is that you'd have to be a really disgusting jerk to try to destroy a small business owner's livelihood just because they're trying to stay true to their own dictates of conscience. The gay lobby stoops that low, and it disgusts me. How hard is it to walk down the street and pick a different shop? Talk about first world problems.

    13. Re:This is the wrong battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you have the right to go to Brooklyn, find a kosher bakery run by Orthodox Jews, and demand that they create "holy cross" themed and decorated rolls for an Easter party?

      Yes

        If they decline and ask you to contact a different bakery, should you have the right to sue them and ultimately bankrupt them and drive them out of business if they continue to follow their religious scruples?

      Yes - if the jury \ court agrees with me I have that right - if the law is unfair then you change the law

      why do you hate Jewish people?

      I don't no one I know has ever made the fact of them being a Jew enough of an issue to warrant me investing the personal commitment to hate them. In fact in most cases it has as much relevance as oh Joe he \she is a Jane, a Hindu, at all person or he has green eyes. It only matters if I am trying to unique identify that individual to someone who doesn't know that person and even then only to the extent it is required to identify them. Ie. they attend your church might help you remember,

      On a grown up level you have the freedom to believe any shit you like until that shit starts having a negative effect on some one else.

      Why do you hate other people s rights when you you support a religion that alleged espouse love and tolerance?

    14. Re:This is the wrong battle by sideslash · · Score: 1

      OK, smartypants, what law says that you can force an artisan to perform a creative work for you if they prefer not to?

    15. Re:This is the wrong battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So hypothetically if I start a religion were it is my sincerely held religious belief that Christians MUST be fed to lions on public holidays as part of the entertainment or all Jews must wear yellow stars because they killed Jesus that would be acceptable to you?

    16. Re:This is the wrong battle by sideslash · · Score: 1

      Sure, you are welcome to start a religion related to that and believe anything you want to. But you can't force other people to cooperate with your religion. Why are you so big on forcing other people do stuff? Why do you want the government to force artisans do stuff [that violates their consciences]? Why can't you just chill?

      If you are an American who studied civics in school, you should know this stuff. Freedom of religion, dude.

    17. Re:This is the wrong battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because of the context. These laws are being perceived as Christian reaction to being "forced" to serve gays (and other undesireables covered under your "scruples of conscious", how quaint) and thus desiring attention from the law to protect them from doing things that they don't want to.

      The overwhelming nature of our national conversation about what Christians have a right to do as business owners and what gay people have a right to ask for as minorities and consumers colors this reactionary law. The fact that other laws like it are on the books does not really matter because they are not part of the current conversation: a newly introduced law is.

      Your example of Jewish bakery owners is not part of the current conversation. Perhaps it actually happened somewhere and is not just some fake ass situation you pulled out of nowhere to serve your purposes, but what has happened and what is part of the national conversation is that Christian business owners refuse to serve gays. And that this law will protect the business owners from retaliation and secure their position as the people with power.

    18. Re:This is the wrong battle by sideslash · · Score: 1

      Your example of Jewish bakery owners is not part of the current conversation.

      Then why did you mention it in your reply? What is this mysterious "conversation" you reference, anyway? Seriously, stop pointing your snooty nose so high up in the air and you may actually engage with other people who are trying to discuss things rationally.

    19. Re:This is the wrong battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Equality under the law and Justice for all - Not My fairy tale give mes more rights than yours!

    20. Re:This is the wrong battle by sideslash · · Score: 1

      I agree with that... so what are we arguing about, exactly? I think you're going to say that you want the government to force somebody to do something. Isn't that right? (Libero-fascists are always doing that sort of thing.)

    21. Re:This is the wrong battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no I am pointing out the hypocrisy in you argument - you want YOUR right to deny other people their rights. A right to believe in whatever fairy tale shit you want A right you hold because to me and a lot of other people that hold belief in other faiths accept it is frankly none of our God damn business and as a society we uphold your right to do so with the following caveat in a civilized society your right to religious freedom may have to be constrained when there is a genuine need and I don't mean an expedient one! You may have the right to believe whatever shit you want it has been a widely accepted principle by the rest of society you don't have the right to act on it when those actions harm someone else!

      You want the rights without the responsibilities. That artisan could just have declined the business without passing a religious commentary or passing judgement. Would that make them any less of an intolerant bigot ? NO but they wouldn't have lost a court case.

    22. Re:This is the wrong battle by sideslash · · Score: 1

      OK... so you can believe whatever you want, but you aren't allowed to talk about your beliefs? You should just keep quiet about them? BZZZZZZZTT! Wrong answer. Back to civics 101.

    23. Re:This is the wrong battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah so you are resorting to that old cliche of the first amendment argument , what next a call to patriotism ? This issue has nothing to do with suppressing free speech. No one stopped the owner from exercising his right to free speech , technically you may be to make a case the person who ordered the cake may have had their 1st amendment violated .

      The owner didn't have to give reason for refusing service but when they did they violated one of the accepted constraints society has put on the right to free speech! Civics 101 which I take you failed.

      If they had keep their mouth shut they would have got away with it !!

    24. Re:This is the wrong battle by sideslash · · Score: 1

      The court decided wrongly in that instance. Presumably the judge and/or jury had never actually decorated a cake themselves. It's an artistic work, and the government shouldn't be able to force somebody to create an artistic or creative work. Of course, you think the government should force people to do stuff like that, because you are... a fascist?

    25. Re:This is the wrong battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whilst to the people involved the symbolism or institution it represents may be culturally significant or important , if that is then if it is important or significant it is clearly discrimination to deny equal access to that symbol.

      Beyond that it is just a fucking cake to me not a culturally significant icon , no one was forcing the baker in to anything they could just have made the cake and said 'oh lord if I have sinned please show me you wisdom I sincerely baked a fucking cake because you told me to love my neighbor as I love myself and show tolerance and understanding in your name !

        Or they could chose not to run a public facing business were any Tom , Dick, Harriet or satanist can walk into the business and ask for a cake Oh but I forgot big bad fascists and the guberment forced them to open up a public facing bakery and do business under the same constraints the rest of business do.

      So we are back to childish insults again because your imaginary friend argument doesn't hold water ? I am as far from a fascist as you can be I don't give a flying fuck what you do as long as it doesn't harm me I just don't expect people to be granted dispensations from the obligations society expects in return for the benefits it provides because of a belief in imaginary friends says your excused.

      Nor do I believe mights makes right and civil disobedience is always wrong but actions have consequences even if the law is unjust and that what why you need courage sometimes to disobey. Your argument is that person should be excused from the consequences of their action because their imaginary friend says they should be or they are a 'creative' role.

        You chose to act sometimes despite knowing what the consequences are likely to be that is called being a grown up.

    26. Re:This is the wrong battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Incidentally after 15 years of schooling by Jesuits I should have said 'oh lord if I have sinned and transgressed please show me you wisdom and mercy I sincerely baked a fucking cake to the best of my fucking abilities because you told me to love my neighbor as I love myself and show tolerance and understanding in your name and I wished to honour you!'

    27. Re:This is the wrong battle by DutchUncle · · Score: 1

      1. Not hypothetical - our local kosher bakery went totally nut-free because all of the religious schools need nut-free foods. Guess what - they suddenly became a prime supplier to additional places who have no interest in kosher but need nut-free and vegan, including two preschools at local churches (which is how I know the story).
      2. In a small town, there may not be a different shop so close.
      3. The only lawsuits that I have read about that might be described as trying to "destroy a small business owner" were cases were people made an agreement or order or reservation, paid money, and were canceled on too late to make alternate plans. That sort of thing causes havoc in totally average cases - here in the NYC area, just a few months back, there was an uproar because a bridal shop suddenly locked its doors, and the owner decamped with whatever deposit money there had been, leaving hundreds of brides and bridesmaids without their promised dresses. Nobody cared about the unpaid employees and bills; all of the publicity was on the weddings planned for that weekend, with dresses already fitted but locked up behind police tape. But that was nothing personal; everyone was being impacted.
      Imagine now if the owner had called up only one couple and said, "I know your wedding is coming up, but I decided my conscience wouldn't let me go through with the order for your dresses. You'll just have to get them somewhere else." And imagine that this wasn't in the NYC area where there are lots of other options, but in a small town. Oh, wait - I forgot - what's the reason for this attack of conscience? Maybe it's a mixed-race couple? A May-December romance, in "the wrong" direction (whichever bothers you more)? Whatever other random bee the store owner finds in his/her bonnet? No, none of them is acceptable under law and custom, no matter how convinced the store owner is that it will all end in tears. But somehow those particular style of dresses don't belong on . . . . . THOSE . . . sorts of people. You know, the more I write this, the stupider it sounds, and I thought that attitude was a waste of effort already. Some object to society allowing some people to marry; I object to stupid people marrying and having lots of stupid children, which is more of a problem in the long run. But so what. It's allowed now. And if they want a dress, or a cake, and someone is in business to sell dresses or cakes, it doesn't make you one of them to sell them the damn dress or cake. You'd sell them a party dress or a birthday cake without even thinking about what good friends they are. "I'm not selling you a cake because you're the wrong sort of people" just sounds so 3-year-old.

    28. Re:This is the wrong battle by sideslash · · Score: 1

      You certainly wrote a lot of words, but carefully avoided engaging in the points I made that refute your position, aka straw man fallacy.

    29. Re:This is the wrong battle by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      "Because it's not about freedom, civil rights, or some crusade to make our country a better place. It's about them feeling accepted. While some religious activists are level headed, others would stomp on the Constitution itself if it would help them accomplish that goal of being accepted." fixed that for you

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    30. Re:This is the wrong battle by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      "This is about establishing guidelines for government to avoid reflexively punishing religious individuals over their scruples of conscience." yes, its all about allowing discrimination because you are religious. by protecting the bigots over their misguided "scruples of conscience", you are creating a slippery slope to re-allowing the religious to discriminate on color over their misguided "scruples of conscience" as well.

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    31. Re:This is the wrong battle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does the kosher bakery regularly provide "holy cross' themed rolls for people besides the Christian? If it does, then it's an issue if they refer them to a secular baker down the street. If not, it's not a service they provide and there is no issue.

      Now let's switch to using gay marriage. Does the bakery regularly provide wedding cakes for weddings to people besides gays? If it does, then it's an issue if they don't want to provide a wedding cake to a gay person. If not, it's not a service they provide and there is no issue.

    32. Re:This is the wrong battle by sideslash · · Score: 1

      Haha, nice try, but you're attempting to "have your cake and eat it, too" (if you'll pardon the expression).

      Feast on this tasty information: cake decoration (in general, but much, much more so for weddings) is a very customized undertaking. The cake typically is supposed to reflect, in an artistic way, things about the couple. A really obvious example is the topper which is placed by the cake decorator. A topper would often have little figurines of the married couple, etc.

      So your attempt to equate a wedding cake to a ordinary and unadorned grocery store loaf of bread in terms of its embodied creative expression really "puts the icing on the cake" as far as the lameness of the arguments in this thread so far.

    33. Re:This is the wrong battle by DutchUncle · · Score: 1

      Umm, I thought I addressed the main point: trying to destroy someone for politics. The lawsuits I have read about were more about the small business sabotaging an event at the last minute, that is trying to destroy the other party, using "religion" as an excuse, than about someone saying right up front "Sorry, I don't think I can put this job on my schedule, you'll have to find someone else." An average mainstream-sexual mainstream-religion mainstream-race couple would get angry at that too. Heck, photographers and such get sick or injured and miss events, and that causes lawsuits too (we happen to know a musician who broke his arm the day before an event and lost money subcontracting a replacement so he wouldn't have "failed to perform"). If you have a counterexample - something that really looks like entrapment of a pious person by people hiding the nature of the event - by all means let's hear it.

    34. Re:This is the wrong battle by sideslash · · Score: 1

      more about the small business sabotaging an event at the last minute

      I'm not sure whether you're lying, or if you just read really biased news sources. Check out this article about the big case that most people have been talking about. The article is from a liberal, gay-friendly perspective but still serves nicely because they are reporting the facts:

      http://www.westword.com/restau...

      ...and please observe that the bakery turned them down immediately when they asked for the cake, NOT sabotaging their event at the last minute.

      So stop spreading misinformation about this issue, 'K?

    35. Re:This is the wrong battle by DutchUncle · · Score: 1

      I would reply no to either, but that's certainly a different description than the other articles I saw. Yes, turned down immediately. And actually I agree with you on this story: the reaction is overkill. Not that that ever happens since the Internet and Twitter :-( There would seem to be plenty of bakeries in Lakewood, according to Yelp. OTOH, again, if they had turned down a mixed-race couple, it would be a federal case.
      Maybe it's because I belong to a very minority religious denomination myself, and maybe because I'm not strident about it, but I just don't see baking a regular cake as causing a crisis of conscience, especially if it's your business (not a personal favor or a hobby). It's not like they were looking for a vulgar design or shape, just a normal (if colorful) tiered cake, right? That's not a religious icon worthy of protection.
      I wonder if anyone would turn down an order for three birthday cakes . . . and some dowels . . . :-)

    36. Re:This is the wrong battle by sideslash · · Score: 1

      You're entitled to your opinion, I'm entitled to mine, and the bakery owner is entitled to theirs. The tricky thing about a conscience is that somebody else can't make that decision for you, it's an individual thing. If the bakery owner really believes as a religious matter that they can't do ABC, then the sledgehammer of the state is pretty much putting them out of the wedding cake business. Personally, I think that's a crying shame.

      If the gay couple were more tolerant, they could certainly coexist with the bakery, and everybody would be happy. But no, they want to bully a religious person into being forced to violate their conscience or risk going out of business. So without passing judgment on whether the bakery is factually correct or not, I'd say the gay couple are clearly bullies and jerks.

    37. Re:This is the wrong battle by DutchUncle · · Score: 1

      I agree. They're certainly not showing their own desire for tolerance, any more than the bakery.
      Now if only it were as easy for religious people to be tolerant of letting others be as they want to be, as I can be of them . . . It's all about whether one is imposing one's views on others (which, again, is what I agree with you about).

  58. Religious hypocrisy by Pedrito · · Score: 0

    The problem with all this hate disguised as religion is that it doesn't hold up. It's complete and utter hypocrisy. Homosexuality is called a sin in both Leviticus and 1 Corinthians. Leviticus and 1 Corinthians also say that tattoos are a sin. My wife and I attend an evangelical church in the south and it doesn't escape our attention that there are a great many congregants with tattoos. Especially those cute ankle and back of the neck ones... You don't see Christians up in arms about them getting married or refusing them service. In Matthew 19:9, Jesus said that a man who divorces his wife, except for adultery, and remarries is himself committing adultery. 1/3-1/2 of all divorces in the U.S. don't involve adultery, and yet do you see Christians refusing these people service or refusing the remarry them? Jesus said the second most important commandment was to "love your neighbor as yourself." It's quoted in two Gospels, Mark and Matthew. He didn't say there's an exception for homosexuals. In fact, he never said anything about homosexuals. The Christian right in this country reminds me of the Pharisees in the bible. Trying to interpret who God would judge and passing their own judgment instead of leaving the judgment to God and loving their neighbor, regardless of their neighbors sins because, after all, the bible tells us that we are all sinners.

    1. Re:Religious hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By popular demand homosexuality was added to the new testament in the NIV version of the bible in some list of sins some where... it isn't present in most other revisions of the bible.

    2. Re:Religious hypocrisy by BeemanIT · · Score: 1

      I'm curious, do you have any references as to which verses were change/removed to the NIV?

    3. Re:Religious hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My wife and I attend an evangelical church in the south and it doesn't escape our attention that there are a great many congregants with tattoos.

      First of all, you still attend, despite seeing their (alleged) hypocrisy.

      Second, when did they get the tattoo? Was it before or after they joined that church? Tattoos are permanent, and people make mistakes.

      In Matthew 19:9, Jesus said that a man who divorces his wife, except for adultery, and remarries is himself committing adultery. 1/3-1/2 of all divorces in the U.S. don't involve adultery, and yet do you see Christians refusing these people service or refusing the remarry them?

      Actually, yes. I see Christians shun these people for unrepentantly doing sinful things. The key word there is "unrepentantly", in case you missed that qualifier. A repentant sinner is to be shown mercy. An unrepentant one is to be shunned. It's a very simple concept that is always made more difficult by the inaccuracies of everyday life.

      The Christian right in this country reminds me of the Pharisees in the bible. Trying to interpret who God would judge and passing their own judgment instead of leaving the judgment to God and loving their neighbor, regardless of their neighbors sins because, after all, the bible tells us that we are all sinners.

      And you hit the nail on the head with this one. Most "christians" are part of religions that have strayed from the teachings of Christ for as long as 1900 years or more. They've continuously incorporated pagan ideologies into their dogma, and have no standing to complain about those who sin. But it's not just "the christian right", either. Jesus' instructions were for his disciples to be "no part of the world", having nothing to do with politics or war, regardless of the "side" they take or how "good" its ideals may be presented to be. Why? Because Jesus' main message was about God's Kingdom and how it would supplant all human governments. And how many of these so-called christian religions are refraining from getting involved in the politics and wars of the nations? Very few. Instead, most of them ride the governments like a drunk harlot riding a wild beast.

    4. Re:Religious hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1 Corinthians 6:9, 10. It's been in there since the earliest available manuscripts.

      It describes both "men who lie with men" as well as "men kept for unnatural purposes", which is a way of saying "pitcher" and "catcher", respectively. More accurately, the first group is homosexual by choice, and the second group is homosexual by employment. No mention is made of anyone being homosexual by genetics because, despite whatever excuses are trotted out, that's not really a thing.

    5. Re:Religious hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, everyone is a sinner. But some people (SUCH AS YOU) don't want to improve. They want everyone to say that they are perfect, just the way that they are.

    6. Re:Religious hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I really appreciate the other scientific journals written 2,000-4,000 years ago that discuss genetics in depth.

      Oh right. Good try, you ass-clown.

      On subject, your comic book also considers bats to be birds. So much for the scientific knowledge of ancient desert dwellers.

    7. Re:Religious hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh yes, because the Bible had SO MUCH to say on the subject of genetics, didn't it? The closest it gets is that episode where Jacob cheats Laban out of his flock by making the true-breeding solid goats stare at a stripey stick so they have spotted kids. Because that's totally how genetics works.

      Ye gods, you're a special kind of idiot. The best science we have on the subjects suggests that genetics plays a small role if any, certainly smaller than the hormonal environment in the mother's womb. I am a lesbian, and did not choose to be one; my mother says the signs were there from age 4. I didn't know there WAS such a thing as gay until 14 but was getting crushes on female celebrities and teachers as early as 9 or 10. Whatever the cause of this is it's not a choice. And my sister, who was abused and raped, is straight as an arrow.

  59. Correction: want people to pause to NOT gather by bjdevil66 · · Score: 1

    ...want people to pause to not gather the PC thing...

  60. How is bigotry a good thing? by sjbe · · Score: 2

    It's weird how some on the left are so eager to push "diversity" that they'll compromise our own liberal western values in the process of pandering to people who do not share these values.

    Fair enough. Explain to us then the rational opposing position then. Explain to us the pro-discrimination position whereby we should be permitted to discrimination on the basis of race, gender, age, or even sexual orientation when none of those things should matter. Explain how these laws trying to push laws purporting to support "religious freedom" are actually anything other than an attempt by bigoted people to discriminate against others.

    It sounds to me like you have an ideological issue with "some of the left" and are trying for some reason to justify what is plainly an attempt by right wing religious conservatives to codify bigotry into state law. 50 years ago those laws were called Jim Crow laws. This is just a later day version of separate but equal. Freedom of speech does not equal freedom to discriminate particularly on a religious basis.

    1. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Complete reading comprehension failure. Grishnakh was merely pointing out that both sides of the political spectrum are eating away at free expression.

      Being for freedom of speech is not synonymous with bigotry. You said so in your own words, yet used the opposite reasoning in an attack. It is time for some self reflection on your part as to why.

    2. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think a baker should be free to not make a gay mariage cake.
      Just the same as they should be free to not make a straight mariage cake if they are gay.
      Refusing to sell a straight mariage cake to a gay couple should be illegal, but forcing someone to make and sell something is stupid.
      And how is wearing a flag discriminatory?
      Is this sweden now?

      Sweden YES!

    3. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      Explain to us then the rational opposing position then. Explain to us the pro-discrimination position whereby we should be permitted to discrimination on the basis of race, gender, age, or even sexual orientation when none of those things should matter.

      You seem to be under the mistaken impression that all things except what the state have decided are proper should be forbidden.

      Yes, among enlightened people race, gender, age, or even sexual orientation should not matter. That does not imply that unenlightened people should be subject to criminal prosecution or lawsuits.

      You should be permitted to discriminate in some areas because you should be permitted to do anything you want that does not interfere with the fundamental rights of others. Housing is a fundamental right, so you shouldn't be legally able to discriminate in renting out a house. But hiring a specific person to take your wedding pictures is not a fundamental right, so a photographer should be legally able to turn down a paying customer for whatever reason they want, even bigotry.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    4. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Thank you, AC. It amazes me how if you criticize one "side" in this country, unthinking morons will assume you must obviously be on the other "side". sjbe's response shows this perfectly.

    5. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      See my response to the AC who responded to you.

    6. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Wearing a flag is not discriminatory. Wearing a flag is speech, and should be protected under the First Amendment. Not allowing someone to wear a flag (any flag) is a violation of the First Amendment. It's quite simple.

    7. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 2

      50 years ago those laws were called Jim Crow laws. This is just a later day version of separate but equal.

      I've been thinking these new laws should be called Jim Queer laws, whaddaya think?

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    8. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by MachineShedFred · · Score: 2

      See, that's the exact kind of logical thinking that seems to be in short supply these days. Unfortunately, it's the creeping idea of "we wouldn't want to offend..." that causes expression to be curtailed.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    9. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      Exactly. If you try to avoid offending people, you're merely stifling expression and creativity, and in effect oppressing people. The problem is that people on both sides want to do this, though they want to oppress different people: on the right, they want to censor anything that offends Christians; on the left, they want to censor anything that offends minorities, even when the minorities have even worse views than the Christians they dislike so much.

      Personally, I like the values that France has as a society, with one of them being secularism. Why this word wasn't written into our Constitution, I don't know, but it should have been. As soon as you start pandering to religions and religious values, you get all kinds of horrible anti-human-rights side effects, since most religions are all about oppressing people and denying them their human rights if they don't kowtow to the religion.

    10. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by ebyrob · · Score: 1

      The freedom to think. What is that now freedom -1?

      All "Hate Crime" laws have at their foundation an attempt to control the very thoughts of others. By contrast, the founders of the US realized governments which had "less power" "less control" over their citizens were generally "less oppressive".

      I hate to think what a government with the power to control my very thoughts would be like.

