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comment by kleinbl00
kleinbl00  ·  3093 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Religious Freedom - HELP ME

It doesn't.

"I refuse to do business with you because I do not support your beliefs or practices" doesn't work when the government has recognized your beliefs and practices as protected. Your watercolor/monochrome discussion is false; if your trade is in painting watercolor, no one can force you to paint in tempera. However, if your trade is in painting klu klux klan rallies in watercolor, you have a civil case that you can't refuse to paint the Million Man March in watercolor.

You should be equally disallowed to refuse a cake with "Jesus saves" on it. You're putting your prejudices ahead of your community, pure and simple. Something lost in all this is that it's a rare person who wishes to do business with someone that hates them. I think it's safe to say that in every case where your trade needs to be protected by law, you're dealing with a situation in which both parties wish there were more choice. Sometimes that choice isn't available.

NO ONE benefits from you standing on your principles and refusing to put whatever the hell your customers want on their cakes. It's a fuckin' cake. But if it means that much to you, that means that you need to be compelled to decorate their fuckin' cake because society is about putting up with other people's fuckin' cakes. That's really what this is about: "religious freedom" as used by the right means the "freedom" to deny people their place in society because religion.





istara  ·  3093 days ago  ·  link  ·  

But I specifically said you shouldn't refuse general business.

My view is that you shouldn't be forced to customise your products in a way that conflicts with your own artistic, moral, or whatever integrity.

Another example: you're a tailor. You make sexy lingerie. Someone wants you to make a peephole bra for a three-year-old. It's probably not illegal, as a garment in itself. But you personally find it abhorrent and against your personal ethical and moral code. Should you be able to refuse that?

What about the damage to your business if you become the "tailor who made the toddler peephole bra"?

Similarly, if your cake shop operates in a tight knit religious community, what about the damage to your brand if someone forces you to make a cake with a message that conflicts with that community's (albeit bigoted) beliefs?

kleinbl00  ·  3093 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Yeah, still no.

You can refuse service to anyone - so long as it isn't for race, religion, color or national origin. Don't want to make a peephole bra for a 3 year old? No one is forcing you to. Refuse to make a peephole bra for a 3-year-old because her dad requires it for religious ceremonies that are officially recognized by the United States government? You're shit out of luck. Damage to your brand? NONE. You're complying with the law.

But do you see what you're requiring here? You're insisting that you have the right to refuse service to pedophiles. no shit. that's not the discussion. In fact, the act of conflating the rights of gay couples to be served anywhere wedding cakes are made with pedophilia is exactly the kind of alarmist, extremist, Godwin-esque argument that keeps people from seeing straight.

It's entirely legal to refuse someone service because you don't like their face. It's entirely illegal to refuse someone service because you don't like their muslim face. That shouldn't be at all contentious. yet somehow the 'wingers have managed to make otherwise rational people start going "I wouldn't want to make peephole bras for toddlers, therefore wingnuts should be allowed to refuse to make cakes for gay people."

This line of argument is beneath you.

istara  ·  3093 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I'm not suggesting they refuse service, I'm suggesting they should be able to refuse to customise their service in a specific way.

I'm an atheist. I wouldn't dream of going into a bakery run by Muslims and asking them to make me a cake with "there is no God!" piped on it.

If the law requires them to do that, then the law is wrong.

On the other hand, when it comes to essential service, I would have no hesitation entering a pharmacy staffed by a devout Catholic and asking for the morning after pill. And if they refused, I would sue the shit out of them.

This isn't about service. It's about being forced to modify your service, and offer a product that you don't normally sell.

kleinbl00  ·  3093 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Again, no.

I don't care that you're an atheist. I don't care what you would or wouldn't do in a Muslim bakery. the law isn't for what people want to do, the law is for what people are required to do. This is something that is often lost: nobody wants to get an abortion. If you need one, you're in a black place in life. That black place is where laws happen.

You're crafting this idea where it's bad manners to do business with someone not of your creed. Sure. Know what? I'm the only white guy my barber cuts hair for and he does a damn fine job and we get along great. Did I seek out a barber in Westchester? Nope. But there was a nice lady there who left and me and Marty have been getting along for five years now.

Should Marty be allowed to refuse to cut my hair?

You keep throwing up these boundaries so that you can keep things in the nice, logical, friendly part of the discussion where you look sensible and rational and then throw up these ridiculously offensive objections that make anyone wanting the opposite look deprived. Again, it's beneath you.

