The bill in particular aims to protect the religious liberty of the owner in order that they might operate their business in accordance with both the Law of the Land as well as how they see fit.
Nice sentiment, but we are a secular nation of laws with prohibitions against favoring one faith over another, one group over another. When you start discriminating against whole groups, you run afoul of those laws.
As has been said in numerous ways, your rights end where mine begin. When you open a business, your right to shape it with your religious tenets becomes more restricted. You can have a grocery that only sells kosher or halal foods, but you can't restrict the sale of them to Jews or Muslims only.
An owner who claims their religion does not want to serve people who are a different skin color will not be able to operate because they are breaking the Law. However an owner who claims that they believe same sex marriage is wrong according to their religion ought to be able to opt out of serving a client who desires their service.
Again, show me a passage from a religious text that says baking cakes for non-believers or sinners is prohibited.
A caterer for instance. Should a homosexual caterer be allowed to refuse to cater an anti-homosexual rally?
On the grounds that they are anti-homosexual? Like a conservative black-tie dinner? Probably not.
On the grounds that he fears for the mental and physical health of his staff or himself by the group wanting the catering done? Like an open air protest by the Wesboro church? Well that's like asking a black baker to cater a KKK rally, so most definitely yes.
Well that's like asking a black baker to cater a KKK rally.
So far, in this thread and in the public square everyone is freaking out that this bill will essentially introduce legalized discrimination against gays. This isn't about gays.
I agree. As I have
repeatedly pointed out, the wording of this legislation is broad enough that it can used to justify discrimination against any group on religious grounds.
It's about protecting religious liberty and whether or not business owners should be forced to go against their religion. Thus far we don't have any movement to not serve gay persons, but we do have owners not wishing to participate in gay culture/ceremonies/etc. and some states have forced owners to operate against their religious scruples or pay the price.
Yes we do.
We have doctors refusing to treat the children of lesbians. We have caterers and photographers refusing
at least some services to gay they provide straights. We have landlords & hoteliers refusing to rent to gays.
Whether you agree or disagree with the scruples of a certain religion or not is beside the point. The point, for America, is upholding the Constitution, which explicitly protects the free exercise of religion.
We have the right to all kinds of things under the constitution, like the pursuit of happiness. And the trend of constitutional law over the past 50 years has been to recognize that refusal of services to groups based on immutable characteristics is unconstitutional.