      My world view says there is only one most difficult and important thing I can change about the world. Myself.

    11. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, I like the values that France has as a society, with one of them being secularism. Why this word wasn't written into our Constitution, I don't know, but it should have been.

      Well, many of the first European settlers came because they thought there wasn't ENOUGH religion. Some early settlements were started as communities devoted to following their religious beliefs and ideals.

      Now, that's not to say these people were against separation of church and state. They were totally for it, but not because they wanted the church out of the federal government (aka secularism), but because they wanted the feds to stay away from their church.

    12. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by Maltheus · · Score: 2

      Historically speaking, free countries prosper more. And freedom means accepting beliefs that are different than your own.

    13. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not, the problem is that they only condemn bigotry from the "right" and ignore that from the left.

    14. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jim Crow laws forbade a business from serving blacks like they served whites. This law would allow a business owner to do what a business owner wants to do in situations that may go against their religious beliefs. So they are not the same. One mandated unequal treatment under punishment of law, the other allows unequal treatment under the law in certain situations.

    15. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by Last+Warrior · · Score: 1

      A hate crime doesn't prevent you from thinking anything. It prevents you from acting on it and hurting someone based on your own stupidity.
      A hate crime isn't when you dont like someone and dont open the door for them going into a building. A hate crime is when you hate someone so much that you go and beat the crap out of them or kill them not because of something they did to you but because of things about themselves that they cannot control. like who their parents are, where they were born, or who they choose to love or associate with.

      Its really sad when bigots play the victim. Attacking someone over race, sex, orientation only says something bad about you and not about them.

    16. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      You don't see the difference between:

      1) Attacking a person who happens to be black
      2) Attacking a person because they are black

      ? Any person capable of committing the second example is clearly a danger to every black person for no reason other than the person's twisted psyche - their victims were not chosen because of who they are (as in the first example), but because of what they are. You can try and play that down by screaming "thought crime!", but it misses the distinction entirely.

    17. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      My world view says there is only one most difficult and important thing I can change about the world. Myself.

      Other than in the most superficial ways, that is the one thing in life you really can't change.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    18. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      A hate crime is when you hate someone so much that you go and beat the crap out of them or kill them not because of something they did to you but because of things about themselves that they cannot control.

      Um, last time I checked, assault and murder are illegal, and have been for centuries. Why exactly do we need new laws against these things? It doesn't matter why you murder someone; they're still dead, and if the law is working correctly, you'll still go to prison for it (with sentencing based on whether it was pre-meditated or not, or an accident or negligence). If you decide you hate black people and want to go kill one, and you do so, that's "murder 1" and the punishment is already rather harsh for that. So why do we need a new law?

    19. Re:How is bigotry a good thing? by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      Wearing a flag is not discriminatory. Wearing a flag is speech, and should be protected under the First Amendment. Not allowing someone to wear a flag (any flag) is a violation of the First Amendment. It's quite simple.

      Mmmm, I was always taught that wearing the American Flag symbol was disrespectful, that it was never supposed to be put on clothing. You honor a flag by raising it on a flag pole, taking it down at night unless it's illuminated, it should be carefully folded, and thrown away if it ever touches the ground.

      Then Old Navy came out with their "gotta wear a flag, gotta wear a flag. Gotta wear a flag, gotta wear a flag" commercial campaign, and I've seen the American Flag worn on a lot more clothing since.

  61. I don't understand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why can't we just have a simple principle:
    If you offer goods and services to the public your potential customers may include those whose appearance, life style, sexual preferences, race, language and even odor you find offensive. So what - get used to it.

  62. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by Charcharodon · · Score: 0

    Not in the military. President Obama signed the order the same time they took sodomy off the books. Kind of strange if you ask me. Hi I'd like you to meet my donkey, err, wife, err well very good friend donkey.

  63. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The separation of church and state is way more clear in the constitution then wording of the 2nd amendment.

    "Because the sun rises in the east, the right to bake cakes shall not be infringed".

    Seems pretty clear to me that I am protecting the right to bake cakes. Yes, my reason for doing so is bonkers, but that does not change the fact that you have the right to bake cakes and that no one may take that right from you.

    And any attempts to circumvent the built-in process for changing the constitution can and will be used against you to infringe on your right to free speech. Which is really the worst part of what you and others like you are doing. You seem so oblivious to the fact that you are digging your own grave, building your own hangman's platform, and tying your own noose. All that is left is for someone who does not like you to pull the lever.

  64. Well not at all surprised how things are going by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's amazing how Americans don't understand the first rule of civil society : your freedoms end where mine begins.
    And sometimes individual freedoms have to be restrained/curtailed for the good of Society.

  65. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by avgjoe62 · · Score: 1

    Anyone can claim any action (or inaction) is a form of abuse

    Yes, anyone can claim such. Proving such is an entirely different matter.

    --

    How come Slashdot never gets Slashdotted?

  66. Obligatory XKCD by kanweg · · Score: 1
  67. Do you want freedom, or don't you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    You need to make up your mind. Do you want freedom, or do you not want freedom?

    There isn't a range of freedom. You can't have just "some" freedom. You either have freedom, or you do not. Even the slightest restriction means that there is no freedom.

    Having freedom means that people will express ideas that you don't like. If you're a homosexual, you'll just have to suck it up and accept that some people will express that it's wrong for two people of the same gender to get married, or for a man to put his penis up another man's rectum. If you're a Christian, you'll just have to accept that some people will express that it's okay for two people of the same gender to get married, or for a man to put his penis up another man's rectum.

    If any sort of restriction is imposed on either party, for whatever reason, then freedom has been completely lost.

    An attempt to give one party "more" freedom ends up resulting in a total loss of freedom for everyone.

    Freedom is inherently impossible in any situation where there are restrictions, no matter how small they may be.

    1. Re:Do you want freedom, or don't you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Some people will go so far as to say it's "wrong" to hunt down a man and kill him in his sleep... Others will go so far as to say that murder is never justified, and people who commit murder should be punished and locked up.

      I guess some people just hate freedom.

      But people who know better, they will exact freedom on the rest of us one way or another, they shall inherit the earth after the coming of ZUUL!

    2. Re:Do you want freedom, or don't you? by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      What you are engaging in is black-and-white thinking. It's not just a logical fallacy, it's also an indicator of mental illnesses.

      Freedom is inherently impossible in any situation where there are restrictions, no matter how small they may be.

      Oh, so my freedom to swing my fist doesn't stop at your face? There is no such thing as absolute freedom.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    3. Re:Do you want freedom, or don't you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Real formal logic = true/false (black/white). Truth tables Barb, not forums illogic logic.

    4. Re:Do you want freedom, or don't you? by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      Again, the world is not black and white. Your argument is recognized as a logical fallacy, because the world is analog, not digital.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
  68. Read The Bill by Sigmon · · Score: 5, Informative

    As I live in Arkansas I actually got around to reading the bill (HB 1228) this morning. Everything people are complaining about is complete FUD. It's really quite mundane... and LOTS of other states already have similar laws on the books. It _basically_ instructs the courts to take into consideration sincerely-held religious convictions in discrimination cases except where there is an impracticality in enforcing the laws without the state encroaching on them.

    This does NOT mean that teh gheys will be denied service at restaurants.
    It DOES mean that I may be spared legal consequences if I decline to build a gay porn website for somebody and am sued for discrimination.

    1. Re:Read The Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It DOES mean that I may be spared legal consequences if I decline to serve a meal to a gay person and am sued for discrimination."

      FTFY.

    2. Re:Read The Bill by bugs2squash · · Score: 1

      What about sincerely held non-religious convictions. Oh that's right. the protection of the law is only supposed to extend to followers of the book.

      --
      Nullius in verba
    3. Re:Read The Bill by Steve+Hamlin · · Score: 2

      You are incorrect. The Federal RFRA and most state RFRAs do just that - generally require the government to enact laws in a manner least-restrictive to religious considerations.

      However, the Indiana bill has two additional provisions: "First, the Indiana law explicitly allows any for-profit business to assert a right to "the free exercise of religion" (and not just individuals)...Second, the Indiana statute explicitly makes a business's "free exercise" right a defense against a private lawsuit by another person, rather than simply against actions brought by government." (Source: http://www.theatlantic.com/pol...)

      This means EXACTLY that a restaurant would now have a strong legal defense against a private lawsuit if the owners decide they don't want to serve gay people. It is NOT limited to making sure the government enacts laws in a least-restrictive-to-religion way.

      Fine, pass it, and after enough old conservative white people have died and such blatant bigotry is made illegal in the same way that refusal to serve black people was made illegal, then the Indiana RFRA will be by law unable to be used to defend this bigoted hysteria. But those two viewpoints are on the same side of history, and will suffer the same fate.

      N.B. And from the looks of it, the Alabama bill you reference has the second part - it isn't just applicable to how AL enacts legislation, it is applicable to all lawsuits whether the government is party to them or not.

    4. Re:Read The Bill by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      Mike Pence was asked many times by ABC if it would allow discrimination based on sexual orientation, and all he gave were non-answers.. Also, it's a lie to call his bill "the same as other states", when other states have laws preventing discrimination against LGBT. Indiana has no such protective laws, and Pence is opposed to them.

      Even Fox News has debunked his claims that his law "is the same as the other laws."

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    5. Re:Read The Bill by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      " It _basically_ instructs the courts to take into consideration sincerely-held religious convictions in discrimination cases " - and that is what is so wrong about this bill. there is already an outlet in law for the sincerely bigotted due to religious belief, its called "diminished responsibility" or a plea of insanity

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
  69. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by TWX · · Score: 1

    Apparently I need more coffee. The last one should have been Buddhists, not Hindus.

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  70. Re:Oklahoma uses Sharia law to ban gays by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    I was just reading a city in Oklahoma enabled Sharia Law to make sure gays do not have rights so the city council can be re-elected.

    If Obama did this they would be screaming murder and going to the white house with pitchforks and torches. Hypocrites.

  71. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mod Parent +5 informative please! Yes, I'm the original and now enlightened troll! May all the homosexuals (previously referred to as faggots) enjoy their equal protection under the law.

  72. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the right to bake cakes shall not be infringed

    Also, does this grant you the right or does it say that the right you already have shall not be infringed? I think it's clear that it doesn't grant you any rights. You already have that right. It is just making it explicit that the right (that you already have) shall not be infringed. It's actually not really necessary, strictly speaking. But the founding fathers were paranoid (rightly so).

  73. Tim Cook - Listen to Kid Rock - FOAD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's no such thing as discrimination against "personal choices".

    Laws are passed all the time to restrict "choices".

    Don't smoke in public buildings.
    Don't drink and drive.
    Don't drive without a seatbelt.
    Don't drive without insurance.
    Don't beat children.
    Don't beat your wife (I understand you never could because of your "CHOICES" you've made.)

    Discrimination against being born male or female, being born with different pigmentation or lack their of in your skin, these are things that can be discriminated against, and that is why the laws were made to assign penalties for that discrimination.

    Trying to place the "CHOICE" of liking the same sex at the same level as how you were born is farcical.

    The bill of rights guarantees that "Congress may pass NO law" that interferes with the freedom of religion. So sorry asshole, you cannot get a law passed that trumps religious freedom. Any laws that try to do that will fail, miserably. Like laws that say you cannot discriminate sexual orientation? Those are unconstitutional if your "choice" is based on said religious freedom.

    So, as Kid Rock sings in his new album "First Kiss" .... Fuck Off And Die

  74. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All forms of non-consensual sex are illegal. More importantly, they are considered to be immoral and thus are likely to remain illegal. The law should generally try to follow what's moral, not the other way around.

    There. Now people will stop comparing two adults of the same gender having consensual sex to somebody abusing an animal. We'll never have to see that comparison again because I've explained it. /sarc.

  75. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by dwillden · · Score: 1

    Yet the implementation of this aspect of the 1st has very little relation to the wording in the amendment. "Congress shall make no laws regarding the establishment of religion." Absolutely nothing about the separation of church and state. Simply that congress shall not try to establish a state religion. or prohibit a religion.

    Whereas some try to justify rules and regulations and out right bans on various firearms based on the Well regulated militia clause but there is not much ambiguity to the "The right of the people to keep and bear arms." is pretty straightforward and clear.

    --
    I'm too lazy to compose a creative sig.
  76. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Get a judge that actually follows the "law" and guess what - all of those "Decisions" get thrown out the window.

    Congress may pass NO law that abridges freedom of religion. PERIOD.

    There are NO exclusions to this. Any Judge that decides otherwise is a Constitutional Terrorist that should be strung up by their bikini underwear.

  77. We Reserve The Right To Refuse Service by Tempest_2084 · · Score: 1

    So out of curiosity, are those signs that say "We reserve the right to refuse serve to anyone" legal? If they are, then why would they need to pass this law? If not, does a business have the right under ANY circumstance to refuse service to someone outside of where the law demands it (like a bartender refusing to serve an intoxicated customer)? Are businesses considered to be public and therefore must be open to everyone or are they considered private and open only to whomever the owner wants (like a private club)? I've always been curious about this

    1. Re:We Reserve The Right To Refuse Service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been curious about this myself. In Ohio, businesses are in theory provided with the right to refuse service to any person at any time for any reason.

      These cases may end up going the same way that the marijuana laws are going: It is in direct opposition of federal law, but the states are doing what they want anyway. It is a de-facto secession from the union, in a way, and I don't see it as a bad thing per se.

    2. Re:We Reserve The Right To Refuse Service by sudon't · · Score: 1

      If you had an internet connection on your computer, it'd be very easy to find out. Here, let me help:

      ---snip---
      Are "We Reserve the Right to Refuse Service to Anyone" Signs in Restaurants Legal?
      Yes, however they still do not give a restaurant the power to refuse service on the basis of race, color, religion, or natural origin. These signs also do not preclude a court from finding other arbitrary refusals of service to be discriminatory. Simply put, restaurants that carry a "Right to Refuse Service" sign are subject to the same laws as restaurants without one.

      What Conditions Allow a Restaurant to Refuse Service?
        There a number of legitimate reasons for a restaurant to refuse service, some of which include:

      Patrons who are unreasonably rowdy or causing trouble
      Patrons that may overfill capacity if let in
      Patrons who come in just before closing time or when the kitchen is closed
      Patrons accompanied by large groups of non-customers looking to sit in
      Patrons lacking adequate hygiene (e.g. excess dirt, extreme body odor, etc.)
      In most cases, refusal of service is warranted where a customer’s presence in the restaurant detracts from the safety, welfare, and well-being of other patrons and the restaurant itself.
      ---snip---

      As a former bar owner, I would like to add: Assholes who bring their own booze.

      Read the rest: http://www.legalmatch.com/law-...

      By adding these religious exemption laws, you're opening up a loophole for all kinds of discrimination. For instance, a proprietor may decide he shouldn't have to serve the Sons of Ham, whom the Bible has said are bad people.
      Yay, religion!

      --
      -- sudon't

      Air-ride Equipped

    3. Re:We Reserve The Right To Refuse Service by kqs · · Score: 1

      As far as I know, you can put whatever sign you want in your window, but you generally cannot refuse service if the only reason is that someone is in a protected class. So you can refuse service to anyone if they are drunk, barefoot, tall, or wearing white after labor day, etc, but not because they are muslim, african-american, or female. LGTB folks are not a protected class in Indiana, so this bill gives you a defense if you discriminate against them for any reason whatsoever.

    4. Re:We Reserve The Right To Refuse Service by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      So out of curiosity, are those signs that say "We reserve the right to refuse serve to anyone" legal? If they are, then why would they need to pass this law? If not, does a business have the right under ANY circumstance to refuse service to someone outside of where the law demands it (like a bartender refusing to serve an intoxicated customer)?

      It is generally legal to refuse service to anyone, except for certain explicitly protected categories (gender, age, religion etc). The catch is that on the federal level, the said protected category list does not include sexual orientation. In some states, it is protected on state level. In some, it's not protected on state level, but is protected on the municipal level. The latter is especially common in large metro areas (which lean liberal pretty much everywhere) in otherwise conservative states.

      So, basically, the reason why that law makes a difference is because it overrides various municipal bylaws prohibiting such discrimination, and carves out a religious exemption that pretty much anyone can arbitrarily claim in practice.

      And yes, businesses can arbitrarily discriminate in other ways. They can refuse to serve intoxicated customers, for example, or people with mustaches (though in some cases discriminating based on some trait can be illegal if it is found that in practice it results in clear discrimination against some protected class by virtue of correlation).

      Are businesses considered to be public and therefore must be open to everyone or are they considered private and open only to whomever the owner wants (like a private club)?

      They can be either, it all depends on how you set things up. If you have some notion of membership, and only serve members, then you can apply pretty much arbitrary filters for people wanting to become members, including those protected classes - i.e. it's perfectly legal to have a whites-only private club, for example (though of course you'll get a lot of flak in the media as soon as it comes out).

    5. Re:We Reserve The Right To Refuse Service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but you can say "Here's your drink you filthy Muslim" and proceed to go on a verbal tirade about how much you hate Muslims.

      The end result is the same - you have the right to decide who you do and don't do business with. If the Federal government and left wing think they can change this they are sadly mistaken.

  78. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1

    You won't find those exact words; however, you will find this:

    but no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States.

    If there was a state religion, or if religion were not required to be separate from the state, there would, indeed, be religious tests applicable.

    Of course, the Constitution also still contains provisions on how to count slaves for purposes of allocating Congress.

    --
    Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  79. Eventually, values will clash by argStyopa · · Score: 1

    At some point your freedoms will clash with my freedoms. Who wins then, Tim?

    For every person demanding that kids be taught that homosexuality is normal and natural and thus should be accepted by all (as proved by its persistence throughout history despite brutal efforts to suppress it), I'd like to submit that we - using the same criteria - teach that murder, rape, and war are LIKEWISE "normal" and "natural".

    Oh wait, one is obviously "good", the other obviously "bad"? Some people might assert that homosexuality is biologically deviant and phylogenically a waste of resources, while war culls the weak.

    (I'll just point out that even composing this post and the examples above was an intellectually challenging exercise, but the moment we don't TRY to understand the viewpoint of our ideological opposite - who likely has the same moral stance, just a different set of facts/priorities/filters - our arguments are bankrupt.)

    Personally, I believe that racists, and homophobes, and sexists should be allowed to just do what they want, and be who they are, as long as they don't actually harm anyone. If they want to refuse service in their business, that's a commercial decision they can make, and can cheerfully live with the consequences of that choice - I mean, it's not like the internet would make it simple for the world to be informed of these choices, and the marketplace - the true democracy, with people casting votes they actually care about with their $ - can vote on whether it's anathema or ok.

    --
    -Styopa
    1. Re:Eventually, values will clash by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      The segregated South falsifies your claim. The free market in those states would quite happily have excluded blacks from the mainstream economic system in perpetuity if left to itself.

      The "invisible hand" is a pile of steaming bullshit, as unevidenced a god as Yahweh.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:Eventually, values will clash by Sigmon · · Score: 1

      The segregated South was NOT a free-market. The south was segregated BY LAW. Laws are enacted and enforced by GOVERNMENT... not a free market. You've heard the term 'Jim Crow', right? They were called 'Jim Crow LAWS'. Jim Crow was not instituted by the free market. It was government. Government FORCED business owners to have things like separate water fountains for blacks and whites. Absent these laws, _some_ may have still discriminated - but most likely would not have.

    3. Re:Eventually, values will clash by MightyMartian · · Score: 2

      Those laws were passed with little or no opposition from Southern society. They weren't forced on the South, they were an expression of the fear and general disdain for Southern blacks by the white majority.

      You're trying desperately to let Southern whites from the end of Reconstruction until the 1960s off the hook for a general and pervasive racism by claiming the State legislatures were at fault. It's absurd and bizarre, but it's the kind of idiocy I've come to expect from Libertarians.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    4. Re:Eventually, values will clash by Straif · · Score: 1

      A lot, if not most, of the segregation in the south was due to government intervention, not business decisions. Jim Crow laws dictated the layouts of restaurants, public transport, washroom access etc..

      In general, businesses go where the money is and as soon as any segment of society has disposable income either existing businesses will adjust to cater to that new clientele or new businesses will open to provide the demanded service.

      --
      Of course that's just my opinion...... you could be wrong!
    5. Re:Eventually, values will clash by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      "Business" is not some entity that exists in a vacuum. The Jim Crow laws were passed with the consent of the majority of white southerners, and were maintained for decades. There's little or no evidence of any dissatisfaction on the part of the majority of Southerners to such laws, and indeed every indication that Segregation was viewed as right and proper.

      I'm sorry you have a hard time accepting this, but Antebellum society until recently was fundamentally racist, and the businesses and legislatures of those states merely reflected the public mood. You will note that there was virtually no Southern civil rights movement, and that the pressure, and ultimately the solution, to Segregation and Jim Crow came from outside.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    6. Re:Eventually, values will clash by Sigmon · · Score: 1

      No... I'm trying desperately to get people to understand that Jim Crow was a GOVERNMENT problem. I'm not trying to get anybody 'off the hook'.

      I've seen so many people blaming the 'Free-Market' for Jim Crow... and Jim Crow is about a far removed from a free market as one can get! You don't seem to have the mental capacity to understand what free market means.... it doesn't mean the rich and powerful people get the government to make laws in their favor! It means the government STAYS OUT OF IT (nearly) ALLTOGETHER and lets people freely make the decisions they wish to make.

      NOTE: I do not argue for a 100% free market... That would be unreasonable. SOME government regulations on a market are desirable - but the goal _should_ be to keep that to a minimum.

  80. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Still crying that you don't get to have your protestant christian religion mandated by the government? Why don't you go back to sucking your preacher's cock while the rest of the world gets on with life.

  81. Total hypocrisy by bradley13 · · Score: 0

    Really, it would be funny if it weren't so sad. All of the SJWs are condemning the Indiana law, because they disapprove of the motivation behind it. However, it is nearly identical to the federal law that the SJWs applauded. The only differences are theoretical motivations behind the laws. The federal law was justified, in part, on the freedom of Native Americans to practice their religion. The Indiana law is justified, in part, on the right of businesses to refuse service when doing so would violate their religious beliefs.

    The actual or hypothetical motivations behind the laws are, in the end, completely irrelevant. In practice, the law can be invoked by anyone who feels that their religious freedom is being curtailed. What's important is the content, so let's look at the laws:

    The federal law, enthusiastically supported by SJWs, states: “Government may substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion only if it demonstrates that application of the burden to the person (1) is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest; and (2) is the least restrictive means of furthering that compelling governmental interest.”

    The Indiana law, vehemently condemned by SJWs, states: “A governmental entity may substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion only if the governmental entity demonstrates that application of the burden to the person: (1) is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest; and (2) is the least restrictive means of furthering that compelling governmental interest.”