If you needed a cake with "there is no God!" piped on it, and the only place you could get it was a Muslim bakery, the Muslim bakery cannot legally refuse to sell you a cake. Full stop. That's the law, has been for 50 years. How many cases of offensive atheist cakes can you think of? I'll wager "none." That's because nobody else would dream of asking for your hatecake, either...

...but it doesn't change the fact that your hatecake is legally protected.

This isn't about service. This is about equality under the law, and equal access in society.

istara  ·  3093 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I think this reflects a kind of cultural mindset gulf between the US and perhaps European countries. To me it's absurd that someone would "need" a cake to the point that they feel they have a "right" to it. It's absurd to me - and rude - that I would impose my beliefs on someone else such that they were forced to modify their services and their own beliefs - for a non-essential product or service.

I guess the split here is that you talk from a position about rights. It's all about "your rights" - the customer's absolute right to always be right and always be served.

And your laws reflect that.

Whereas for me - as someone from a nation for whom queuing politely and apologising when someone else bumps into you is a national pastime - it's about consideration. I don't need or want laws that legally protect a hate cake. I'm quite happy to have such speech restricted. If I have to express my own freedom of speech through other channels, that's fine. I'll do so. I'll find another cake vendor, or make my own, or perhaps put the message on a table decoration.

I don't think we are going to reconcile this, because I'm not arguing from a legal point of view (and I'm outside the US anyway, so your laws don't really affect me) but I what I personally believe should be the situation.

Our difference of opinion on this is a cultural one, it's a difference of attitude.

kleinbl00  ·  3093 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Right - that polite country of yours.

Europeans looking down their noses at Americans for their civil issues is the most tired, most tawdry, most hypothetically continental move there is. In Amsterdam, this is "tradition":

In Los Angeles, this is front-page scandal:

The split here is you come from a homogenous society based on a homogenous culture that emphasizes homogeneity. Y'all are 87% white, maybe 7% Indian, 3% black, nothing else really in the numbers. Where I grew up, white folx were the third largest minority behind Hispanics and Native Americans.

It's easy for you to be high and mighty.

istara  ·  3093 days ago  ·  link  ·  

It's not "looking down their noses", it's appreciating a cultural difference.

Of course your own history of migration, legacy of slavery, geographic diversity and higher extant religiosity are going to mean you need different laws.

It's not about better/worse, it's about practicality and what fits the current state of society. The US needs stronger enforcements of anti-discrimation because there is still more cultural discrimination. You had enforced segregation within living memory, we did not.

I'm not sure why you're trying to paint me as "high and mighty". I fully admit that your country lags Europe in some regards (I can't imagine an openly atheist president would yet be electable, for example). In some other regards, the US exceeds Europe (secularity in public schools for starters). Plus there is also a lot of diversity within Europe. Ireland and a couple of countries massively lag the rest of the developed world in terms of reproductive rights. Here in Australia, we lag horribly when it comes to gay marriage rights.

briandmyers  ·  3093 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    still more cultural discrimination (in the USA)

Really? I'll assume you're not considering aboriginal discrimination, then. Although I shouldn't talk, we in NZ aren't a whole lot better. At least we have legal gay marriage now, finally (c'mon over!)

briandmyers  ·  3093 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Seems to me that in these type of edge cases (which may require a court to decide), the rule should be based upon if the person requesting the service is being discriminated against. If you WOULD make that peephole bra for the town's crazy grandma, but NOT for the dodgy-looking dude who you think might be a pedo, then you're discriminating. If you wouldn't make it for anyone, then no-one's rights are being violated. Weird example but I hope you see what I mean.

[edit - to be fair, I'm not sure I agree with myself on this. It's a tough issue]

istara  ·  3093 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I do see what you mean. You might argue that you only make that bra in an adult size.

Likewise you might argue that you only make wedding cakes with flowers/non human figures. And if you did so, fair enough that you wouldn't want to put two brides on. There are some religions that prohibit the use of human images anyway (strict islam being one).

Also to throw into the mix: you're a wedding caterer, you're Jewish, you don't make or serve food with pork. Someone asks for sandwiches with ham instead of salmon. Are you required to make those?

If the wedding cake guy said: "I can't make you a cake saying "Ben and Steve's Big Gay Wedding", but I can make you cake with flowers, or one with a generic "Happy Wedding"" - would that be okay?

Then back to the first example, you could offer to make the dodgy-looking dude a bra, but only in an adult size or above.

Then you have the dilemma that his wife is a midget/little person...