    There is no significant difference between the two. What the SJWs are objecting to are the purported motivations of the people passing the law. In short: "it's good if we do it, but bad if you do it". Pretty much textbook hypocrisy.

    p.s. For those wondering why the States need their own laws, when a federal law exists: Some court case or other led to a decision that the federal law was not binding on State and local governments. This is mentioned in the Wikipedia article about the federal law.

    --
    Enjoy life! This is not a dress rehearsal.
    1. Re:Total hypocrisy by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      What a crock. The federal law, and the states that passed similar laws, ban discrimination against LGBT. Indiana doesn't, which makes the law quite different in its' effects. You know it's bad when even Fox News is pointing out your lies about your anti-LGBT law.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
  82. Re: Does this law protect puppies? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

    You wouldn't be a God-fearing bigot if didn't constantly compare homosexuality to bestiality and pedophilia.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  83. Re: Does this law protect puppies? by jythie · · Score: 2

    Hate to break it to you, but homosexuality is not a paraphilia any more than hetrosexuality is. It is not even a sexual practice.

  84. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Eh - Sorry, you are wrong.

    http://www.constitution-billofrights.com/bill-of-rights/first-amendment/separation-of-church-and-state/

    And more specifically to the point.

    http://www.constitution-billofrights.com/bill-of-rights/first-amendment/

    2. Congress does not have the authority in Article 1, Section 8 to abridge the free exercise or expression of religion within the states. However, the First Amendment makes this point explicit.

    ie - the founding fathers thought this important enough to not only "not grant" the authority, they thought enough to "explicitly" deny that authority in the first amendment.
    So yeah, my freedom of religious expression is protected by the Bill of Rights, while your "choice" to like the same sex isn't.

  85. Please ready Hobby Lobby before commenting by l2718 · · Score: 1

    You are entirely wrong. The Hobby Lobby ruling said nothing about the workers submitting to the religious beliefs of the company owners. The workers retain full access to all medical serviced they wish. For example they are free to use their own money to buy contraception and abortion, and to buy health insurance that covers contraception and abortion. The only "right" the lost was the "right" to have the employer buy them contraception. The workers certainly have a right to be compensated for their labour (and they are!) -- but are not "submitting to the religious beliefs of their employer" by being paid their salary in cash instead of in medical services.

    The only abuse here is that salary paid in cash is taxable, while salary paid in medical insurance isn't. But that is a problem created by Congress, and the solution is to remove the loophole. Decoupling health insurance from employment would automatically solve the religious liberty problem (if each workers bought their own coverage, the employer's religious beliefs wouldn't be relevant) and would mean losing your job wouldn't automatically mean you lose your insurance..

    1. Re:Please ready Hobby Lobby before commenting by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 1

      WTF are the air quotes for?

    2. Re:Please ready Hobby Lobby before commenting by OhPlz · · Score: 1

      Hobby Lobby's insurance plan covered contraception. What they didn't want to pay for was the "morning after" products.

    3. Re:Please ready Hobby Lobby before commenting by l2718 · · Score: 2
      Excellent question:

      WTF are the air quotes for?

      The word right is used today to denote two very different kinds of things. People talk about the "right to freedom of speech" but also about "the right to a living wage". Unfortunately, these are two very different kinds of legal arrangements.

      Rights of the first kind (exemplified by the freedom of speech) are negative rights: rights to be free from interference by others. You can do as you please as long as you don't harm anyone. Respecting and protecting such rights is, in my opinion, a principal function of government.

      "Rights" of the second kind (exemplified by the "right" to have your employer buy you a specific form of health insurance) are positive rights: they amount to an imposition on someone else to do something for you. In other words, they cannot be fulfilled without infringing someone's negative right to be free from interference. Positive rights are properly aspirational statements ("wouldn't it be great if people could have X even if they don't have X now?"), and are called "rights" as a rhetorical device: since we all agree that negative rights ought to be protected by the government, calling something a "right" creates the impression that it should be protected too.

      When speaking about positive "rights", I use the word in quotes to highlight this distinction, and avoiding the rhetorical trap set by the proponents of such "rights".

      In the case at hand, the employees of Hobby Lobby have every right (without quotes) to use their salary to buy contraception. They don't (and shouldn't) have the "right" to have Hobby Lobby buy them contraception. The owners of Hobby Lobby (acting jointly through the company) have a right to freedom of thought, and a right to dispose of their property (Hobby Lobby and its money) as they please, including by refusing to buy someone contraception.

    4. Re:Please ready Hobby Lobby before commenting by l2718 · · Score: 1

      Duly noted. In detail, the government views the "morning after" pill as providing contraception, while the company views it as providing abortion. This has no effect on the way the Hobby Lobby ruling is viewed by the public or what it actually means.

    5. Re:Please ready Hobby Lobby before commenting by OhPlz · · Score: 1

      It doesn't change the impact of the court decision, but I do believe it smears the reputation of the business and its defenders. The media makes the company out to be as bad as the Westboro Church lunatics, when in reality they had compromised and would cover nearly all forms of contraception. If this were well known, it would not have gained the publicity it did.

    6. Re:Please ready Hobby Lobby before commenting by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 1

      They don't (and shouldn't) have the "right" to have Hobby Lobby buy them contraception.

      Their employer doesn't "buy them contraception", it just buys them health insurance. And at that point, they can start minding their own business about their employee's personal lives. Why should details about your health care still be under the influence of your employer's religion? Your employer has no business deciding if you shouldn't get insurance coverage for a circumcision.

    7. Re:Please ready Hobby Lobby before commenting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your employer has no business deciding if you shouldn't get insurance coverage for a circumcision.

      Why is our health care tied to our employer in the first place???

  86. Test it? by zerosomething · · Score: 1

    If you think the Indiana RFRA gives a business the right to discriminate based on religion then test it. Refuse to serve "Christians" and see how that works out in the courts.

    --
    It all starts at 0
  87. Is My Religious Liberty Being Threatened? by kindbud · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How to Determine if Your Religious Liberty Is Being Threatened in Just 10 Quick Questions.
      Just pick "A" or "B" for each question.

      My religious liberty is at risk because:
    A) I am not allowed to go to a religious service of my own choosing.
    B) Others are allowed to go to religious services of their own choosing.

    2. My religious liberty is at risk because:
    A) I am not allowed to marry the person I love legally, even though my religious community blesses my marriage.
    B) Some states refuse to enforce my own particular religious beliefs on marriage on those two guys in line down at the courthouse.

    3. My religious liberty is at risk because:
    A) I am being forced to use birth control.
    B) I am unable to force others to not use birth control.

    4. My religious liberty is at risk because:
    A) I am not allowed to pray privately.
    B) I am not allowed to force others to pray the prayers of my faith publicly.

    5. My religious liberty is at risk because:
    A) Being a member of my faith means that I can be bullied without legal recourse.
    B) I am no longer allowed to use my faith to bully gay kids with impunity.

    6. My religious liberty is at risk because:
    A) I am not allowed to purchase, read or possess religious books or material.
    B) Others are allowed to have access books, movies and websites that I do not like.

    7. My religious liberty is at risk because:
    A) My religious group is not allowed equal protection under the establishment clause.
    B) My religious group is not allowed to use public funds, buildings and resources as we would like, for whatever purposes we might like.

    8. My religious liberty is at risk because:
    A) Another religious group has been declared the official faith of my country.
    B) My own religious group is not given status as the official faith of my country.

    9. My religious liberty is at risk because:
    A) My religious community is not allowed to build a house of worship in my community.
    B) A religious community I do not like wants to build a house of worship in my community.

    10. My religious liberty is at risk because:
    A) I am not allowed to teach my children the creation stories of our faith at home.
    B) Public school science classes are teaching science.

    If you answered "A" to any question, then perhaps your religious liberty is indeed at stake. You and your faith group have every right to now advocate for equal protection under the law.

    If you answered "B" to any question, then not only is your religious liberty not at stake, but there is a strong chance that you are oppressing the religious liberties of others.

    --
    Edith Keeler Must Die
    1. Re:Is My Religious Liberty Being Threatened? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Way to cherry-pick and strawman with those questions.

    2. Re:Is My Religious Liberty Being Threatened? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      A) You're not required to celebrate anything.
      B) Same logic trotted out in the 50s-60s about black people. Clearly you should be able to close the door on anyone who "sickens" you, right? Maybe you should take a serious look at yourself if you're so easily "sickened".

    3. Re:Is My Religious Liberty Being Threatened? by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Your butthurt at having your justifications for intolerance crumble in the face of logic is noted, bigot.

    4. Re:Is My Religious Liberty Being Threatened? by Orgasmatron · · Score: 1

      Congratulations! You've identified 10 scenarios that are not at issue anywhere in the US, and that have nothing whatsoever to do with the laws in question.

      --
      See that "Preview" button?
    5. Re:Is My Religious Liberty Being Threatened? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The law is meant for number 5.

    6. Re:Is My Religious Liberty Being Threatened? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The sad irony is that "the freedom to oppress others" was exactly what the Pilgrims came to the New World to establish. It was the (only) part of their faith that they couldn't practice freely in early 17th-century England. The Calvinist Puritans wanted their Shining City on the Hill, where sin was effectively banished by highly intrusive social control.

      That's why there's such a weird, distorted view of "religious liberty" in the US - its very roots are conflicted and inherently contradictory.

    7. Re:Is My Religious Liberty Being Threatened? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What we have here is:

      11. My religious liberty is at risk because:
      A) I am not allowed to choose with whom I will associate or do business.
      B) The state will not force other people to associate or do business with me.

    8. Re:Is My Religious Liberty Being Threatened? by youngatheart · · Score: 1

      Number 5 is applicable if you rephrase it:
      5. My religious liberty is at risk because:
      A) Members of my faith can be forced to create something endorsing activity my religion prohibits with legal repercussions if they refuse. (Colorado)
      B) I am now prohibited from forcing people with beliefs contrary to my own to create something their religion prohibits. (Indiana)

      This is directly applicable to what is happening:
      http://www.latimes.com/opinion...

      The customer, named Bill Jack, also wanted Marjorie Silva to add “an image of two men holding hands, covered in a big, red X.” ... We're not doing this.... Jack has filed a religious-discrimination complaint

      http://www.americanthinker.com...

      the bakers in question are not refusing service to a type of people — they are refusing to be party to a type of message.

      http://www.breitbart.com/big-g...

      [Judge] Spencer ordered Phillips to bake cakes celebrating gay marriage for any other parties that ask for such a cake in the future.

      http://www.nydailynews.com/new...

      An Oregon bakery will have to pay a gay couple up to $150,000 for refusing to bake them a wedding cake ... pay up to $75,000 each

    9. Re:Is My Religious Liberty Being Threatened? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Regarding christianism in the US, I would say 5A, 7A and 8A are ticked.

      Like all -isms, progressivism is a religion and unfortunately now it US official faith.

    10. Re:Is My Religious Liberty Being Threatened? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You left out:

      11. My religious liberty is at risk because:
      A) I am forced to condone and/or financially support actions which my religion condemns
      B) I force others to condone and/or financially support actions which their religion condemns

    11. Re:Is My Religious Liberty Being Threatened? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyone that disagrees with me on a controversial issue is a bigot

      What a lovely juggernaut of irony you have perched upon your shoulder. Let me guess, he hates crackers.

    12. Re:Is My Religious Liberty Being Threatened? by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Pulling straw men out of your ass doesn't make you less of a bigot, fool.

    13. Re:Is My Religious Liberty Being Threatened? by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      You're so right. The left always wants to crush any other opinion that isn't theirs. Tolerance except from them.

    14. Re:Is My Religious Liberty Being Threatened? by kindbud · · Score: 1

      Congratulations. You have understood the point perfectly.

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
  88. Overwhelmingly Atheist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And the offense against Christians builds to a fever pitch while the crowd yells “Stop pushing your values on us!” But it’s neither Gays nor Christians doing most of the pushing. Atheists are doing the pushing against Christians. Religions other than Christian and Anti-Christian are seldom involved. Christians are going to get their pants sued off it they don't bake the cake with same sex couples. It is the plan.

  89. Apples and Oranges by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    There are two completely different situations in TFA:

    - Clerks work for the city / county, not the feds or the courts. If they have a problem with the rules, they can challenge them or quit. If someone else is offended by the rules, their problem is with the city / county, not the clerk. The Texas clowns want to lay their responsibility on someone who has no authority to deal with it and certainly isn't being paid enough to.

    - People who run a business (like a bakery) should be absolutely free to refuse service to anyone, at any time, with or without giving a reason. It's not the government's business. If a bakery wants to make cakes for government functions, they follow the government's rules. If the public doesn't like it, the business changes their policy or closes. Period. (Ignoring all the ways the government can visit "unrelated" reprisals on uncooperative subjects.)

    How can anyone argue against that? I'm reminded of the small southern town I grew up in. Lots of natural beauty, and lots of rich northerners who wanted to live there. Trouble was, most of them immediately joined or created every committee, etc, they could find, ran for office, and wrote to the newspapers trying to turn their new home into the same totalitarian northeastern sewer they were supposedly escaping. It's okay to know all the answers, but preserve me from the ones who want to impose their answers on everyone else.

    1. Re:Apples and Oranges by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      - People who run a business (like a bakery) should be absolutely free to refuse service to anyone, at any time, with or without giving a reason. It's not the government's business. If a bakery wants to make cakes for government functions, they follow the government's rules. If the public doesn't like it, the business changes their policy or closes. Period. (Ignoring all the ways the government can visit "unrelated" reprisals on uncooperative subjects.)

      Except that isn't true. The Civil Rights Act 1964 pretty much killed segregation, which based on that very claim. Generations of African Americans grew up banished from many white-run businesses based on the claim "businesses have an absolute right."

      The fact is that businesses do not have absolute rights to refuse service, and have not had an absolute right in half a century.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  90. Tim Crook? by AndyKron · · Score: 0

    Fuck Apple's Tim Crook. Fuck Apple and everything associated with Apple.

  91. I can mock all I want by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Religious people have the right not to have their faith mocked...

    Exactly where in US law does it say that one should be immune to mockery based on your religious choices? Rest assured that I fully plan to mock you and your invisible friend. I'll just won't deny your marriage license as well.

    ...by being forced to admit into their midst people that do not share their beliefs.

    That is EXACTLY the excuse used by bigots to justify Jim Crow laws and other forms of discrimination. That's just a fancy way of saying "we don't want your kind here".

  92. Not discriminatory- REDUNDANT. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First Amendment: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

    Second Clause forbids any law that interferes with religious practice.

    Any law that impinges upon religious freedoms in ANY way is explicitly VOID upon it's face from it's beginnings. In fact, it shouldn't even get enforcement based on the decision of Marbury v. Madison, with the Supreme Court finding that, "It is also not entirely unworthy of observation that, in declaring what shall be the supreme law of the land, the Constitution itself is first mentioned, and not the laws of the United States generally, but those only which shall be made in pursuance of the Constitution, have that rank. Thus, the particular phraseology of the Constitution of the United States confirms and strengthens the principle, supposed to be essential to all written Constitutions, that a law repugnant to the Constitution is void, and that courts, as well as other departments, are bound by that instrument."

    Tim Cook should, quite simply, shut his damn pie-hole unless he's going to get that amended.

    This is why people should flatly NOT care about who says what- because idiots with celebrity make statements they flatly have no business making.

  93. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem is most of the people do not like a group of people, and such business are allowed to refuse services, we can create a situation where the outcast group cannot use the goods and services they need to function/survive in society.

    We need business to offer goods and services for us to function, otherwise we will spending all of our time on our own survival. Having businesses refuse business based on aspects people cannot control means your are forcing people from the society.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  94. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No it's not.
    It depends on the state.

  95. Right to refuse business already exist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't business owners already have the right to refuse business to anyone for any reason? Is a law needed to use religion as the reason for this?

  96. Shut up Tim, and focus on business making. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do what you do best, and leave politics to a horse, it has a bigger head.

  97. Re: "principles our nation was founded on" by shilly · · Score: 1

    This is completely mad! The separation of church and state is the *same thing* as not establishing a state religion. If you put up the Ten Commandments on a gigantic plaque outside City Hall, you are, de facto, establishing Christianity as the religion that the state endorses. (Judaism doesn't have the Ten Commandments, it has the Aseret Dibrayot, which means something rather different.)

  98. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    Wasting your time. They have had the 2nd explained to them more often then a creationist has had evolution explained to them. They don't want to know.

    You cannot educate 'willful ignorance'. It's a waste of time to try.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  99. Heh...pot, kettle, black. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Is it hate disguised as religion? Let's see...

    Leviticus 18 - "You shall not lie with a male as with a woman; it is an abomination."
    Leviticus 20 - "If a man lies with a male as with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination; they shall surely be put to death; their blood is upon them."

    Ouch. Not so much hate, now is it? Let's see more, shall we?

    Jude 1:7 - "the inhabitants of Sodom and Gomorrah are stated to have been 'giving themselves over to fornication, and going after strange flesh,'"

    Ouch. Again...not so much hate, now is it? Is there more?

    Romans 1 - "For this cause God gave them up unto vile affections: for even their women did change the natural use into that which is against nature: And likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another; men with men working that which is unseemly, and receiving in themselves that recompence of their error which was meet"

    Ouch. Wow...that's even in the New Testament.

    Sorry, you're full of shit and hatred yourself. I, as a Christian, love others as my brother, but I do hate the sin, do not condone it, and don't believe that those that claim to be actively practicing gays are anything but hypocrites. There's no hatred there...I don't accept their chosen lifestyle because it's explicitly called out as a sin in the Bible. You're off bashing Christians in your own remarks in the same manner you accuse them of. Projection much?

    In the end, though, the laws are redundant. The Constitution EXPLICITLY calls out the anti-discrimination laws as they have been framed as being forbidden to all branches of Government in the First and Fourteenth Amendments. Want to change this? Get it amended. Best of luck, you'll NEED it.

    1. Re:Heh...pot, kettle, black. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you read much of the rest of the law around Leviticus and Exodus? Are you free from all of that sin? As mentioned by GP, tattoos are a sin. So is cutting your facial hair. So is associating with a woman during her period. So is working late on a Friday (I'm allowed to kill you if you do that). So is eating a bacon cheese burger.

      That book is full of a shit-ton of absolute bunk and you are just as good as every other Christian when you pick and choose which parts validate your bigotry and hatred towards others.

  100. We reserve the right to refuse service... by erp_consultant · · Score: 1

    to anyone. You have probably seen these signs in restaurants and other businesses. But in today's world, can a business owner really refuse to serve someone? The answer is it depends.

    The Federal Civil Rights Act guarantees: "full and equal enjoyment of the goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages, and accommodations of any place of public accommodation, without discrimination or segregation on the ground of race, color, religion, or national origin.". The Americans with Disabilities Act extends this to include people with disabilities. So currently, federal law does not extend these rights to sexual preference.

    Some states, such as California, have extended the Civil rights act to include sexual preference. It passed something called the Unruh Civil Rights Act which makes it illegal to discriminate based on sexual preference and what it calls "unconventional dress". Other states have done similar things.

    The point here is that currently it is a State's rights issue, not a Federal issue. So states are free to adopt the Federal Civil Rights Act as is or they can extend it to include other things, like California has done.

    What Tim Cook and others are trying to do is have it become a Federal issue so that the Federal Civil Rights Act is amended to include sexual preference. Much like gay marriage proponents are attempting to do. Then states will be powerless to invoke their own individual standards.

    We can debate whether or not it is the right thing to do but at the heart of it is a Federal vs. States rights struggle.

  101. Businesses Have A Right to be Jerks by Jarwulf · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I can't believe how many people are can't wrap their heads around businesses being able to choose their own customers. Being a 'jerk' is a moral offense and should not a legal one on par with robbery or murder. People already are allowed to be jerks for a million other reasons, why is orientation so special? If the government needs to go after bakers not baking a cake for someone why not also jail and fines for adultery or cutting in line?

    1. Re:Businesses Have A Right to be Jerks by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      From past experience (e.g. Jim Crow), we know that in some cases allowing people to discriminate results in discrimination so pervasive that it severely affects the targeted group - basically, they're unable to obtain the services anywhere, or they can only obtain them for significantly higher prices or significantly lower quality.

    2. Re:Businesses Have A Right to be Jerks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't believe how many people are can't wrap their heads around businesses being able to choose their own customers.

      The people who can't wrap their heads around it are probably mostly women or blacks.

      Who cares right? *highfive*

    3. Re:Businesses Have A Right to be Jerks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and I can't believe that people cannot understand that businesses can and do choose their customers every day. What amazes me is that people get so wrapped up over a 70 year old florist declining to do a gay wedding, or a photographer declining the same wedding that they have to sue. I get pissed off at businesses all the time. How do I deal with it? I don't spend money there. I don't sue them for the $7.91 it cost me to drive to a different florist (that was the actual court awarded damage) and consequently bankrupt the little old lady with legal fees.

      I am a photographer. I hate photographing weddings of all types, but I get the idea that you slashdotters would force me to do something I would do very poorly - photograph a wedding and probably ruin it for the happy couple with my uninspired wedding photos. I prefer to photograph nude women. However, I don't photograph nude men because as an artist, I don't get inspired by the male form. Am I a bigot? or an artist that finds his muse and sticks to it? I really don't have any problem turning down jobs to photograph gay weddings. I simply say I am busy. Should I be sued for doing something we all do every day? Telling a little white lie to avoid offending someone?

    4. Re:Businesses Have A Right to be Jerks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're intentionally misrepresenting the situation. Shame on you.

      Businesses don't have a right to refuse service to individuals with immutable qualities (race, gender, orientation) because that would violate the deal that they have with the government. In exchange for being able to display their storefront in commercially-zoned areas (and in addition to the protections the government provides to businesses to help prevent fraud, etc.), the business agrees to serve the public. This "right to refuse service to people I don't like" idea is bullshit, and it's been proven to be bullshit over and over again.

  102. Tim Cook is an idiot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tim Cook is an idiot. He obviously has no regard for the constitution and certainly no concept of the hierarchy of overlapping rights and responsibilities.

    1. Re:Tim Cook is an idiot. by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      Multiple levels. This didn't work out well for Starbucks. He's gay, we get that. Get a room joy-boy. Buy from me if you like. Don't require me to do something I don't want to do as a business and is against my religion using the force of the Government.

      Apple is also sucking. Well on the decline, just like Microsoft did, just like IBM did, just like... well you get the idea. Less gay stuff, more cool stuff.

  103. Is there anything that YOU would NOT do for money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is there any line that YOU would not cross? Is there any belief that you hold sacred? Is there anything that is not "against the law" that you would not do, for money? IF they said that they would take away EVERYTHING you own, your home, your business, because you refused to do this thing, would you say OK I'll do it. Could you have the courage of your convictions? Should someone be able to take away EVERYTING you own, because you REFUSED to do something? Whatever happened to the right to refuse a customer? They lose that sale, but should they lose EVERYTHING?
    This is not for large publicly traded companies, this is for small mom and pop companies. This saves them from doing whatever unsavory thing some "customer" comes in and decides they want done. It lets them be honest that they do not want to do it, rather than "failing to meet contractual obligations" oopsy!

  104. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by blue9steel · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The correct balance is probably to allow it for sole proprietorships but not parternships or corporations. That way individuals aren't forced to violate their conscience while groups are required to conform to societal norms. If Joe's lawnmower service center or Sally's cake shop is discriminatory it's probably not a big deal in the grand scheme of things (distasteful as it may be to some), but if you have the same problem with Toro or Albertsons it's a major issue. This makes both sides unhappy, so it's likely the best compromise solution.

  105. How does this guy justify opening his mouth on the by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After all the lawsuits on poaching and how Apple and Google have decided to prevent poaching by restricting former employees opportunities even after they get laid off?

  106. I agree with Apple? by whitroth · · Score: 1

    Now *that's* strange... but yep. I see *zero* difference between religious discrimination based on gender and racial discrimination... oh, except that the former means you need to pull down your pants so they can decide whether or not to discriminate against you.

    And trolls, it doesn't matter what sex you really want to get laid by, deep down inside, you *still* won't get laid by anyone.

                          mark

  107. Not so. by emil · · Score: 4, Informative

    I just finished Reza Aslan's "Jesus the Zealot," and much was said about the Roman occupation, and the Levite collaborators, even in the sanitized gospels that were whitewashed for a Roman audience.

    "Give to Caesar that which is Caesar's, and give to God what is God's," is actually a direct challenge to throw the Romans out of Judea, a statement made within the Court of the Gentiles on the temple grounds. Tearing down and rebuilding the temple in three days, as a challenge to the high priest Caiaphas, also directly threatened the Roman order.

    The Roman governors of Judea were alternately viciously efficient or incompetent, and a spirit of rebellion reached a crescendo after the crucifixion, when Judea was free from Roman rule for four years, then crushed by the armies of Vespasian and his son Titus, who utterly destroyed Jerusalem.

    1. Re:Not so. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      and a spirit of rebellion reached a crescendo after the crucifixion

      No, it reached a climax. The crescendo was what lead up to the climax. Crescendo means a steady rise in volume, not an endpoint. Its like climbing a hill (crescendo), and reaching the summit (climax).

    2. Re:Not so. by erapert · · Score: 1

      "Give to Caesar that which is Caesar's, and give to God what is God's," is actually a direct challenge to throw the Romans out of Judea, a statement made within the Court of the Gentiles on the temple grounds.

      Here's the actual text:

      Matthew 22:15-22King James Version (KJV)

      15 Then went the Pharisees, and took counsel how they might entangle him in his talk.
      16 And they sent out unto him their disciples with the Herodians, saying, Master, we know that thou art true, and teachest the way of God in truth, neither carest thou for any man: for thou regardest not the person of men.
      17 Tell us therefore, What thinkest thou? Is it lawful to give tribute unto Caesar, or not?
      18 But Jesus perceived their wickedness, and said, Why tempt ye me, ye hypocrites?
      19 Shew me the tribute money. And they brought unto him a penny.
      20 And he saith unto them, Whose is this image and superscription?
      21 They say unto him, Caesar's. Then saith he unto them, Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's; and unto God the things that are God's.
      22 When they had heard these words, they marvelled, and left him, and went their way.

      The people who were listening to Jesus at the time apparently disagree with you and with Reza Aslan: they took the statement to mean that they should pay their taxes.
      So either you're malicious or you should consider reading a little bit before tipping your fedora.

    3. Re:Not so. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the Reza Aslan that claimed that there were legions of Roman soldiers in Judea around Jesus' time? ...despite there not being a single legion, not even close. There were a handful soldiers at Pilate's palace and that's probably it.

      The guy's book is a sham. Judea in Jesus' time was not a restive place: That's why there were barely any soldiers in Judea at the time. He projects the conditions from the time of the Jewish–Roman wars into Jesus' day. That's like looking at Vietnam in 1969 and concluding that Vietnam in 1929 was very dangerous. It's just a useless observation. His image is as about as accurate as the Life of Brian, which also had Roman soldiers marching around everywhere.

      "and a spirit of rebellion reached a crescendo after the crucifixion, when Judea was free from Roman rule for four years"

      This is just the nonsensical picture that Aslan created. Yes, in Vespasian's time, there was unrest in Judea. No, this had nothing to do with Jesus who lived decades earlier. Jesus was a most minor of figure, of no historical importance in his time, not even worth mentioning by historians until the Christian sect became large. In the 1st century, Christians were a tiny sect of no importance.

    4. Re:Not so. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your supposed to withdraw before climax then you have no problems with religious birth control.

    5. Re:Not so. by dog77 · · Score: 1

      The Bible itself says that Jesus was referring to his body when he said he would raid the temple in three days.

      19Jesus answered them, “Destroy this temple, and I will raise it again in three days.”
      20They replied, “It has taken forty-six years to build this temple, and you are going to raise it in three days?” 21But the temple he had spoken of was his body.
      22After he was raised from the dead, his disciples recalled what he had said. Then they believed the scripture and the words that Jesus had spoken.

      What inside information does Reza Asian have that the Bible is wrong?

    6. Re:Not so. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Give to Caesar that which is Caesar's, and give to God what is God's," is actually a direct challenge to throw the Romans out of Judea, a statement made within the Court of the Gentiles on the temple grounds. ...Depends on how you read it. If god created everything, then everything is god's. I take it to mean that whether or not you pay your taxes is irrelevant to god.

  108. Law Exists in 20 States + 11 States. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2015/03/27/19-states-that-have-religious-freedom-laws-like-indianas-that-no-one-is-boycotting/
    Eleven other states have the equivalent law due to decisions in court cases.

  109. What law protects Indianans? by Kohath · · Score: 1

    Should salesforce.com be forced by law to do business in Indiana? Why is it permissible for salesforce.com to discriminate against Indiana based on the CEO's beliefs?

  110. Will never again donate to LGBT causes... by iamacat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...after what happened to Mozilla CEO. I wholeheartedly support same sex marriage and plural marriage. I especially support alternative lifestyles entered by choice rather than because you were "born this way", because this country is about freedom of choice. I personally enjoy my choices and would hate to deny this to others. If an adult gay man wants to try conversion therapy to marry a woman he is not attracted to, it's no more our business than a woman who marries a rich guy she is not attracted to.

    What I can not support is this notion that the only way you can be free is if nobody else is free. Brendan Eich was bullied out of his job just because he, as a private citizen, made a legal donation to a political campaign that most CA residents supported at the time. This is as reprehensible is a female CEO getting sacked because she had an abortion, and yet not a single gay rights organization came out against this. So despite donating money to oppose Prop 8, I will never again financially support these causes. I just can not be sure than my contributions will be used to promote equality rather than discrimination.

    So I see how folks in Indiana would feel they need the law to make sure all personal beliefs are equally respected, not only most politically correct ones of the day. If I run a family IT shop and a bunch of Republicans show up wanting help with their campaign website, I don't want to serve them. How can I deny the same freedoms to a florist next door who doesn't want to participate in a same sex wedding?

    1. Re:Will never again donate to LGBT causes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A poster refers to France

      Personally, I like the values that France has as a society, with one of them being secularism.

      as being an ideal place. Someone was jailed for posting that Charlie Hebdo does not protect against bullets which was a reference to Charlie Hebdo's cartoon that the Quran does not protect against bullets. Either both are funny or neither is.

    2. Re:Will never again donate to LGBT causes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for bringing back Brendan Eich

      His abject eviction is one of the reason why I absolutely suppor tthe Indiana law.

  111. Re: Does this law protect puppies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The logic follows though. Or do you think that bestiality and pedophilia are choices that people make?

  112. Troll -1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tim Cook and his ilk are fiercely against single people having the same rights to pension and tax benefits given to people who claim to be married. After all, these people are mutually masturbating, as opposed to single people who are using their own hand. Surely the constitution gives special rights to these mutual masturbators, as proclaimed by the supreme court.

  113. Why is this a big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just let businesses identify themselves as equal opportunity service providers or something similar and direct your money to businesses who don't want to refuse you service?

    This is a problem with a legit, simple free market solution that requires no government involvement at all. If somebody is providing a service that takes more than a couple of hours of time and they strongly object to having to do it...let them not do it. Take your business to somebody who doesn't object.

    This is not complicated and the outrage is indicative of how much people have come to rely on government to solve problems it doesn't need to solve.

  114. You're discriminating by Kohath · · Score: 1

    You're discriminating against Apple based on your beliefs. If discriminating based on one's beliefs is impermissible, you should be forced to buy iPhones. I hope you're prepared to pay a huge fine or go to jail or be forced out of your job or property by government (or government court-supported) bullying.

  115. These are real laws that can do real harm by sjbe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is all just a distraction and pandering to a political base.

    No it is not. It is an attempt to enshrine bigoted ideology into law against a group of people who have done them no harm. Just because it is pandering does not mean it will not do real harm.

    No business that likes money and wants to continue making money will be discriminating against anyone.

    BULLSHIT. Plenty of racist homophobes actually support this nonsense. This is legislation that specifically targets minority groups that by definition do not have the population to fight back directly. "Ohh, 1% of our customer base is angry with us, whatever will we do..."

    Big corporations surely don't care who or what you sleep with in bed at night if you want to give them money.

    Do you seriously think that the owners of Chick-Fil-A or Hobby Lobby wouldn't force their religion on others if given the chance? Companies are guided by people and people have biases. It's not even remotely difficult to find examples of companies discriminating against entire classes of people including women, blacks, hispanics, asians etc even when doing so is explicitly against the law. Ask women how that equal pay thing is going these day.

    And if a small business decides to put their own religious beliefs in front of making money, then so be it if they go under.

    If it were a fair world I would agree with you but reality frequently doesn't work that way.

    1. Re:These are real laws that can do real harm by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      No it is not. It is an attempt to enshrine bigoted ideology into law against a group of people who have done them no harm. Just because it is pandering does not mean it will not do real harm.

      Google "define:bigot": "a person who is intolerant toward those holding different opinions."

      If you're intolerant of another person's beliefs, so much that you have to get the law to force them to obey you... doesn't that make you a bigot?

      BULLSHIT. Plenty of racist homophobes actually support this nonsense. This is legislation that specifically targets minority groups that by definition do not have the population to fight back directly. "Ohh, 1% of our customer base is angry with us, whatever will we do..."

      Hitler supported it, therefore it must be wrong!

      Do you seriously think that the owners of Chick-Fil-A or Hobby Lobby wouldn't force their religion on others if given the chance?

      No, not really. Every time a customer walks in is a chance to proselytize. And they don't.

      Some do: What do you think the Salvation Army is doing around holiday season?

    2. Re:These are real laws that can do real harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. There's nothing you can do to stop people from not serving gays or black people or men or women or whoever they want. Ultimately they can just be such giant assholes that nobody in those groups will want to use their product/service.

      And you're full of shit in terms of the "1% of customers". Have you seen the outrage machine that is the modern world? Even a whiff of discrimination makes the news in a very negative way.

      But still - you can't do shit about it and liberal government stooges are powerless as well. All these (shitty, I agree) companies need to do is hang up signs like "We will serve dirty gays, but we fucking hate them" and in general be complete assholes to customers they don't want to serve.

    3. Re:These are real laws that can do real harm by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      Read the law dude - http://www.indystar.com/story/... . You'll see it does nothing of the sort. BTW, the same law the ACLU, Chuck Scheumer pushed and Bill Clinton signed in 1993. Somehow they were/aren't anti-gay. You bought a load of manure from main stream media again.

  116. Not 100% correct by aepervius · · Score: 1

    A lot of other state have that in law have in *addition* ban on discrimination. Example : illinois they do indeed have a freedom fo religion act, but at the same time they have a ban on discrimination based on sexual orientation. And as far as i can tell, when both conflict, the ban would take precedence.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
  117. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by rahvin112 · · Score: 1

    Ah the old show me the wording argument. How tired.

    You can't have freedom of religion if the state itself is religious. If the state itself is Baptist there is no longer any freedom to be anything other that Baptist because the state will act as an arm of the Baptist church in passing and enforcing laws. And more importantly as the religious often like to point out Atheism is a belief and for that atheist to have freedom of religion he cannot be subjected to religiously inspired action by his government. This is a recognized principle that the supreme court has upheld numerous times.

    The state itself must be free of religious motivation and action, without that there can be no freedom of religion. Any law or action that's driven solely by religion is unconstitutional. This is why laws allowing only nativity scenes on public property are illegal but laws allowing religious displays of any kind on public property are fine.

    As with all our rights the devil's in the details. And you simply can't have true freedom of religion if the government is acting as the arm of a church. A freedom of religion that says you are only free to be baptist or X version of Christian isn't freedom of religion.

  118. Re:(election time) Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Looks like you hurt someone's feelings.

    Well said, though.

  119. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by itzly · · Score: 1

    Bestiality is illegal

    Cow fisting by a vet excluded of course.

  120. Tolerate != not prohibit by mpercy · · Score: 1

    Just because I don't tolerate something does not mean I think that a law prohibiting that something is a good idea. On several occasions I have asked people (white people, and I'm white) to stop using the N word in my presence. But a law prohibiting that would be a violation of their (idiotic & racist) free speech and i would be against it.

  121. Re:a question - Right now by MerlynEmrys67 · · Score: 1
    I am required by the government, over penalty of a large fine to do business with corrupt insurance companies. I MUST purchase their product, that provides me nothing that I can't provide on my own. I like how now we equate having insurance with having access to health care. Currently I pay about 10,000 dollars a year for insurance that provides me about 5000 dollars in services a year. What could I do with that additional 5,000 dollars a year for the next 10-15 years that I am running a surplus to create a saving account that I can pay for services when I am older and running a deficit.

    To make it more plain. On average the country pays more to insurance companies that they are provided in medical services... otherwise the insurance companies would go out of business.

    So, yes currently the government compels me to do business with a company that I don't want to

    --
    I have mod points and I am not afraid to use them
  122. Logical fallacy watch: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Something didn't work one time, therefore nothing similar will ever work any time.

  123. Tangible harm trumps imagined harm by sjbe · · Score: 1

    But they see no harm in forcing a religious person to choose between being faithful to God and making their living.

    Exactly how is a religious person being harmed here? Harmed in a tangible way that we both can agree is real. A religious person claiming it is a "sin" for them to make a wedding cake for a gay couple is a mental block in their own head. This is nothing more than an attempt to justify a bigoted fear response. This sort of bogus argument is why we have separation of church and state in the first place. Economic transactions are the domain of the state and personal religious preferences should have NO bearing on them at all. Ever.

    As far as I can tell, that prioritization is itself a religious judgment. It's saying that it's more wrong to refuse to blaspheme, than to blaspheme.

    A religious person's imaginary rules for themselves are not and never should become my problem. If they want to live their life putting crazy imaginary restrictions on what they are ok with doing, that's their problem. They have NO right to make it my problem. I don't follow their religious law and I your argument is basically the same argument used to justify abominations like Jim Crow laws.

    1. Re:Tangible harm trumps imagined harm by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Exactly how is a religious person being harmed here?

      If you assume that their religious view is false (which is a judgment the government is not supposed to make), then I'd say the religious person is being harmed in precisely the same manner as that of a gay person who can't get his/her cake decorated with a certain message: it's simply a matter of hurt feelings.

      If a religious person's view is true, then you're forcing them to have an alienated relationship with God (the Christian view), or by apostate (I think a Muslim view, but I could be wrong), and at a heightened risk of eternal damnation.

      A religious person's imaginary rules for themselves are not and never should become my problem.

      A religious person could argue that an atheist's imaginary world view should not be his problem either. My point in saying that I can't see how to have a clear separation of church and state in cases like this. Secularists win and religious persons lose, or vice versa, as far as I can tell.

    2. Re:Tangible harm trumps imagined harm by camazotz · · Score: 1

      The atheist who argues that he should not be subject to an arbitrary set of beliefs that are based on unverifiable and possibly entirely fictional supernatural systems of judgement has a better leg to stand on than the deeply religious soul who wants to argue that his book was written by an unverifiable entity of unknowable nature, but trust him, he's real, and it defines an absolute set of laws that mean that two men, who want to be in a monogamous relationship recognized in marital ceremony, are ruining everything. I completely understand why religious tolerance isn't going to fly, though.....and I can't fault those who are religious and have no desire for tolerance, because no rational person should tolerate religion, either.

    3. Re:Tangible harm trumps imagined harm by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      I'm very sympathetic to your point (I'm actually agnostic, so I tend to look at these issue through several lenses at the same time.) My take on the certainty of theism is that there's often better support for it than some will admit, but most of us don't see a slam-dunk case for it.

      I do think you're missing one of my main points here, though. I agree that a certain form of harm is done to gay persons who are unable to get equivalent business accommodation for their weddings as do straight couples.

      But my point was that Christians, and perhaps some other religious persons, also suffer a kind of harm: having to choose between committing acts that may be prohibited by their faith, and not being able to make their living.

      I'm not arguing about a particular manner in which those two notions of harm should be balanced in public policy. I'm simply raising the point that it's not a simply matter of "harm A" vs. "no harm". To Christians, it's a matter of "harm A" vs. "harm B". Atheists, on the other hand, see it as "harm A" vs. "no harm". Or at last I think they do.

      BTW, thanks for the civil discussion. You're raising good points in a friendly manner, which doesn't always happen. I really appreciate it.

  124. Civil Unions by Ryan+McLaughlin · · Score: 1

    There is actually a really simple solution to all of this. The biggest complaint I have with all this is not that Gay people want to be legally joined. It is that the government has given special legal status and rights to a religious ceremony, marriage.

    The best thing the country can do is pass a law that converts all marriages to civil unions, and grants all legal rights formally granted to marriages, to civil unions, and then remove those rights from marriage. Marriage goes back to being a religious ceremony with no legal status or rights like it should be.

    Then religious people no longer have a complaint about marriage being redefined and gay people get all the legal rights they want. We can define Civil union however we want because religion is no longer involved.

    Just my 2 cents

    P.S. I am Christian

  125. Religious believe != bigotry by cshort · · Score: 2

    I see a lot of people throwing around words like "bigot" and "hate" on here. The thing is that the people displaying the most hate and bigotry appear to be those accusing people of believe of having those traits. Believe that something is wrong does not mean the person with that believe hates the person that commits that act.

    1. Re:Religious believe != bigotry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whether you "hate" them is irrelevant. You can "pity" and "love" them all you want while you squish their faces and their freedoms under your jackboot. It is the action that is despicable.

  126. Church of Light and Dark by BenJeremy · · Score: 2

    I will start a new religion, where upon "dark" and "light" days will alternate. As a member, you will be obliged only to serve somebody of darker skin or lighter skin, depending on the day, all others will be turned away.

    For example, If Tuesday is a "dark" day, you only are allowed to do business with or assist people with darker skin. The next day, you will only do business with those of a lighter skin shade.

    Those without skin, or matching your own skin color are not to be dealt with, ever, as it is sinful.

    Religious freedom!

    1. Re:Church of Light and Dark by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Discrimination based on appearance is not the same as discrimination based on behavior. Everyone discriminates based on behavior. If you are a baker, and a vegan, and believe in animal rights, you should not be forced by law to bake a cake for the National Pork Association.

  127. Re: Does this law protect puppies? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

    The logic does not follow. Homosexuality is conduct between consenting adults; children and animals cannot, by their very nature, grant consent.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  128. Not all discrimination is OK by sjbe · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Everyone discriminates. You choose physical / personality traits that you require in someone to date / marry / have sex with. You choose your hobbies, bands, etc. You say "I love McDonald's" or "I hate White Castle". EVERYONE DISCRIMINATES.

    Not one of those forms of discrimination causes societal harm. Whom you chose to date does NOT cause the same problems as denying someone basic civil rights because they are a woman or a minority. There are some forms of discrimination that are plainly harmful to society so we protect classes of people against discrimination. No it is NOT ok to pass over someone for a job or pay them less because they have a vagina. No it is NOT ok to refuse service to a well behaved patron in a restaurant because of their skin color. Do not confuse basic consumer choices with civil rights.

    Then with the Civil Rights movement, they decided that for blacks to have equal rights, business owners had to lose their rights (yeah, I don't get the logic either).

    Say what now? You think it is ok for a business owner to refuse service on the basis of skin color? Business owners merely were required to actually follow the constitution (not to mention basic decency) which they could have been doing all along but didn't. "Don't get the logic"? Are you seriously that daft?

    The only reason that people currently are opposed to the "religious freedom" law is because they don't like THAT religious view.

    100% wrong. These "religious freedom" laws are simply sneaky attempts to enshrine and protect bigotry. Someone's religion should NEVER form a basis to refuse economic transactions because economic transactions are the domain of the state. That is a plain violation of the separation of church and state.

    1. Re:Not all discrimination is OK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone's religion should NEVER form a basis to refuse economic transactions because economic transactions are the domain of the state. That is a plain violation of the separation of church and state.

      By this logic, it should be illegal to keep kosher, because you're discriminating against pork butchers for religious reasons.

    2. Re:Not all discrimination is OK by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Say what now? You think it is ok for a business owner to refuse service on the basis of skin color? Business owners merely were required to actually follow the constitution (not to mention basic decency) which they could have been doing all along but didn't. "Don't get the logic"? Are you seriously that daft?

      Don't worry - that's next on their agenda.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    3. Re:Not all discrimination is OK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      economic transactions are the domain of the state.

      Did you take your mouth off the bong to post this?

  129. Discrimination forbidden by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Religion is NOT protected in the constitution, as a matter of fact the founding fathers try their best to EXCLUDE religion from all government affairs and ensure that there is no discrimination based on faith.

    You're a special kind of stupid, aren't you? You didn't even understand what you wrote.

  130. Senator Barack Obama voted for RFRA in Illinois by Jodka · · Score: 2, Informative

    Past supporters of RFRA acts include Barack Obama (who voted for one as Illinois State Senator) and Bill Clinton (who signed one into law as President). So Tim Cook's position is not in the political mainstream and in fact it is even outside the liberal Democrat mainstream. The news here is Tim Cook inappropriately dragging Apple into a political war to endorse his own radical politics, not anything going on in Indiana.

    Cooks' statements are also not based on any actual facts. See background on RFRA here.

    Not long ago Apple stood for fanatical devotion to great design. Now it stands for tasteless bling and Tim Cook's political agenda. We all know the heartbreaking history of that company. It is made even sadder by Cook's failure to stay true to the vision.

    from:

    Apple: Insanely great design.

    to:

    Apple: Indiana is a bunch of Anti-homosexual Christian Bigots.

    Tim Cook is not qualified to lead Apple. Not because he is gay (nothing wrong with that in my opinion) but because he is ruining the corporate image by putting his personal politics ahead of Apple's interests. If any other employee at Apple used the Apple name to endorse his own personal political views, that employee wold be fired. The same policy should apply to Cook.

    --
    Ceci n'est pas une signature.
    1. Re:Senator Barack Obama voted for RFRA in Illinois by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That may be the best point. Apple items are likely expensed and a large part of many IT budgets - especially small ones (one Macbook Pro on an IT budget of $10,000 could be 20%).

      [Tim Cook]: Americaâ(TM)s business community recognized a long time ago that discrimination, in all its forms, is bad for business. At Apple, we are in business to empower and enrich our customersâ(TM) lives. We strive to do business in a way that is just and fair. Thatâ(TM)s why, on behalf of Apple, Iâ(TM)m standing up to oppose this new wave of legislation â" wherever it emerges. Iâ(TM)m writing in the hopes that many more will join this movement. From North Carolina to Nevada, these bills under consideration truly will hurt jobs, growth and the economic vibrancy of parts of the country where a 21st-century economy was once welcomed with open arms.

      As a culture war/wedge issue, this ought to have been recognized as toxic PR. Of course, for companies with no PR or little to lose, it may not matter. But what does Apple gain by taking a side on this issue? It could be a calculated risk that pays off with the younger demographic.

      [Tim Cook]: I have great reverence for religious freedom. As a child, I was baptized in a Baptist church, and faith [which one?] has always been an important part of my life. I was never taught, nor do I believe, that religion should be used as an excuse to discriminate.

      So what is the Baptist stance on atheists in heaven??? Or just in general...

      [Tim Cook]: In total, there are nearly 100 bills designed to enshrine discrimination in state law. ...

      This isnâ(TM)t a political issue. It isnâ(TM)t a religious issue.

      What a fucking, lying-ass moron. If it is about "law", it's politics. Always.

      polâiâtics (pÅlËÄ-tÄks)
      n. The art or science of government or governing, especially the governing of a political entity, such as a nation, and the administration and control of its internal and external affairs.

      Dumbfuck.

    2. Re:Senator Barack Obama voted for RFRA in Illinois by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      Tim Cook is not qualified to lead Apple. Not because he is gay (nothing wrong with that in my opinion) but because he is ruining the corporate image by putting his personal politics ahead of Apple's interests. If any other employee at Apple used the Apple name to endorse his own personal political views, that employee wold be fired. The same policy should apply to Cook.

      And here I was thinking that what Cook does gets him the respect of all good citizens. You see, Cook isn't using the Apple name to endorse his own political views. He is endorsing Apple's political views.

    3. Re:Senator Barack Obama voted for RFRA in Illinois by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      What makes you believe that those are Cook's personal politics, and not Apple's corporate politics? If corporations are persons, then they can also have legitimate political positions.

      Also, why do you believe that this is ruining the corporate image of Apple, rather than enhancing it?

    4. Re:Senator Barack Obama voted for RFRA in Illinois by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What makes you believe that those are Cook's personal politics, and not Apple's corporate politics? If corporations are persons, then they can also have legitimate political positions.

      You are missing the point entirely, which is that Apple should be apolitical. Their message should be about their product, not about their politics.

      Also, why do you believe that this is ruining the corporate image of Apple, rather than enhancing it?

      Because slandering an entire state is not a positive message.

    5. Re:Senator Barack Obama voted for RFRA in Illinois by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      You are missing the point entirely, which is that Apple should be apolitical. Their message should be about their product, not about their politics.

      Why should Apple be apolitical? Apple, as any other privately held company, should be what its owners - i.e. its voting shareholders - want it to be. Shareholders express such desires by voting for the board, and the board places a guy in charge who is the spokesperson for the company. If the guy in charge voices a particular opinion in his role as a CEO, then he's speaking for the company, and ultimately, for the shareholders. Do you expect the shareholders to be utterly apolitical?

      Furthermore, the political view that is voiced is not even necessarily matched by the shareholders, but they can expect the company to voice it for the sake of PR. Given the stereotypical Apple customer, this seems like a smart strategy. Then there are employees, who do expect a some degree of political alignment from the companies they work for - and, again, given the overall IT culture in US, and especially in the Silicon Valley, being firmly pro-gay-rights provides Apple with a good public image from hiring perspective.

      If you don't like it, why, go ahead and voice your displeasure by selling your AAPL stock. If enough people will do it, the company will notice. You have the shares, right? If not, then why are you even bitching about this in the first place?

      Because slandering an entire state is not a positive message.

      It's a positive message insofar as it works toward reducing discrimination. Or at least most of Apple's customers will see it that way, which is what matters. And "slandering" is, of course, just your subjective politicized twist.

  131. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Its so clear then please point out in the constitution where it says "separation of church and state." I'll wait go and find it.

    It's right next to "freedom of speech", which I'd lay down cash that you claim to cherish.

    Grownups understand that things like "freedom of speech" and "separation of church and state" are phrases that refer to an enormous body of legal rulings that collectively establish and define those concepts. Grownups also recognize that "your right to swing your fist ends where my nose begins", and that a law keeping you from being an asshole to people you don't like is not oppressing your religious rights.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  132. Re:a question - Right now by jo_ham · · Score: 1

    You can afford to pay any amount of medical expenses (for example, major heart surgery, serious trauma surgery etc) with cash on hand?

    It's wager that you're something of an edge case.

    Otherwise, I call bullshit on insurance "not providing anything [you] can't provide on your own".

    Or do you mean your parents will pay?

    Or are you just monumentally stupid enough to simply roll the dice daily by not having insurance and thinking you couldn't possibly get sick or be injured? and consider that a better position than actually having insurance (or access to universal healthcare if you live in any of the other developed nations on earth)?

  133. What we need are Wahabi Muslims in the DMV. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We'll see how good an idea these bills are when Muslim employees in the DMV refuse to accept drivers license applications from women.

  134. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by epyT-R · · Score: 0

    I rarely see tolerance in any form from the left.. Their mantra is always about how some other group not on their whitelist is oppressing some group that is.

    A church and its community should not be required to accept people who do not comply with its doctrine for the same reason gay people should not be required to associate with them or live by said doctrine. Both populations should tolerate the liberty the other has because it protects the rights of both. This is part of the point of "Liberty and justice for ALL" (not just non white non straight non males). I think people in general need to realize they're not going to be welcome everywhere and not everyone is going to like them.

    For me, the line is drawn where some group uses the state to force their lifestyle/belief on others

  135. About "Gay Services" NOT about "serving gays" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Extremist 'gay' activists attempt to con people into seeing the issue from a completely false perspective. NO State in the USA is giving companies the ability to deny their NEUTRAL services to 'gays'. No supermarket, for instance, can attempt to block 'gays' from entering and doing their shopping there. No, this is about 'gays' forcing a company to provide a BESPOKE GAY SERVICE.

    Say you make 'erotic' cakes. These 'gay' activists want the ability to FORCE you to make (on request) a cake depicting male-to-male ANAL INTERCOURSE- if you refuse, they want you to be prosecuted under 'non-discrimination' Laws. I choose an EXTREME example her to clarify exactly what this gay lobby is arguing.

    Take the example of a wedding photographer that chooses NOT to photograph a 'gay' wedding. A 'gay' wedding is NOT a wedding. It is a REASONABLE expression of the freedom of sexuality for adults, like a 'wedding' where a man marries his favourite horse- and YES they are equivalent, since homosexuality is NOT the master-race of 'deviant' sexuality- all forms of non-hereto-sexual behaviour are equally valid. If a gay has the 'right' to FORCE a wedding photographer to photograph their gay 'wedding', every other type of adult sexuality has the EQUAL right to force the photographer to photograph THEIR partnership ceremony as well.

    This is NOT what sexual or religious freedom rights mean. YOU are free to be what you want to be. YOU are free to participate in society when your choices are NOT impacting that participation. But YOU do NOT have the right to demand from others services that EXPLICITLY serve your sexual or religious choices.

    Does a fast food joint break religious discrimination laws when it REFUSES to offer non-pork or non-beef menu options. Funny, I don't recall any Yank making a fuss over this.

    The extreme gay lobby exploits the inability of Betas to comprehend the flaws in their 'logic' and also the willingness of Betas to accept the idea that gays are the 'master-race' of Human sexual 'deviancy' (and I use that word in its scientific sense- as in deviates from the norm). It is like Judaism being the MASTER-RACE of non-Christian religions in the USA, and indeed the gay lobby acts identically to the zionist lobby.

    Jews in the USA successfully argued in court that Muslims who sent money to Palestine SPECIFICALLY for the use of orphanages, could be charged and convicted of helping terrorism, because Palestinians, freed from having to pay for their own orphanages, could spend more money on the military means of attacking Israel. There are actually Muslims serving life sentences in US jails CONVICTED under this 'argument'. The gay argument that people should be FORCED by law into providing GAY SERVICES (which is NOT the same as serving gays) follows the same twisted logic.

    PS gay lobby groups are now saying that children who find the idea of gay sex acts personally repulsive are 'HOMOPHOBIC' and should be targeted at school. Yes, if as a straight male you are disgusted by the idea of watching gay pornography, you are now a social 'criminal' under the twisted, evil perversion of the concept of sexual freedom of expression.

    Here's a clue for you Beta dummies. I believe FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE is the greatest freedom, but at the same time I DESPISE all organised religions, and am equally disgusted when Christian-zionists (like the filth at HBO this last Sunday) have the bloody cheek of ganging up on Scientology. Believing in freedom of conscience does NOT mean giving any form of respect to anyone because of their religious choices. When the State chooses to give POWER to organised churches, this is NOT freedom of conscience at play. Likewise when the State chooses to give power to one type of sexual deviancy over all the others, something very wicked is happening.

  136. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by epyT-R · · Score: 1

    Great, so we don't need affirmative action anymore, right?

  137. The meaning of "Religious Freedom" by dskoll · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Religious Freedom, or Freedom of Conscience, originally meant that the government wouldn't try to impose a particular brand of religion on the people.

    The concept has been abused and mutilated until now it's interpreted as "My religion gives me freedom to trample all over your civil rights".

  138. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by sexconker · · Score: 1

    Lol, idiot much? Religion is NOT protected in the constitution, as a matter of fact the founding fathers try their best to EXCLUDE religion from all government affairs and ensure that there is no discrimination based on faith. Also, the first amendment is about protecting your freedom of expression. Noone is trying to get that from you, just get keep your barbaric traditions from public spaces you worthless piece of ignorant scum

    "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

    Idiot much? Lol?

  139. Sorry, wrong. by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

    your "choice" to like the same sex isn't.

    You have to read as far as the ninth amendment:

    The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.

    Other rights that are exclusively a matter of informed, personal and consensual choice, are obviously covered. Any law -- or private action -- that denies such rights is unconstitutional or simply wrongheaded.

    Yes, I know there are many such laws and attitudes. WRT the laws, we had laws implementing slavery and denial of woman's right to vote (among many others), and we managed to figure out those were asshole positions to take. So there's considerable highly visible precedent for us correcting our course when ideas like yours manage to turn into law and acting out.

    Hopefully, eventually we'll have legislators -- probably by accident -- that will be pro liberty instead of these lace-panty, pearl-clutching corporate shills we have now. As far as the attitudes go, we can't fix stupid. Yet. But genetics is coming right along, there's hope there, too.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  140. We discriminate based on behavior all the time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's discrimination and then there's discrimination. It is virtually universally agreed that discrimination based on race, sex or color should be illegal. These are merely outward appearances which one cannot help, and we should not be solely defined on them.

    However, each of us has other aspects that are based in behavior, and not appearance. We discriminate on the basis of behavior all the time. If someone walks into a staff meeting and announces, "I'm gay." it's applause all around. If someone walks into a staff meeting and announces, "I'm into spanking," not so much. Yet each announcement is nothing more than an indication of behavior which that person likes to engage in.

    If I follow a set of morals which causes me to abhor certain behaviors, I should not be forced by law to be a party to those behaviors. I should not have to bake a cake that celbrates spanking. I should not have to bake a cake for Sea World if I think it is wrong to impound wild animals.

    Discrimination based on appearance is wrong. Discrimination based on behavior is not so cut and dried. If gay people want to get married, fine, I don't care. Just don't force me to bake a cake for them.

    1. Re:We discriminate based on behavior all the time by dskoll · · Score: 1

      Look, I agree that you shouldn't have to bake a cake that specifically celebrates spanking. But if a couple into spanking came into your store and asked for one of your generic cake designs, I do not believe you should be able to refuse them service.

      Similarly, I don't believe gays should be refused a generic wedding cake.

  141. Apple's Phony Conscience by Stormy+Dragon · · Score: 1

    So is Apple going to close its South Asia headquarters in Singapore, where homosexuality is a felony punishable by 2 years in prison?

    Or do they not actually care about civil rights and are just trying to hook onto their customer base's current "cause of the week" in a cynical attempt to get good PR?

  142. This works against Christians too! by skipkent · · Score: 1

    By looking at who owns the banks and big corps I can see a lot of Goys and Gentiles being denied services.

  143. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course, the Constitution also still contains provisions on how to count slaves for purposes of allocating Congress.

    Better to learn from history and avoid repeating it than to cut out and censor all the ugly bits.

  144. Re:(election time) Christian Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And you must vote republican as well right? The stupidity of you progressives amazes me sometimes.

  145. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Get a judge that actually follows the "law" and guess what - all of those "Decisions" get thrown out the window.

    Yes, any decision you disagree with is "not following the law". It's a very convenient self-insulating view.

  146. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How many Eddie Murphy movies should the owner be forced by law to screen?

    Torture is also illegal

    Hasn't stopped them so far.

  147. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I rarely see tolerance in any form from the left.. Their mantra is always about how some other group not on their whitelist is oppressing some group that is.

    A church and its community should not be required to accept people who do not comply with its doctrine for the same reason gay people should not be required to associate with them or live by said doctrine. Both populations should tolerate the liberty the other has because it protects the rights of both. This is part of the point of "Liberty and justice for ALL" (not just non white non straight non males). I think people in general need to realize they're not going to be welcome everywhere and not everyone is going to like them.

    For me, the line is drawn where some group uses the state to force their lifestyle/belief on others

    So, whites-only cafes were ok after all?

  148. Two Wrongs, both Cook and Lawmakers by AcostaJA · · Score: 1

    Firsta than all, The STATE isn't made to shape the people's mind or believes, the same way that People Believes shouldnt shape the states laws. State purpose is to provide a common place where N different character individuals, etc can LIVE IN PEACE, to everybody, First instace o rule of an state is RESPECT TO INDIVIDUAL NATURAL RIGTHS ITS THE BASIS OF THE PEACE. On the other way, communities here pledges for the state to rule on things arent part of an secular state: Religious Matters. Everithing started when Married Catholics (just to name an religion) pledged for an "in men-laws marriage", contaminating the SECULAR STATE creating something that actually doesnt exist ( 'almost every religion states that an marriage in men-laws actually doesnt exist, since the marriage is an religious ceremony and being whife and husband its an faith condition') so those Married Catholics got what they want, a way to "marry" again, on which actually its an civilian contract, since almost no importatn religion consider valid ot true an "in men-laws marriage". So Cook (here representing what its "nick"-named the Gay Lobby), asked for somthing an true and perfect SECULAR STATE souldnt recognize: MARRIAGE, an true SECULAR state doesnt name an private contract with something extracted form an Cult or Religion, so If the Gay Lobby wants really all the advantages (legal, practical and social) the wrongly named "in men-laws marriage", they first must pledge to removal to all these Cohabitation Contract (what actually is) the nick "marriage", while retaining all the rigths and restrictions foreseen on such Cohabitation Contracts. The same way, Religous communities, should be considered an Club, not special groups, and in no way belonging or not to such community should allow any kind of discrimination from pro-gay, atheist, other religious group, and the state it self, and every individual should have warrant that its religuos practice will be respected while its kept inside the areas where such religion community acorded to practice it's belief. So an Gay dont have rigth to irrumpe an Catholic ceremony asking for gay marriage or chalenging the catholics with gay mods, its inaceptable. the same Catholics goups dont have right to irrumpe inside an Gay Pub, and without invite and preach "all the gays are doomed to hell" or things such. It's wrong on public space some law protect discrimination, the same is wrong individuals ask for laws protecting ofense to others. (this its true on both directions). So, no Gay Marriage un less its only an religious marriage and under some religion with this kind of marriage (non christian, jewish, islamist allows gay to marry and its very explicit), so gay are banned to ask for religious marriage on religions that don't allow it, no matter the *equity* question, marriage its an religious institution not an secular one. And so Cohabitation Contracts (incorrectly named Marriage) should be named Marriage (this is an religious ceremony), and also shoulnd be limited by religious belief and be just another contract, among Men an Women, two men, two women, many men and a woman, many woman and a men, whatever not restricted by religious belief but acordingly not named Marriage since an TRUE AND PERFECT SECULAR STATE DONT HAVE MARRIAGE AS NAME FOR WHAT ACTUALLY ITS AN COHABITATION CONTRACT. Everithing its possible, with mutual respect as basis, the problem here is that an cohabitatin contract isnt for some gays what actually interest for they (all the benefits of the in-men law's marriage) but to challenge the hetherosexual community with the "marriage" word; the same way Anti-Gay groups believe that banning certain rigths to Gays will drop the gay population or silence it, TWO WRONGS DONT MAKE AN RIGTH. Its my opinion.

  149. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 1

    Eddie Murphy has had a checkered movie history. For every Norbit, there's the scene from Dreamgirls where he won (rightfully) an Academy Award for a single look.

    Now about Tyler Perry though....

  150. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by epyT-R · · Score: 1

    Why not? There are plenty of clubs today that cater to various cultures and lifestyles, right? There are gay clubs? Irish taverns? Gay parades? The NAACP?

  151. Re:Not one of these are a guaranteed threat by mattventura · · Score: 1

    The difference there is that apart from #2, those are all choices that someone makes.

  152. Texan Clerks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A sing outside of a Texan court house: "Clerks who do a part of their job specified in the document written in Farsi at the private safe of the Mayor of Waco at the basement of an undisclosed villa will be shot."

  153. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Dragon+Bait · · Score: 2

    So yeah, my freedom of religious expression is protected by the Bill of Rights, while your "choice" to like the same sex isn't.

    But at the same time, your right to throw your fist ends where my nose begins. That's where legal technicalities get interesting.

    But let's look at it from a different point of view, let's say that I own a large restaurant with attached back room that I will let out to various parties. As a private citizen, do I have the right to not let to the First Church of the Unredeemed? Am I really a private citizen at this point, or am I company doing business with the public? Am I allowed to discriminate against your religion? If not, why not? The constitution restricts what the government can do, not what I (or my business) can do.

    The bottom line though is, people wanting to discriminate against gays doing normal things like hold weddings or lease an apartment are on the wrong side of history. In 50 years discriminating against gays will be as repugnant as discriminating against blacks today.

    Will all anti-gay attitudes be wiped out? No. People are people. Just as there are open racists today, there will be open anti-gays in 50 years, but the majority will look down on the bigots.

  154. What I've Learned by doomicon · · Score: 2

    Anyone can claim to Christian.

    Jesus stated: "Love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul and all your might, AND Love your neighbor as yourself"

    If you claim to be a Christian, and can't love those who you believe to be are "lost" (or bake them a cake), you may as well claim to be a Super Sayijin.. as both claims are pretty farfetched.

    --

    Awesome!
  155. Who is really behind this? by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    Who has lobbied for this? What businesses, or churches, are pushing for this?

  156. Re: "principles our nation was founded on" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's that smell? Oh, just some guy burninating salty bitches on the interwebs.

  157. Re: Does this law protect puppies? by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

    You are ignoring that homosexuality is between consenting adults (the type that is legal anyway - homosexual rape isn't legal for example). Whereas bestiality and pedophilia are not. Which is a pretty significant difference making your "only difference" claim absurd.

    I'm not so sure.

    There could be an argument that many homosexuals are suffering from a form of sexual addiction and therefore they cannot appropriately consent to sex (because of diminished responsibility due to their addiction).

    Also theres plenty of evidence that interspecies sexual relations can occur with consent and it certainly occurs quite a lot in nature (there are LOTS of hybrids out there, in the wild).

    --
    In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
  158. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by mjm1231 · · Score: 1

    Let's count the number of each of these which prohibit nonmembers from attending or participating... Zero. Zero. Zero. Zero.

    So, what was your point, exactly?

    --
    Ideology: A tool used primarily to avoid the bother of thinking.
  159. Re: Does this law protect puppies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are ignoring the fact that we are murdering animals for fun ( completely legal). If you say homosexuality should be legal, then bestiality, is also should be legal, and so as incest ( especially homosexual incest).

  160. Re: Does this law protect puppies? by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    so one is a choice and one is a disease?

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  161. It's been repeatedly shown you are a bigot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's been repeatedly shown you are a bigot. By your own words.

    Marriage is not defined by any specific religion, and not even by any specific class of religions (not by Christian, Muslim, Judaic, Abrahamic, etc.) It is a far older, and far broader concept.

    There are a number of religions and religious institutions that perform homosexual Marriage, and others have for millennia. So nobody is redefining anything except you, or the religious zealots in your narrow and self-serving definition of religion.

    Government is not forcing any religious institutions to perform anything. Individuals who have objections to the requirements of their government jobs (clerks, etc.) can find another job. (Libertarian enough for you?)

    Business that offer public accommodation in the US can not discriminate against protected classes. Don't like it? Don't have a business that offers public accommodation. Again - this is freedom. You can have your club, private religious org, whatever. You can cater to your own members with any rules you want and they agree to.

    What you cannot do is benefit from the public space, offer a service to the entire community, and use the general protections of government (like fire, safety inspections, police, roads. sidewalks) etc. and then discriminate against protected classes.

    Don't like it? You have more freedoms. Move to North Korea or Somalia or some such other hellhole. Nobody is forcing you to live in the country that your fevered imagination thinks is oppressing your poor religion-addled mind.

    1. Re:It's been repeatedly shown you are a bigot. by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      Again, you fail to read. I said it is not up to the state to define marriage, it is up to religion. I did not state any specific religion, or even any specific point of view. I merely state that it is up to the religions to define a religious ceremony, not the state.

      I don't particularly care what an illiterate AC says about me, but at least learn to read, it is important in life.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    2. Re:It's been repeatedly shown you are a bigot. by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Not being an intellectually lazy, hate-filled bigot is also important in life - you might want to work on that.

    3. Re:It's been repeatedly shown you are a bigot. by michaelamerz · · Score: 1

      Thank you for this comment. I am following the discussion with utter disbelieve. What century are we in?

    4. Re:It's been repeatedly shown you are a bigot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Religions may define their own concepts of what they call "marriage", but the actual marriage (the one that is acknoledge by law) is defined by the state. Relgions have no business meddling with it.

    5. Re:It's been repeatedly shown you are a bigot. by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      Is it hate filled to say:

      "The state should not define what the church does"
      ?

      I am saying that the state redefining marriage is wrong as it is a religious ceremony, and as TFA is talking about, it is just a matter of time before the hate filled anti religion bigots decide that they need to tell the church that they will have to marry gay people even though it is wrong in their eyes.

      But I'm the hate filled bigot trying to say that religion should be able to choose, and if the Methodists want to allow gay marriage, more power to them, but the state is FORBIDDEN from doing so by the first amendment, and now the state is going against the first amendment and telling people that their religious objections are meaningless, and that the state knows best.

      You might want to work on reading comprehension as well. I have not a single time said anything hate filled. I haven't yet said that gay marriage is wrong, or shouldn't happen. I said it should be up to the church on if they want to preform a religious ceremony for someone who the religion itself says is sinning by even considering marriage. I am saying (as this law is trying to codify) that no one should be forced to photograph a gay wedding that makes them uncomfortable. That is called hostile workplace lawsuit. But there have been cases where a photographer was sued because they didn't want to participate. Is this right? NO.

      If anyone is being intellectually lazy here, it is you. You have said not one thing in response to what I have said, you haven't made a point, you just state in a very lazy manner that I am a bigot without taking on any of the points I made.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    6. Re:It's been repeatedly shown you are a bigot. by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      Last I checked the First Amendment was passed in 1791 and stated that the state was forbidden from "make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,". This law that is being discussed in TFA is talking about that, and I was bringing up another side to it. I am saying the state shouldn't be determining what marriage is because it is a religious ceremony. It should be each religion's choice whether they will marry a gay couple, not the state's choice. The recent outcry over this Indiana law highlights that it is just a matter of time before anti religion people try to take that power next, and forget that this country was founded on the concept of freedom of religion, not freedom from religion.

      If the Methodists want to marry gay people, more power to them, it doesn't effect me in any way. If the state tells all religions that they are required to marry any couple no matter what sexes they are, that is wrong and against the first amendment.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    7. Re:It's been repeatedly shown you are a bigot. by michaelamerz · · Score: 1

      There's only ONE freedom and its absolute. If you want freedom of religion than there must also be freedom from religion. And I disagree: Marriage is not only a religious thing. It also has broad implications on the real life. And - since you quoted the constitution: Please always remember: All men are created equal. That is the spirit of the forefathers philosophies. Everything else has to obey this very basic principle.

    8. Re:It's been repeatedly shown you are a bigot. by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      The spirit of the forefathers would have all women not having the vote (as all MEN were created equal), and only the wealthy land owners having a vote (which is who the vote was originally allowed for).

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
  162. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by onepoint · · Score: 1

    Disclosure : I'm really hating this law since it seems ( and I don't know exactly ) that it's an easy way to discriminate.

    My question is: ( more like an extreme thought exercise )

    I have create a faith that does not like fat people, can I open a restaurant and only admit thin people ?

    based on everything I have read so far, even this is acceptable under this rule ( so to be law )

    --
    if you see me, smile and say hello.
  163. Re:Hypocrites by ClickOnThis · · Score: 2

    Also, as the Gay lobby has pointed out time and again, sexual orientation is genetic. These people can't help that they are attracted to 12 year old boys, it's who they are.

    Homosexuality != Pedophelia

    Die in a fire, troll.

    --
    If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
  164. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by tburkhol · · Score: 2

    If Joe's lawnmower service center or Sally's cake shop is discriminatory it's probably not a big deal in the grand scheme of things (distasteful as it may be to some), but if you have the same problem with Toro or Albertsons it's a major issue.

    There are many flavors of "Religious Freedom Law,"but at least the Indiana law applies to the employees as well as the businesses. So, Joe's lawnmower service may refuse people on the basis of religion at the policy level, but Joe, the employee of Starbuck's, may also refuse to serve people on the basis of his personal beliefs. The law is intended to prevent Starbuck's from firing Joe for his expression of personal religious freedom.

  165. Sodom and Gomorrah wasn't about same-sex marriage by Aqualung812 · · Score: 1

    Go read the story of Sodom and Gomorrah again.

    The story is about how a group of men were coming to Lot's house to rape the visitors. As the host, it was Lot's job to protect them, and he even offered his daughter up for rape to protect his guests.

    Now, find a story about two people of the same sex being in a committed loving relationship and show me where it is condemned.

    Homosexuality in the Bible was always related to violence or the worship of other gods. There is not a reference to the type of homosexuality that exists today, so it is very hard to get a Biblical case, pro or con.

    --
    Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
  166. Re: Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by dmp123 · · Score: 1

    Easy. Just put a narrow door on your restaurant and the fact people won't be able to get in.

    Simples

  167. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by easyTree · · Score: 1

    What is wrong with you people (no, not you brain-dead basement dwellers - you, the majority of your countrymen and the policymakers).

    You need to be prevented from travelling overseas or having any influence on world events until you've achieved civilization according to a modern definition of the word. Warning: this probably means getting decent healthcare too. ie.Healthcare with a primary goal of *drumroll* providing health (omg!) to your population rather than as a secondary but necessary expense of profiting from them.

    Really, I'm so sick of hearing USA USA USA trumpeted from every fucking orifice. Fix your shit. Fix the imbalances in your society and maybe things will start to heal.

  168. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by random+coward · · Score: 1

    Since you haven't actually read the first amendment to the constitution, let me break it down for you:

    .. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

    So there is "freedom of speech" right in the Amendment. Right next to the prohibition on congress to pass a law prohibiting the free exercise of religion, Which is right next to the prohibition of Congress to create a Federal Government's officially established religion(i.e. a state religion). No where does it separate the state from being effected by religion. In fact the way the courts have ruled that recognition of any religion by any governmental agent, is a defacto establishment of atheism as a state religion.

    As for things grownups understand; they understand the difference between violence which is not protected and being an asshole, which is protected by the aforementioned freedom of speech. So your law preventing someone from being an asshole to people they don't like is oppressing not only their religious rights but their speech rights as well. Here is a law professor agreeing that racist speech is protected speech, i.e. being an asshole to people.

  169. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    [...] just get keep your barbaric traditions from public spaces you worthless piece of ignorant scum

    Dare to say that to a Muslim? If yes I am with you, else you are just a hypocrite and a coward.

  170. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by random+coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    But I will contend the state is become atheistic. So the state is acting on behalf of atheists constantly and it is disadvantaging all other religions.
    This is because while courts do in fact acknowledge that Atheism is a religion, they are applying a Separation of Church and State doctrine to prevent any religion or mention of God from the state.
    And no God is Atheism.
    Thus my problem with the courts ruling based on a nonexistent separation of church and state in the constitution rather than the clear freedom of religious express and prohibition of the establishment of a state religion(which the courts have established defacto instead of dejure, re atheism.)

  171. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by sycodon · · Score: 1

    Try to get your float promoting Gay Therapy or Traditional Marriage into a Gay Pride Parade.

    Groups discriminate all the time. You tolerate some because you agree with them.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  172. Hypocrit by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    They go against the very principles our nation was founded on, and they have the potential to undo progress toward greater equality

    If Tim Cook is so bloody interested in equality, he can give to the poor everything he is paid.

    The US was founded on justice, equality before the law . All other forms of equality forced by law are a swindle; they are injustice.

    --
    Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    1. Re:Hypocrit by Cederic · · Score: 1

      If Tim Cook is so bloody interested in equality, he can give to the poor everything he is paid.

      Well, he _has_ said he'll give his fortune to charity. Does that count?

      The US was founded on justice, equality before the law . All other forms of equality forced by law are a swindle; they are injustice.

      I suspect you agree with Tim Cook on this. The issue is that the law is trying to supercede equality and prevent it.

  173. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

    No where does it separate the state from being effected by religion.

    Are ye daft, son? That's exactly what it says: religion cannot become the basis for law. It is literally impossible for my religion to write laws without prohibiting your free exercise thereof; that's what laws do.

    In fact the way the courts have ruled that recognition of any religion by any governmental agent, is a defacto establishment of atheism as a state religion.

    IHBT. Sigh. I hope you're trolling anyway, because I'd hate to think that an adult could pack that much accidental ignorance into a single sentence. No courts have ruled that way, and atheism cannot be a religion (any more than my lack of belief in the Tooth Fairy establishes me as an "aTooth-Fairyist").

    Here is a law professor agreeing that racist speech is protected speech, i.e. being an asshole to people.

    You can say asshole things to people, but there are enumerated acts of assholery that are explicitly illegal. You have the freedom of speech, but the Civil Rights Act of 1964 says it ends at the cash register.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  174. think of the poor halal butcher.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that may be sued for refusing to cater a Friday afternoon pig roast at a gay wedding.

    1. Re:think of the poor halal butcher.... by dskoll · · Score: 2

      No. They're not discriminating against gays. They won't cater for anyone on a Friday and they won't cater a pig roast for anyone.

      If they refuse to cater a gay wedding with Halal food on a Sunday afternoon, then yes... that's discrimination.

  175. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Starting in the middle of a sentence doesn't mean the rest of that sentence isn't there.

    "A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the People to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed."

    If you can ignore the first half of the sentence, I can ignore the second half.

  176. Re:Sodom and Gomorrah wasn't about same-sex marria by Coren22 · · Score: 1

    Your sig is evil...

    I agree on the rape angle, but it was implied that the men of the city enjoyed sodomy, and it was at least partially why the cities were destroyed. It is however very difficult to untangle, as it could be as much about dishonoring guests as it was about the attempt at forceful sodomy with the male angelic guests.

    --
    APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
  177. Flip side of the coin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A) I am not allowed to go to a religious service of my own choosing.

    And so we all should be.

    A) We force everyone to recognize everyone's relationships, including handing out benefits intended for helping people start families to just everyone.
    B) We fix the laws so they're not so backwards, so that healthcare is single payer and a non-issue, that anyone can define who visits them in the hospital, that marriage benefits are changed to child-raising benefits as there's no reason to pay two people to have sex in the first place and that was already silly.

    A) I can redefine living members of the genus homo sapiens to be 'sub-human' in some capacity and strip them of legal rights, following a long history of abuse, slavery, etc. where people we deemed sub-human due to a lack of mental capacity.
    B) I am unable to legally kill.

    A) I can be sued for praying in public if people are offended, even though nobody is actually forced to participate.
    B) I have Freedom of Speech and people can criticize the prayers all they want, but not stop them.

    A) I can be forced to violate my conscience and pay thousands of dollars for offending someone.
    B) They can go to any of the dozens of other cake shops and put me out of business.

    A) Another religious group has been declared the official faith of my country.
    Namely, atheism.

    A) Any non-public schools are kept by policy out of the hands of those who are not rich, with every attempt at letting people out being cut off, allegedly for fear that our already terrible public schools could get even worse.
    B) We let people pick whatever school they like, so long as it meets reasonable educational standards.

  178. War of the cults by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Corporate cult vs religious cult.

    It's like watching the last two US presidents in a steel cage match, and then being asked which one you hope will win when it doesn't matter as long as one of them gets the shit beat out of them.

  179. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What if a Satanist wants to buy a kitten to sacrifice to Satan, but states they plan on using the new Zentanic process where the animal feels no pain and suffers no duress?

    Should a pet store owner be able to refuse service or make the sale anyway, depending on their own personal beliefs?

  180. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean like suing people for saying things that offended you and refusing to attend a religious service you don't agree with?

  181. I think perverts should be beaten. by Theovon · · Score: 1

    These fundamentalist Christians are dirty perverts. They spend way too much time thinking about what other people are doing in the privacy of their own homes, and then for some reason they want to get involved by going into those bedrooms and playing dominator/dominatrix and telling people what to do while they're having sex.

  182. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not victimizing Hindus by eating beef.

    The cow is still a Hindu, is it not?

  183. Meh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Any non govt. non monopoly business should be allowed to NOT do business with anyone they wish.

    For any reason. Including race, religion or orientation.

    Forcing them is the worse of two evils.

  184. Re: Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by onepoint · · Score: 1

    I thought of that first. it's a violation of handicap people ( wheel chair laws )

    most of the USA. door width has to be 36 inches in width.

    --
    if you see me, smile and say hello.
  185. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

    Abuse is a matter of perspective. Anyone can claim any action (or inaction) is a form of abuse.

    I wish I could paste a jpg into this.

    Anyhow it says "Your rights end where my feelings begin"

    Many people affect 'offence' just to get some political capital.

    --
    In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
  186. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by phorm · · Score: 1

    Yes, the law be equitable only in this situation:
        You are a prostitute, and are heterosexual. Somebody wishes to engage your services. You say no, because you don't swing that way...

    Otherwise, frankly, what happens in my or anyone else's bedroom is NONE OF YOUR BUSINESS, because it doesn't involve you. Also, if your religion regards their relationship as a sin, I suggest you stop eating shellfish, working on a Sunday, and any gazillion things that are all old testament and have nothing to do with being "Christian" (the religion that supposedly follows a guy who basically preached love and acceptance, ya know).

  187. Wait... by sycodon · · Score: 2

    ...isn't this the guy whose products are built by labor force that is for all intents and purposes, slaves?

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  188. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you on crack or are you naturally stupid?

  189. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by random+coward · · Score: 1

    IHBT. Sigh. I hope you're trolling anyway, because I'd hate to think that an adult could pack that much accidental ignorance into a single sentence. No courts have ruled that way, and atheism cannot be a religion (any more than my lack of belief in the Tooth Fairy establishes me as an "aTooth-Fairyist").

    KAUFMAN v. McCAUGHTRY, 7th Circuit, rules Atheism is a Religion.
    But whether atheism is a “religion” for First Amendment purposes is a somewhat different question than whether its adherents believe in a supreme being, or attend regular devotional services, or have a sacred Scripture. The Supreme Court has said that a religion, for purposes of the First Amendment, is distinct from a “way of life,” even if that way of life is inspired by philosophical beliefs or other secular concerns. See Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205, 215-16, 92 S.Ct. 1526, 32 L.Ed.2d 15 (1972).

    Id. at 52-53, 105 S.Ct. 2479. In keeping with this idea, the Court has adopted a broad definition of “religion” that includes non-theistic and atheistic beliefs, as well as theistic ones.



    So tell me about this "aTooth-Fairyist" religion of yours. Are you sure you're not the ignorant one here?

  190. Stop Buying Apple Products by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No more iPhones from me...

  191. Bearded tech support guy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... can now refuse to help with windows or apple related issues. Gnuff said.

  192. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by epyT-R · · Score: 1

    Sure you can 'participate' if you're willing to participate in your own discrimination..this esp applies to the NAACP which really is no better than the KKK.

  193. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Howitzer86 · · Score: 1

    It has the potential to be a little worse than that.

    Because of its character-based nature, any effort to figure out who's gay is going to go over about as well as finding the "Communists" did during the HUAC days. If business owners really care about keeping gays out of their Christian establishments, we'll find out pretty quickly when perfectly straight people start getting kicked out for simply having lunch with their friends.

    Truthfully though I don't think it'll come to that. Already restaurants and other establishments are either putting up pro LGBT stickers or doing nothing different. I'm sure we'll have the odd ball BBQ shack in the woods show up in the news from time to time, but I'm beginning to doubt that these bills are anything more than for show. Republicans are saying, "Look, we get it! We're Tea Party. We're the new kind of conservative!", in an effort to reinvigorate the base.

    If they really wanted to push gays out of society, they have a ready-made method for that, which they use on convicted sex offenders. Maybe we should reserve our freak-out for when they try to pass new sodomy laws.

  194. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    Why not tell me which religion it is that disallows talking to gays, backing cupcakes for gay weddings, and so forth? There certainly is no backing for this in the predominant religion of Indiana. What religious beliefs then are being protected here? No one is being asked to commit any sins. The first ammendment rights of free expression of religion and free speech are not given additional protections by this bill and were not in any danger without this bill.

  195. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

    You mean the case where the court ruled very narrowly that atheism should be afforded the same legal respect as religions when ensuring the rights of people holding those opinions? You would be hard pressed to choose a case less helpful to your viewpoint.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  196. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by sycodon · · Score: 1

    Especially the Congressional Black Caucus

    I've never heard a convincing argument for their position.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  197. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

    Would the law also apply if Joe declares that he can only serve people that are satanists (due to his religion)? If it does I can see shops becoming quite a good jobs for lazy people - "My religion prevents me from serving you because you are human, sorry."

  198. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and that a law keeping you from being an asshole to people you don't like is not oppressing your religious rights.

    Listen, you stupid dickless shitbrained fuckhead - there is no law that prevents you from being an asshole, to people you dislike or people you like or anyone else. I know this may be difficult for a moronic cocksucking baby-raping pussy-whipped asswipe like you to understand, but any law that FORCES people to do something is oppressive. Sometimes this oppression is considered worth it, and that's the exact circumstance this law requires the courts to consider: Is the oppression the least oppressive and most effective way to achieve an essential government interest.

    Now go back to whoring yourself out to your fellow leftist Nazis and syphilitic goats, like a good little genetic failure.

  199. Why not let people ban blacks and fat people? by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Surely the fair thing to do is to let every other bigoted group ban who they want.

    1. Re:Why not let people ban blacks and fat people? by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      Fat people would probably be ok. Black people - side from the law, it's not a good idea.

      Life's hard. Harder if you're stupid.

  200. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    So what does your choice with religious expression have to do with their choice of a private lifestyle that doesn't affect you in any way? Show me the religious texts your religion has that disallows making cupcakes for a gay weddings. Now there are religious texts that would support not doing commerce with any outsiders, but those relatively rare and small sects generally don't do business with the public and they were not high on the list of supporters for this bill.

    This is most certainly not a Christian rights issue in any way. There may be scriptures that seem strongly to forbid homosexual activity, but there are also scripture sthat are against remarriage after divorce, premarital sex even by straight people, allowing women to teach during church services, and so forth. Yet this "religious rights" bill did not gain steam before when atheists or Hindus wanted to buy a wedding cake from a Christian baker, or for a racially mixed couple, or if the bride was previously divorced, or an unmarried couple wanted to buy a loaf of bread, etc. No, this issue showed up in response to gay marriage being legalized.

    There is nothing whatsoever in this bill that protects actual religious freedoms.

  201. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

    "The Aristocrats!"

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  202. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by blue9steel · · Score: 1

    Joe, the employee of Starbuck's, may also refuse to serve people on the basis of his personal beliefs. The law is intended to prevent Starbuck's from firing Joe for his expression of personal religious freedom.

    That sounds like an employment nightmare and a legal minefield. I doubt this was the intent and it doesn't sound like a good idea.

  203. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So yeah, my freedom of religious expression is protected by the Bill of Rights, while your "choice" to like the same sex isn't.

    So they need to make it a religion?
    The First Church of Rainbows and Unicorns*
    *Unicorns are sometimes taking a break to re-stiffen their horns...

    Hey! Who put LUBE in the holy water font?
    It must be a Saint Liberace Day Miracle!

  204. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Grownups also recognize that "your right to swing your fist ends where my nose begins", and that a law keeping you from being an asshole to people you don't like is not oppressing your religious rights.

    Did you just use the defining phrase of libertarianism and then advocate for a law to restrict people's speech in the same sentence?

    Being an asshole is fine. Shun people, call them names, shout at them, shake your fist. But don't hit them. That's the line.

  205. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    But where are there any religious beliefs in any mainstream religion that forbid an employee of Joe's lawnmower service to refuse to fix a lawnmower of a gay person, or that of an atheist, communist, etc.? What "on the basis of religion" is this? It most certainly is not Christianity.

    Now what if the coffee shop clerk (my religions prevents me from calling them "baristas") is harming business by giving a religious test to everyone who makes an order, so that he only serves those with the proper belief system (no gays or lawyers). Should that employee be fired or reassigned to floor mopping duties, without that being a violation of their religious expression of freedom?

  206. Re:Hypocrites by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    MBLA is an organization advocating for a very harmful act to be made legal. There's no way to equate that with a normal advocacy group.

    But if it were me in the PR firm, I would refuse but not on religious grounds. There is nothing here about free expression of religion, that's just being used an excuse to be bigoted towards gay, a knee jerk response created to the legalization of gay marriages. There is nothing in any of my religious texts that says I must refuse service to certain groups of people. On the contrary, the religious texts I've read point in the opposite direction, and the founders associated with known and despised sinners.

  207. Why are you entitled to impose your views? by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    If an individual has a religious objection to doing something... who is anyone to say they have to do that thing?

    Leave people alone.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    1. Re:Why are you entitled to impose your views? by dskoll · · Score: 1

      Some Muslims have a religious objection to permitting non-Muslims to live. Who are we to stand in the way of their sincerely-held beliefs?

      Leave people alone.

    2. Re:Why are you entitled to impose your views? by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      conflating not wanting to do a business deal for religious reasons with being permitted to murder people is the sort of association a complete fucking moron makes.

      You just made that association.

      Ergo... you are a complete fucking moron.

      Good day.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  208. Re: Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    I always order out.

    However under the law as it is written, I think I would lose any lawsuit if the restaurant refused to serve me. All the restaurant has to do is declare to the court that giving me service me would violate a religious belief of either the owners or anyone working there.

  209. Mark is the earlier, and more reliable gospel. by emil · · Score: 1

    It is supposedly written in crude Greek by a student of Paul.

    Mark 11:27 clearly has Jesus in the temple with a crowd of his followers, delivering this statement in 12:13, in full view of the centurions of the Antonia fortress which the Romans had physically attached to the temple walls. In order to gain access to the Court of the Gentiles, Jesus would have walked beneath the Roman eagles that had been affixed to the entrances of the temple by Herod (crowned king of Judea by Rome).

    The priestly vestments and tools were kept in the Antonia fortress, and given to the high priest only when required.

    Rome owned Jerusalem and greater Judea, and expressed no hesitation in demonstrating this fact.

    Also, bear in mind that Nazereth was a small town near the larger city of Sepphoris, where Jesus likely worked as a carpenter. Sepphoris was burned to the ground by the Romans in an earlier revolt.

    It is highly unlikely that Jesus was ambivalent to the Roman occupation of Judea.

    1. Re:Mark is the earlier, and more reliable gospel. by erapert · · Score: 1

      You should re-read Mark 12:14: They came to him and said, “Teacher, we know that you are a man of integrity. You aren’t swayed by others, because you pay no attention to who they are; but you teach the way of God in accordance with the truth.

      Jesus had a reputation for being precisely the opposite of what you insinuate. He wasn't the least bit interested in making political points against the Romans. Furthermore, re-read Mark 12:15-17.

  210. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

    Except we've decided as a country that there are certain ways it's not OK to be an asshole, particularly when it's because the other person is black, female, Muslim, etc. I did not advocate for restricting free speech. I'm advocating for what law already says regarding other minority classes: feel free to speak your mind, but you shouldn't get to act against gay people any more than you're allowed to act against black people.

    I'm dyed-in-the-wool small-l libertarian (and a registered large-L), but I'm horrified at the idea of passing laws to explicitly protect the "right" to discriminate against minorities. "First they came ..." and all that; we shouldn't be looking for new and creative ways to crap on our neighbors.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  211. Re: Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Though it is not a good idea, that probably was the intent. Many people in "legal industry" will be employed to navigate the "minefield".

  212. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Darinbob · · Score: 2

    First off, selling a wedding cake to a gay couple has nothing to do with accepting gay marriage. No one else going in to buy a cake has to pass a test before being allowed to buy one. If someone came in and wanted a wedding cake for their two cats (so they could stop living in cat sin together), is the baker going to refuse on the grounds that cats can not be married in the eyes of the church, or is the baker just going to laugh and humor the kooky cat lady? Is the baker being a hypocrite for refusing service only to gay customers while accepting anyone else?

    Second, let's say hypothetically that this is a Christian church, there is no religious edict or teaching against selling a wedding cake to a gay couple, so there is no religious freedom being suppressed here. The baker is not being forced to officiate at a gay marriage, not being forced to engage in any gay activities, not being forced to sin in any way whatsoever.

    What is happening is that some groups can not keep distinct their religious beliefs from their political beliefs and their cultural beliefs. They're as mad as hell at gay marriage being legalized so that they're using a knee-jerk reaction against it and falsely claiming it is about their own religious beliefs being violated.

  213. Actual religious freedom by Livius · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In funny a way it's a good thing the society has reached a point where people have completely, absolutely, totally forgotten what religious freedom fundamentally means and why it's important.

    Three or four hundred years ago, expressing your personal religious belief in the privacy of your own home could lead to soldiers dragging you off to prison and all of your wealth being confiscated by the state.

    Religious freedom is the absence of that happening.

  214. Let's reverse the conversation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If a person were to wear KKK clothing into a black-owned business, does that person have the right to demand service? Are we really going to force that business owner?

  215. Needs GNU by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

    Finland's official Pravda^W^Wleading newspaper had an article on this particularly American issue. The main thesis is that you guys have a lot of freedom to offend and beat up each other, because any government intervention would go against the natural freedom of free men to do unto each other as they like. Of course, the follow-up is reduced freedom for individuals in lots of ways. You guys have more freedom than us in certain ways, but as a result you have less freedom in some other ways. It's hard to say which way is right, but it sure sounds a lot like BSD vs. GNU.

    Personally, I'm in for more freedom in some areas. Finland officially switched from the Eastern Bloc into the EU 20 years ago, but I'm yet to see the full effects.

    --
    Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
  216. Meaningless and impotent. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anti-discrimination laws for private people/businesses are meaningless, feel-good pablum. They do nothing. You can't stop people from being aholes, and it's wrong to try to legislate them away from being aholes. Note that this does not of course include violence, fraud, etc...

    Know what it's pointless? All you have to do to not serve gays (or any other group you don't like) is hurl abuse at them as soon as they come in the door.

    "Sure, you dirty #!@#$ I'll bake your wedding cake for you $%!@suckers. Oh, you want me to shoot pictures of you little $#!@'s? Well, OK, but I'll be hurling abuse at them too."

    Nothing one of you liberals can do about that, either. I agree discriminating against gays is both idiotic and bad for business, but you can't stop people. Sure, you can make them technically offer the service or product, but that's just a feel-good law that violates a basic human right to be an asshole.

  217. Are you forced to shop at a store? by s.petry · · Score: 1

    While I am surely against discrimination, there is a place for law, and a place to let the market handle itself. We already have laws to address discrimination, so the law being discussed is something else. For example if you refuse to sell a tire from your shelf to "one of those" you will be sued, and rightfully so. Similarly, if you refuse to hire "one of those" or fire a person because they are "one of those" you will be sued, and again rightfully so. These are good laws, and should remain on the books. (Pardon the generalization, "one of those" was shorter than the long list of potential discrimination targets, no offense was intended.)

    Considering that we already have laws, and the new law is not overruling those, we should ask what the new law was supposed to cover (go ahead and read the short history on this, I have). It is to cover a service industry having the right to refuse specific customized services and was exactly the result of a gay couple suing a bakery that refused to customize a cake they way the couple wanted. Note that this is not some off the shelf item that the baker refused to sell, it was not a job applicant that was refused, it was a specific modification that someone wanted that was refused.

    If you answer no to the question in my subject, then why do you care about a law forcing a service to make you something the way you want it? Is this not a place for normal marketing pressure to make the correction if and where necessary? If a bakery refuses to make something you want, don't shop at that bakery? A different bakery willing to do your custom work will be happy to make the money. Good service distinguished from bad is exactly the thing that makes successes and failures in the "Services industry". If there are no other bakeries worth a damn in your area, start your own and cash in! That is what the "American Spirit" is all about.

    I think the law as written was vague enough to be poor. Better written, it would have still resulted in some protest but not nearly as justified.

    I see this in line with the huge amount funding and campaigns that went into making all bars and restaurants "no smoking". No law ever forced any of those businesses to support smokers, and a savvy entrepreneur could have made a mint on "no smoking" clubs and restaurants. Not that smoking is good (though it's legal), but the legislation forcing a service to behave a certain way breaks normal competition. The market can't dictate success, the Government does. It is too easy for this type of law to end up on a slippery slope.

    Whether or not you believe it was "stupid" there are additional costs associated with customizing services, some are potentially long term. If the bakery was in a highly religious area and accepted the job of customizing the cake how much business would they lose? If they are in an area with a high population of LGBT, how much would they gain? Those are factors a service business needs to weigh. Even if in someone's opinion it's stupid not to do the extra, how many people in the world have a religion? I'll give you a hint, the majority does. Again, this is not refusing to sell an off the shelf product which resulted in a successful lawsuit. It was the refusal to customize a product that resulted in the successful lawsuit.

    To make some comparative analogies: Should the Jewish or Muslim person be able sue the butcher for having pork on it's shelf, or should the market dictate that a butcher shop in a predominantly Jewish or Muslim area not carry pork? How about the atheist that lives in the same neighborhood, can they sue? Can the gay male sue the topless bar for not having male performers? Can the lesbian woman sue Chip&Dales for not having female performers? This is the precedent that was set with the successful bakery suit, unfortunately. We can't put that Jeanie back in the bottle, so I believe additional legislation is surely needed.

    As I indirectly stated numerous times, the "Services Industry" is not the same as other businesses. The commodity is the personalization, not just fixed object cost. Society generates the normals with financial support for good choices, and gets rid of bad the same way.

    --

    -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

  218. Fuck gay adoption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A kid deserves a mother & father.

  219. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Absolutely untrue and your choice of words belies your inability to substantiate your claim.

    The First Amendment contains 2 clauses; FEDERAL government cannot prevent communication and cannot establish a government religion.

    "Separation of church and state", as a specific quote or concept, is nowhere in the founding legal documents of the United States. It's use did not create prohibition against religious expression.

    The first 3 Amendments specifically prevent the FEDERAL government from implementing oppressive control over the population through the methods used by the British while specifically recognizing the natural rights of citizens to defend themselves against such.

    Documents which govern the FEDERAL government do not necessarily apply to State or Local governments.

    "Discrimination" is not a universally-negative term, any more than "profiling" is a universally-negative term. The right of a person to purchase a good or service does not require another person to conduct such a transaction under any and all circumstances. All states have many laws which allow discrimination in specific instances. Legally, the FEDERAL government didn't have such a structure until Brown v. Board of Education was concluded. The 14th Amendment was never ratified so, legally, it isn't law. Additionally, the mere existence of law does not make it legally binding. All laws are subject to challenge to verify their concurrence with the Constitution and Bill of Rights.

  220. Re: Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, there isn't anything that says I can't provide services to gays. However, the meaning and applicability of "Therefore let us not pass judgment on one another any longer, but rather decide never to put a stumbling block or hindrance in the way of a brother," should be self-evident. I see making it easier to do something morally wrong as putting a stumbling block in that person's path. Another similar text is "It would be better for him if a millstone were hung around his neck and he were thrown into the sea, than that he would cause one of these little ones to stumble." The meaning of "little ones" can be interpreted multiple ways though I would interpret it as anyone young and impressionable.

  221. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by random+coward · · Score: 1

    Moving the goalpost I see. From "No courts have ruled that way" I found that the 7th circuit did in fact rule that way, and they based it on a Supreme Court Ruling as well(that would be the second quote). So I said that courts recognize that Atheism is a religion. The courts agree.

    My viewpoint is that the government should not favor one religion over another religion. I, like the courts, have a broad construction of what a religion is. This after all being a legal argument.

    You think that theistic religions should be disadvantaged, and that Atheism and Secular Humanism should be advantaged in government, to protect that separation of church and state, changing their definition to suit your argument. Then you think that no law should be based on religious belief; when in fact all law is.

    The Civil Rights Act of 1964 doesn't protects against all kinds of offense. It doesn't protect based on sexual orientation. And that is what the nexus of this Indiana law is about. So no bullshit about that ending action at the cash register. That's false.

    I'm done with this goal post moving and your rhetoric. If you want to come back with some logic and facts have at it, but quit calling me a liar when you don't have a clue what the fuck your talking about.

  222. Re:Sodom and Gomorrah wasn't about same-sex marria by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sodomy is simply sexual contact without the aim of procreation. Did the Bible specifically talk about men taking it up the wazoo?

  223. Just FYI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For the lazy, there's only THREE Shakers left in the world, so maybe everyone will get the sarcasm.

  224. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

    "Separation of church and state", as a specific quote or concept, is nowhere in the founding legal documents of the United States.

    It was no less than Thomas Jefferson who said:

    Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between Man & his God, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, & not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should 'make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,' thus building a wall of separation between Church and State.

    Next, your strawman:

    It's use did not create prohibition against religious expression.

    Correct. Still doesn't. You're legally entitled to say "blacks are of the devil" (or whites for that matter). Go ahead! No government agency will stop you. However, you're not allowed to discriminate based on race, color, religion or national origin in hotels, motels, restaurants, theaters, and all other public accommodations engaged in interstate commerce (court-upheld interpretation: pretty much anywhere).

    No one believes that any of our rights are unlimited. You can speak your opinion, but you can't yell fire in a theater. You can bear arms, but don't expect to own a nuclear bomb. You can sincerely believe that whites are a superior species to blacks, but you don't get to own, kill, intimidate, lynch, or otherwise harm a black guy, regardless of your vile beliefs. This isn't something I'm making up out of whole cloth, but well-established and widely accepted interpretation of Federal law.

    Documents which govern the FEDERAL government do not necessarily apply to State or Local governments.

    Read your Constitution, son. The 14th amendment says:

    Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

    This codified previous Constitutional supremacy thoughts by explicitly stating that States don't get to write laws violating the Constitution or selectively affording privileges to one group and not another.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  225. Why pay for family planning? by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

    but why should anyone but the individual pay for said options???

    We have to start from the premise that said individual may well not be able to afford these options.

    Then, we pay for the same reason that we as group pay for other things that benefit society over the long term, like roads, fire departments, public education, defense, sewers, sidewalks, dikes, rain gutters. We know certain needs are going to come up, and/or certain events will actually happen, so we prepare for them in some way that optimizes the outcome.

    Unwanted children are very often a serious burden both on society at large, and often upon the parents, and often even to themselves. The workforce is diminished and damaged, and people grow up under conditions that start out with a fairly strong negative impetus.

    We benefit directly by stronger parent-child relations; by prepared parents as opposed to "oh crap, I/we didn't plan on THIS!" parents; By better educated and happier citizens.

    It's the future we're investing in. That's one of the best things society can do.

    Lastly, the evaluation should, at least in my estimation, be based upon this criteria:

    Which is worse? Unwanted children, loss of productivity, social turmoil and misery, or a very reasonable levy upon the citizens in general?

    All family planning services taken together ca. 2010 account for 2.37B out of the total of 3.55 trillion spent, or .06%, or 6/10,000ths of the total expenditure. That means for every $1000.00 you paid in taxes, that 60 cents of that went to cover family planning. Not too harsh, I'm thinking.

    To me, if that is the question (and I think it is), the answer is pretty much a foregone conclusion.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    1. Re:Why pay for family planning? by TWX · · Score: 1

      I cannot remember which author said it, but the quote is, "no one born with a hungry mouth is truly innocent." It applies well when people want to go on about the innocent-children in the abortion discussion. After birth these people will need resources. If their parents can't or don't want to provide those resources then that burden falls on society, a society that doesn't want to expend significant resources, unless neglect occurs.

      This is a raw deal, and is the primary reason why I support reproductive rights that include the right to not reproduce despite going through the motions. It's a travesty that people both want to take away the tools to prevent pregnancy in the first place and then want to take away the means to end unwanted pregnancy.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  226. Whatever... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I mean who cares. You people put too much emphasis on government acknowledgment. People will ultimately do what they want to do regardless, whether it's discriminatory or not.

    This is just yet another galvanizing bi partisan blow up of pure political crap.

    Moving on...

  227. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

    Then you think that no law should be based on religious belief; when in fact all law is.

    I cannot keep up with the contortion of intellectual dishonesty required to type that sentence with a straight face. I don't think you're lying to me and that you really believe this, but I equally believe that you're lying to yourself. Have a nice day and best of luck in your future endeavors.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  228. religious freedom by spongman · · Score: 1

    religious freedom is one thing: a poor excuse for behaving badly.

  229. You are seriously telling me... by emil · · Score: 1

    ...that the slaughter of Sepphoris would have no impact whatsoever on the childhood of Yeshua? That the wounded refugees sheltering in Nazereth would have no impact on him? That childhood memories of a Roman atrocity would have no lasting effect? That the PTSD his family likely suffered made no difference whatsoever?

    You also mistake guile in talk of the occupation for peaceful intent - direct threats against the Romans was suicide. Did not Jesus say to sell your cloak and buy a sword? That he came to set 3 against 2, and 2 of 3, father against son, and mother daughter?

    I'm not buying it. Reread all you like.

  230. Frankly, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't GIVE A FLYING FUCK what Tim Cook says, thinks, farts or shits.

    How the fuck does this even make Slashdot?

  231. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Starting in the middle of a sentence doesn't mean the rest of that sentence isn't there.

    Under a plain english reading of that sentence the first half can safely be ignored, it's a reason given for why the second part needs to be followed, not an actual restriction. Under a historical reading of that sentence using the writings of the people who wrote that amendment the first half allows the government to force you to be armed. If you want to force people to accept the first half then not only are you not allowed to restrict other free peoples ability to arm themselves, those free people an actually force you to arm yourself.

  232. Religious Freedom Means . . . by hduff · · Score: 1

    "Religious Freedom" means that you can believe as you wish free of government control or mandate, not that you can force others to believe what you believe or others can be forced to act in ways contrary to their beliefs, but consistent with yours.

    The Bible is full of stories of real-world penalties that are to be paid for following your beliefs, including death. These modern believers want their outward expression of their beliefs to be free of any real-world consequences from people who do not share those beliefs. That's not how any of this works.

    --
    "I believe in Karma. That means I can do bad things to people all day long and I assume they deserve it." : Dogbert
  233. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Rakarra · · Score: 1

    Try to get your float promoting Gay Therapy or Traditional Marriage into a Gay Pride Parade

    Probably wouldn't work because those are strictly exclusive instead in inclusive. Both of those are attacks on gay people.

    "Gay therapy" comes from the perspective that being gay is evil and it needs to be cured. It'd be a pretty big 'fuck you' to most people attending a pride parade.
    "Traditional Marriage" isn't a celebration of heterosexual marriage, it's an attempt to outlaw marriage for homosexuals.

  234. Re: Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Using your.analogy, should you be able to sue a baker for not making you a cake with 2 cats on top? It is their labor and extra effort, they have to deal with messed up inventory, and put other work aside to handle your personal request. Idiots like you must also believe in cake fairies, where wands make and decorate cakes, not people and labor. And sod off, you smell like cat pee!

  235. Whites Only by si3n4 · · Score: 1

    your right, what's the harm in letting people discriminate based on their prejudices, it's not like so many people would do it that someone is actually hurt

  236. Fire up the SJW 9000!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Zbul7EnI3w

  237. Unconstitutional by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't understand why these laws are even being considered. In my state stores are allowed to post a sign at the register which states that they reserve the right to refuse service to anyone. I realize that this is usually reserved for folks who enter diners without shirts and shoes. But by bringing religion into the mix clearly (in my opinion) makes such laws unconstitutional (the whole Separation of church and state thing).

    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof ...

    What happens when someplace refuses service to a federally protected minority? I'm counting the days till someone sues in FEDERAL court for millions and names the state as a willing accomplice. I don't see how the state would stand a chance in federal court.

  238. Re:Hypocrites by mab · · Score: 1

    Pedophilia or paedophilia is a psychiatric disorder in which an adult or older adolescent experiences a primary or exclusive sexual attraction to prepubescent children, generally age 11 years or younger.

  239. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    discriminate against religions

    Isn't it fair that everyone should get a turn?

  240. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    The Founding Fathers were well aware of long traditions of the early colonies to attack other Christians of the wrong sect. Puritans hanging Quakers was an early American tradition, and much of the Constitution is written so that various religious groups can coexist.

    When I say "various religious groups", let's not forget that while some might consider one group to just be another denomination of Christianity, there are plenty of people who may not agree. It is unlikely that we could unanimously agree that Mormons are Christians, and I've heard plenty of bad things said by various Protestants and Catholics about the Jehovah's Witnesses. Some of the more extreme Protestants claim that Catholics build false idols of Mary and their Saints and choose to pray to them instead of worshiping God. (I'm not interested in debating what Catholics do or do not believe, I was only stating the opinion of a minority of people, as I understand it)

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  241. Y'all are pro-discrimination, but it seems legal by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    You're free to exercise your religion, you're just not free to acquire a business license and operate under any hocus pocus framework you want.
    But it seems that there is no federal law, as written, that prohibits discrimination of customers are a business based on sexual orientation. Not even federal employment laws seem to protect LGBT, except for federal employees

    But the Supreme Court can establish a precedent that the existing federal laws that protect the enumerated classes of race, national origin, religion, sex, age, and disability also cover classes not enumerated (what criteria?). Doing so would then prevent states from operating pro-religion/anti-LGBT laws until the federal laws are modified to overturn the precedent by specifically excluding LGBT. It's not so unusual, Reed v. Reed (1971) extended the reach of this clause, and Romer v. Evans (1996) is a case that is strikingly similar to the current issue.

    But until that happens, the issuing of business licenses is controlled at the State and County level and remains at their discretion as long as the federal guidelines are follow with regard to the enumerated protected classes. So if your State Assembly and Governor are into the same hocus pocus as you, you can all hold hands and triumphantly expel all the gays from your community. (no, not really going to play out that way. but that's what the end goal appears to be)

    (that's how this arm-chair non-lawyer sees it)

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  242. Forced speech by phrackthat · · Score: 1

    The reason why these laws have been coming down is because people are concerned, rightly, that they will be compelled to engage in forced expression in favor of something that they find morally wrong. Whether you believe it is morally wrong is besides the point - no one should be compelled to engage in any form of expressive activity in favor of something they find morally repugnant. The first amendment enshrines our freedom of speech and the 13th states that no form of involuntary servitude is to be permitted in the United States - and trust me, if you're forced to make the choice between (1) being fined into eternal indebtedness to the state (as these fines cannot be discharged in bankruptcy) or having your livelihood cut off or (2) engaging in conduct you find wrong: it's involuntary. Why are people concerned about this? Bakers have been put out of business because they refused to use their artistic talents (which express themselves) to make wedding cakes for homosexual unions. At least one photographer was handed down ruinous fines for refusing to photograph a homosexual wedding. A florist was shut down for refusing to make a floral arrangement for a homosexual wedding. Each of these people believe that their actions would be tantamount to approving the homosexual wedding and such actions would be in violation of their deeply held religious belief (see, i.e. Romans 1:32 - the conduct itself is condemned, but even those who approve of such conduct are condemned). Frankly, I don't think that the gays who asked for these services did so in good faith - they did it to cause problems for those people because they loathe them. They want to drive religious expression completely from the public square and keep it confined to a two hour slot on Sunday (or Saturday as the case may be).

  243. Re: Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

    Having a system that supports the creation and nurturing of the next generation of mankind is in the long term best interests of homosexuals just as much as anyone else. Corrupting it into something purely based on decadent sex is not wise. For anyone.

    --
    -1 Uncomfortable Truth
  244. Re: Hypocrites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The APA nearly normalized it in the last DM. The betting is that they will next go around. Then what will you say? Doesn't matter, you will be a hypocrite either way.

    I hate intellectually dishonest mother fuckers like you...well at least as long as that's permitted.

  245. Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you are in business, then your constitutional rights go out the window???

    So..... it was RIGHT then in the 1950's for blacks in some places to be banned from owning businesses? After all, the culture in those places at the time disapproved of such business owners, so since they were out of step with the clear will of the people they apparently by modern left-wing theory had no right to be in business (at least until they caved-in and became white...)

    Thie modern leftist garbage that people do not have the CLEARLY WRITTEN CONSTITUTIONAL religious freedoms, because they confligt with some sexual deviants whose supposed superior protections are not even IN the constitution puts EVERYBODY's constitutional rights at risk, all on the altar of the current fad of puclicly celebrating various sexual proclivities.

  246. Re:Christian Theocracy - whacko claim by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The nation was FOUNDED by largely protestant Christians and its laws are based on their ideology but it was not , at its founding nor at any time since a "Christian Theocracy"

    No new effort to slightly retard the de-Chrisitianizing of the nation by the atheists and gays of the hard-left will convet the nation into a "Christian Theocracy"... at best these laws will slightly delay the rot of the civilization.

  247. Re: Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Dragon+Bait · · Score: 2

    Corrupting [marriage] into something purely based on decadent sex is not wise. For anyone.

    But that's generally not what people who are gay are doing. I know two women that raised two or three kids together. Their marriage would not have been "just" about sex. Their marriage would have been a statement to the world that this is the person that comes first for me, which is pretty much the same statement that my hetero marriage does.

    But, based on your statement, what about hetero marriages where the couple find they are infertile? At that point is their marriage "purely based on decadent sex"? If so, should we force their marriage to be annulled if they find they can't have children? What if they get married past their childbearing years?

    If [one of] the purposes of marriage is to declare monogamy towards one other person, why shouldn't gays be able to publicly declare such a thing? Wouldn't encouraging gay marriage be a means of reducing promiscuous sex?

    Honestly, go through and write down all of the reasons that marriage (of any form) should be recognized and then objectively ask yourself if that reason would also apply to a gay couple. Keep in mind that with artificial insemination and adoption, gay couples can be parents. If you get over your own revolution to the gay lifestyle, you might find that your objections to gay marriage start to fall away.

  248. Try again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Nobody is saying you have to celebrate same-sex marriage" is a blatant lie.

    Photographers have been sued for not photographing gay weddings (i.e. being active participants in something they believe is deeply sinful), bakers have been sued for not baking custom wedding cakes for (and specifically decorated to celebrate) gay marriages, ranch owners have been sued for not renting their property for use in gay marriage ceremonies and allowing it to be decorated for the gay marriage and photographed decorated and used that way, etc

    Consider:

    "Amendment I"

    "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

    You will note that there is no "except when your religion offends a bunch of sexual deviants", or "except when you open a business" in there.

    It's currently a BIG CAUSE on the left to wipe-out all issues of morality in the legal code, so it's no surprise that you guys are eager to ignore the plain text of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights if it offends any group with a focus of what's between their legs.... BUT the precedents you set when you wage such a "social justice war" will be far-reaching and you're not gonna like the eventual effects. If government can drive a person out of business because that person's beliefs are unpopular with a core constituent of a politician NO MATTER WHAT the Constitution says, then it can do that to ANYBODY. Any future politician will be free to strip all environmentalists or gays or you-name-it of THEIR rights NO MATTER WHAT the Constitution actually says. Obama promised that he would "fundamentally transform" the United States, and it appear he was right - in his aftermath and aided by his midless supporters nobody in the US has any actual fixed and guaranteed rights.

    1. Re:Try again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2014/03/refusing-to-photograph-a-gay-wedding-isnt-hateful/284224/

      http://www.insidetucsonbusiness.com/news/when-is-refusing-service-legal-and-when-is-it-discrimination/article_305de452-a55b-11e3-8245-001a4bcf887a.html

  249. What a good law... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I'm a radical Muslim, would such a law allow me to wage Jihad and behead the infidels, only because my religion forces me to do that and I'm permitted to fulfill my religious obligations? It sounds like Texas and the whole Bible Belt are the place where Al-Qaeda should move their HQ, their sacred haven, land of religious freedom.

  250. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by HuguesT · · Score: 1

    For me, the line is drawn where some group uses the state to force their lifestyle/belief on others

    So, people in Texas who try to use the board of education to promote textbooks that have a negative stance on evolution? These people are from the left? I wasn't aware.

  251. In law or not, makes no difference by hooiberg · · Score: 1

    No company wants to hire a muslim.

    So an employer can either cite a law that allows the company to do this, when a muslim applies for a job, or, as was always the case before these laws, use vague arguments such as 'we have found an other candidate that better fits in the existing team' or 'an other candidate better fits the current company culture.'

    So effectively, nothing changes, just the way it is motivated changes.

  252. What??.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Freedom is discriminatory? Really? So what Tim Cook can offer in contrary to that? Because forbidding the religion is itself a discrimination. Religion slavery instead?.. There is a saying: "Ask an idiot bow to God and he will destroy his forehead".

    1. Re:What??.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If your freedom harms other people and their freedom, it is indeed discriminatory. There is unlimited freedom in the jungle, where the strong devour the weak, you know. And a law that permits such a freedom sets the society on a perilous path - the path to the law of jungle.

  253. Funny who all is against these new laws... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... Turns out that it's the same groups that continually try and pass their discrimination laws against law-abiding gun owners. Hurts, don't it?

  254. I'm preferring Jobs' public profile by DThorne · · Score: 1

    At least he was just a grasping, greedy meglomanical fascist, and I didn't need to hear public proclamations of his sexual orientation or just how much he was going to pooch his family in his will when he kicks off. Now this.
    Honestly, you idiot, I don't care about any of your thoughts on any of these topics. You seems to think that because you're the world's most publicly rich gay man, that gives you cred. Pfft.

  255. Re:a question - Right now by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    I am required by the government, over penalty of a large fine to do business with corrupt insurance companies. I MUST purchase their product, that provides me nothing that I can't provide on my own. I like how now we equate having insurance with having access to health care. Currently I pay about 10,000 dollars a year for insurance that provides me about 5000 dollars in services a year. What could I do with that additional 5,000 dollars a year for the next 10-15 years that I am running a surplus to create a saving account that I can pay for services when I am older and running a deficit.

    To make it more plain. On average the country pays more to insurance companies that they are provided in medical services... otherwise the insurance companies would go out of business.

    So, yes currently the government compels me to do business with a company that I don't want to

    Yes, and I have to pay car and buildings insurance and get nothing back at all each year! Those evil insurance companies are just pocketing my money and buying themselves yachts.

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  256. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

    NO, Hindus are the ones with the cow issues, not Buddhists.

    --

    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  257. Re: Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by tbannist · · Score: 1

    Having a system that supports the creation and nurturing of the next generation of mankind is in the long term best interests of homosexuals just as much as anyone else. Corrupting it into something purely based on decadent sex is not wise. For anyone.

    Bullshit. You don't believe this, it's just an excuse to enable your prejudice. If you really believed it you'd be up in arms over opposite-sex married couples who don't have children and supporting same-sex couples who have children (adopted or other wise).

    --
    Fanatically anti-fanatical
  258. Re:"principles our nation was founded on" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Show me on the doll where the evil religious people touched you.

  259. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But my religion says that everybody should be homosexual. I suppose my religious freedoms will also be honored...thanks!

  260. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

    declare him an enemy combatant

  261. Re: Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by RoLi · · Score: 1

    That is not true, it is not in the interests of homosexuals because they usually don't have children.

    Basically "behind me the deluge" is their interest.

  262. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder if a cinema owner should be forced to sell tickets to black men.

    Oh wait, I don't wonder that at all, because I'm not a bigoted idiot.

    Somehow the target of gay rights keeps changing to include more and more people in the category of bigots.

    I could get behind "Keep the government out of the bedroom!" wholeheartedly. I wasn't sure if "Don't ask / Don't tell" was really a step forward, but as a policy enshrining a sense of privacy it was fine with me. I was a little uneasy about "Don't like gay marriages? Don't have one!" a few years back, but not really worried.

    Now we have moved on to something that could be fairly described as "If, when asked, you don't celebrate gay marriages in your public life, then you are a bigot who should pay civil damages until you have learned your lesson." Demanding this level of compliance from dissenters is really too much for society to request. In the short term, RFRA can be repealed or struck down by courts, but in the long term, RFRA or at least something like 'conscientious objector' status is going to be a element of civil society. Frankly speaking, to suppress the natural freedom to hold one's own opinion requires a level of totalitarian commitment that the US populace will not support.

  263. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by RoLi · · Score: 1

    Fair enough, but why should we let homosexuals define societal norms? Are we really sure that a world suited for homosexuals is a better world? And why can homosexuals not just move all to San Francisco and let everybody else alone?

  264. Plenty. by emil · · Score: 1

    Pilate sent scores of insurgents to Golgatha every day. Tiberius recalled him to Rome for sending a phalanx to butcher several thousand Jews in a riot. A personal interview was thus extremely unlikely, and the "hand washing" just preposterous.

    Try a basic test - who met Jesus first after the resurrection? Each gospel has a different answer. Unless you are extremely versed at doublethink, some of them have to be wrong.

    1. Re:Plenty. by dog77 · · Score: 1

      The Bible is our only significant source of information we have of Jesus, and so if you are saying the Bible is not true, that is a reasonable viewpoint, but if you are saying that you have some other source that says Jesus was trying to say something different or that the Bible was significantly distorted; what is that source?

      That the details differ on different accounts of what happened after the resurection, I don't see as a test of anything. I can see the differences explained many different ways, and even the oppositie of what you are trying to imply, you could say they appear more authentic since they are not exact copies, or you could say they took different accounts, or they were trying to emphasize different themes, or a bunch of myths assembled seperately.

      If you are trying to argue that Jesus was doing what many of the other Jews at the time were doing, it sounds like that is just a guess, and you have no evidence for what you are asserting. Or if you are not just guessing, what is the evidence?

  265. Laughable... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But, boy howdy he is STILL doing business in Saudi Arabia where they EXECUTE gays and behead innocent victims of rape.

    You have to love the principles of the Left.

  266. All laws are discriminatory by definition... by servant · · Score: 1
    It is discrimination to keep someone from or require some action of any person or group that is different from whatever they would otherwise want or be able to do.

    Discrimination is not inherently bad. It is the application that is bad.

    We don't have a 'right' to drive a car, it is a privilege. It is discriminatory against the people that want to drive a car that don't want to abide by other definition of 'civil conduct'. It is also discriminatory to allow ANYONE to get away with anything that EVERYONE is allowed (but not required) to do.

    Get over it. Life isn't 'fair'.

    --
    ... "When you pry the source from my cold dead hands."
  267. Unrest? by emil · · Score: 1

    You call the complete destruction of Jerusalem unrest?

    And I imagine that Sepphoris also was not destroyed in 4BC by the Roman legions that were not in Judea?

    And Herod Agrippa was a kind and just ruler, of whom Claudius remarked "I'd rather be his dog than his son?"

  268. Re: Does this law protect puppies? by Rakarra · · Score: 1

    Both children (teenagers at least) and animals are sexual creatures

    But they are incapable of giving informed, human consent. Yes, even human teenagers. That is the distinction that is drawn.

  269. no shirt no shoes no service by wellsdm · · Score: 1

    what about rights for nudists to eat in public? Where does it end?

  270. Re: Does this law protect puppies? by Rakarra · · Score: 1

    You are ignoring the fact that we are murdering animals for fun ( completely legal). If you say homosexuality should be legal, then bestiality, is also should be legal, and so as incest ( especially homosexual incest).

    Most Western societies have long long ago decided that violence is a less serious affair than sexuality.

  271. Religious Freedom by pebear · · Score: 1

    As a Christian I can understand why people would want such protections from having their small business's being shutdown because they don't want to participate in a gay wedding or activity. The law is the same as the Federal law that was signed by Bill Clinton and has been adopted by 26 other states. Even the State of CT one of the largest Gay protectorates in the US has that same law on the books. That being said I would say as a Christian I would not hesitate providing services to gay people at gay events. Money is money even if I don't agree with their activities. St. Paul says to Christians, to eat meat that was previously sacrifced to Roman gods because the food ultimately comes from God. I look at work contracts that come from the Gay community in the same way. It's work that is comming from God and it's resources being provided ultimately from God. Jesus would never turn away people for just being gay. He welcomed every shunned person in the first century, Women, Prostitutes, Publicans, tax collectors and others. I don't see why he would not welcome gay people either. I think American Christians need to be more like Christ and less like their favorite TV preachers. Sorry folks for taking up too many words or being snarky here like many others.

    --
    Paul E. Bahre
  272. What Tim Cook does is a detestable thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    God's word is clear about homosexual acts that it is a detestable thing.
    (Leviticus 20:13) “‘If a man lies down with a male the same as one lies down with a woman, both of them have done a detestable thing. They should be put to death without fail. Their own blood is upon them. NWT

    Leviticus 20:13King James Version (KJV)
    13 If a man also lie with mankind, as he lieth with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination: they shall surely be put to death; their blood shall be upon them.
    The word lie does not mean telling untruths...it means laying down with. Ya'll better pay attention. God is gonna have them all executed at Armegeddon soon enough anyhow. I suggest you get out from among them. Sodom and Gomorrah was destroyed because of homosexual activity.
    (Jude 7) In the same manner, Sodom and Gomorrah and the cities around them also gave themselves over to gross sexual immorality and pursued unnatural fleshly desires; they are placed before us as a warning example by undergoing the judicial punishment of everlasting fire.
    You have been warned.

  273. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by Rakarra · · Score: 1

    Eddie Murphy has had a checkered movie history. For every Norbit, there's the scene from Dreamgirls where he won (rightfully) an Academy Award for a single look.

    He didn't win, Ed Asner won that year. But he was nominated, at least. I put Murphy now in the same category as Adam Sandler and Rob Schneider. Guys who do seem like they have comedic chops (all three of them showed those as SNL cast members) but who have terrible, TERRIBLE taste in movies.

    Sandler in particular is on record as saying that he doesn't try very hard in his movies, and they are nothing more than ways to get paid while bringing a bunch of his friends in and goofing off for a few months (Grown-Ups is a good example).

    Now about Tyler Perry though....

    Tyler Perry was quite good in Gone Girl. And, amusingly, the 2009 Star Trek reboot. And of course, the Dave Chappelle Show.

  274. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder if a cinema owner should be forced to show gay pornos.

  275. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by blue9steel · · Score: 1

    Fair enough, but why should we let homosexuals define societal norms?

    The majority do, and nowadays 55% want same sex marriage to be legal.

  276. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by rochrist · · Score: 1

    What a surprise that you prefer to remain anonymous, coward. Unlike Tim Cook.

  277. Re: Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by rochrist · · Score: 1

    Of course he doesn't. He's just frightened.

  278. Tolerance for Me ... by robogram · · Score: 1

    ... But not for Thee Tim Cook is merely echoing the ignorance and bigotry of the radical left. He cannot fathom a situation where citizens should be protected from government action that violates their religious beliefs. The stance taken by Tim Cook is nothing less than Anti-Christian Bigotry http://bit.ly/anti-christian-b... There is a very big difference between discriminating against someone based on who they are as opposed to actions they are taking. RFRA laws simply allow my company to defend itself against the government when it wants to force us to participate in actions that violate the religious beliefs of the company. Those on the radical left are not content with just leaving no room for dissent - they also want hearty approval (from their opponents!) for actions the opponent finds offensive. "To require a wedding vendor to service a same-sex wedding is not eliminating discrimination against the gay couple. It’s coercing the wedding vendor. Think of an alternative situation where a gay baker is required [forced] to bake dessert cakes for a pro-marriage [anti- same-sex marriage] rally sponsored by a conservative group. Surely we should acknowledge that a person should not be required to provide a good or service for an event premised on views that the baker finds objectionable. Do you really want to live in a country where supposedly free businesses are required to use their goods and services against their will?" http://bit.ly/indiana-rfra-eig...

  279. Re: Does this law protect puppies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are ignoring that homosexuality is between consenting adults (the type that is legal anyway - homosexual rape isn't legal for example). Whereas bestiality and pedophilia are not. Which is a pretty significant difference making your "only difference" claim absurd.

    Most any sentence containing the word "consent" is but a thinly veiled apology for brutal and remoreseless application of State violence to one's perceived social/political/cultural enemies.

  280. Re:Does this law protect puppies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, your example is wrong too. A better example is the owner of a Jewish deli being sued for discrimination because he didn't sell an Easter Ham.

  281. Tim Cook - Do your homework by robogram · · Score: 1

    "What these religious-freedom laws say is that government can require people to violate their religious beliefs only when it is pursuing a compelling interest, and must do so in the least intrusive manner possible." http://bit.ly/tim-cook-do-your...

  282. RFRA Law Help Manage a Policy Dilemma by robogram · · Score: 1

    "... what the Indiana and other bills actually do is help manage an important policy dilemma. As a society, do we value gay rights? Increasingly the answer is yes. Do we value religious freedom and practice? Historically the answer is yes. We value both, but they do not always live easily together. What this bill does is help courts manage the dilemma—while protecting against discrimination, also protecting religious rights where the state has no compelling interest in violating them or where alternative policies less restrictive to religious rights should be pursued." http://bit.ly/indiana-sanity

  283. divide and conquer by paul+mafinga · · Score: 1

    Usually it's the Democratic Party attempting to divide and conquer We the People -- anything to hand-wave away from the 4,000,000 words of IRS Tax Code, the flood of red ink, and the lack of efficacy checks throughout the Presidential cabinets.

    In this case, the Republicans and their extreme Christian lobby have divided We the People with a very foolish division -- Religious vs. Non-Religious. This is a violation of secular ideals, to say the least.

    Rather than Pence claiming that it's okay "because Clinton did it" the GOTP should modify the wording to put it more in line with the Right to Remain silent and/or Conscientious Objection -- for example "Freedom of Conscious" act. This would have protected both secular and religious people from performing acts for hire that they find personally appalling.

    Full Disclosure : I am a profound Tea Party Libertarian who despises the Modern Democratic Party and believes that a three step process exists to restore the Constitution : 1) Drop the IRS Tax Code from 4,000,000 words to a small set of entities and formulas; 2) Abolish the Continuing Resolution (force the Legislature to Appropriate); 3) Privatize all of the Executive Cabinets and use a small shim of highly trained Validation and Verification specialists to perform contract monitoring. I believe in the restoration of Freedoms and Liberties for all adults, regardless.

  284. No soup for you! by mpercy · · Score: 1

    George Costanza: [Soup Nazi gives him a look] Medium turkey chili.
    [instantly moves to the cashier]
    Jerry Seinfeld: Medium crab bisque.
    George Costanza: [looks in his bag and notices no bread in it] I didn't get any bread.
    Jerry Seinfeld: Just forget it. Let it go.
    George Costanza: Um, excuse me, I - I think you forgot my bread.
    Soup Nazi: Bread, $2 extra.
    George Costanza: $2? But everyone in front of me got free bread.
    Soup Nazi: You want bread?
    George Costanza: Yes, please.
    Soup Nazi: $3!
    George Costanza: What?
    Soup Nazi: NO SOUP FOR YOU!

    Soup Nazi: What is this? You're kissing in my line? NOBODY KISSES IN MY LINE!
    Sheila: I can kiss anywhere I want to.
    Soup Nazi: You just cost yourself a soup!

    Elaine Benes: Um... you know what? Has anyone ever told you you look exactly like Al Pacino? You know, "Scent Of A Woman." Who-ah! Who-ah!
    Soup Nazi: Very good. Very good.
    Elaine Benes: Well, I...
    Soup Nazi: You know something?
    Elaine Benes: Hmmm?
    Soup Nazi: NO SOUP FOR YOU!
    Elaine Benes: What?
    Soup Nazi: COME BACK ONE YEAR! NEXT!

  285. Re: Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

    I am. I believe in annullment of non fruitful unions. Fuck who you like, cohabitate as you like, but make marriage about nurturing families has ALWAYS been my position. I came to this position when my tasks as a life insurance agent/financial planner led me to help rich DINKs pay less taxes using marriage laws, and felt strongly enough about it to change careers.

    My position may not be to your liking, but it is still based on logical long term social best interests as I see them, and not extremism or prejudice.

    --
    -1 Uncomfortable Truth
  286. faggots, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how would you feel about being forced to make a swastika cake, or cater/photograph (be present for) an event like an anti-gay rally? retards

  287. Re: Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually it showed up in response to cases like a 70 y/o grandmother who has served gay customers for years being forced to make a cake whose message violated her beliefs about marriage.

    This law wouldn't guarantee she would win, but it places the burden of proof on the state. My guess is that she would win because she serves gays without discrimination every day of the week, and in context this is a reasonable exemption.

    Do you grasp the difference?

  288. Indiana and China by eric_harris_76 · · Score: 1

    I've not been keeping up, but I'm pretty sure Indiana still has a better track record on human rights than China.

    And that's even if you buy the bizarre notion that bakers and photographers and such are "common carriers" who have to accept anyone who meanders up to their doors as a customer.

    --
    There's no time like the present. Well, the past used to be.
  289. Re: Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

    The do retire. Think big picture for a minute?

    --
    -1 Uncomfortable Truth
  290. Religions are ~2000 years old; by NewYork · · Score: 1

    Religions are ~2000 years old;
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A...
    Humans are ~200,000 years old;
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H...
    Religion was born when the first con man met the first fool;
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F...

  291. Other messias. by emil · · Score: 1

    There were several miracle workers in Judea at the time of Yeshua, some who could even raise the dead by contemporary accounts. The main difference is that Yeshua performed his miracles without monetary charge. If this aspect is similar, and rebellion was a common sentiment (i.e. Sepphoris), then we can assume that Yeshua was familiar with the issues, even if he did not share the opinions of all of them.

    After the crucifixion, Paul changed Yeshua radically, abandoning Mosaic law and calling himself the "first apostle." James the Just, the head of the whole church, recalled Paul to Jerusalem twice, and censured him for what would amount to heresy. James then dispatched emissaries to all of Paul's congregations to correct the "flawed" teaching, which was largely successful. There is even a story in the memoirs of Clement (Peter's successor) that Paul threw James down a flight of stairs in a rage on his second return.

    Paul's teachings would have been discarded, if James had not been murdered, and Jerusalem destroyed. As it was, Paul's writings were the only existing documents after Jerusalem's fall, and all the later gospels included strong influence from his letters.

    The rebellious attitude of Yeshua towards the Romans would not serve a new Roman religion, so it was removed, for practical reasons.

  292. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

    The correct balance is probably to allow it for sole proprietorships but not parternships or corporations. That way individuals aren't forced to violate their conscience while groups are required to conform to societal norms. If Joe's lawnmower service center or Sally's cake shop is discriminatory it's probably not a big deal in the grand scheme of things (distasteful as it may be to some), but if you have the same problem with Toro or Albertsons it's a major issue. This makes both sides unhappy, so it's likely the best compromise solution.

    Discrimination is discrimination. It can't be half discrimination. The question then too, is drug use discrimination with consequences?

    In my view discrimination is insidious. We have likes and dislikes. We choose one grocery store over another because we are more comfortable shopping there. We choose a model of car for the same reason.

    --
    Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
  293. Re:Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by blue9steel · · Score: 1

    Discrimination is discrimination. It can't be half discrimination.

    Of course it is, but it's not quite that straightforward. We allow many kinds of discrimination and prevent some. We also try to protect freedom of association and freedom of religion. Sometimes those three things conflict and we end up with a situation where supporting one thing decreases support of the others and so decisions have to be made about where to draw the line. Previously the line was all in favor of those against same sex marriage, recently things have shifted the other direction, as a society we'll have to figure out how to balance things fairly. Perhaps the right place to draw the line is zero tolerance, perhaps it's not, I'm sure there will be plenty of debate about it going forward just as there has been about things like racism and affirmative action.

  294. Re: Does this law protect puppies? by Bathroom+Humor · · Score: 1

    Animals can consent, as can children. Does not happen very often, no. And any consent they grant is almost certainly not informed consent. But it's not impossible for them to agree to things like that.
    It is still fucked up, regardless.

  295. Apple Tehran Gay Right by whipnet · · Score: 1

    I would be interested in Tim Cook's opinion on Iran's gay rights being that they have a store in Tehran and all. I'll wait......

  296. Re: Tim Cook is a Pro Discrimination Faggot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Corrupting it into something purely based on decadent sex is not wise. For anyone.

    Nor is it something that is happening.

    Nor do you believe that it is. You rail against strawman arguments because you piss your little pink panties at the thought of trying to address the facts at hand.