Originally
posted by
Supertodd:
In all of the examples of supposed anti-gay bigotry which have been making news lately, what the supposed bigots are objecting to is not a person, not even a sexual orientation. They are objecting to - and refusing to participate in - an act which they find morally repugnant. Gay marriage.
First of all, the photographer is a FAR better example than the cake. I don't see how selling a cake is "participating" in the ceremony. Heck, the cake isn't usually even part of the "ceremony" itself. The photographer actually has to be present and, to a degree, involved.
I have a hard time seeing the moral burden here. I suppose all our war photographers are horrible immoral people because they choose to be present and photograph atrocities? Or reporters covering a public execution? A photographer is essentially a documentarian. They aren't the priest or the one giving the bride/groom away.
The service provider could turn down a job for a million reasons. Too busy. Don't drive to that part of town. Need to spend that day with the family. The question here is if there is a _law_ protecting a class of citizens from being the "reason" for the refusal. And in these cases, there is such a law (state law). As mentioned before, these are in appeal. The law itself would need to be challenged and the question would go on to SCOTUS.
Originally
posted by
Supertodd:
So, now I have a couple questions. Let's say that you own a photography business. Let's also say that you are of the belief that circumcision is a morally repugnant act of mutilation, especially when performed on children. A Jewish family asks you to take photographs at a bris. If you refuse to participate, does that make you anti-Semitic? And whether or not it makes you anti-Semitic, should the government have the power to force you to violate your own principles and participate in the ceremony?
And if your answer to those questions is "no", then how does that example differ from that of a Christian refusing to participate in a gay wedding ceremony?
I don't think anyone is forcing a wedding photographer to photograph funerals, book-burnings, high school proms, etc. Now, if you specialized in child photography and refused to photograph a child because the child was Jewish, that would be a problem under these existing state laws. Likewise, and more narrowly, if you regularly photographed surgery on babies but refused to photograph a bris _because of the religious context_, that might also cause problem under these state laws.
At some point, SCOTUS may have to try to draw a clearer line. I don't think they want to though. There is a good chance they'll keep kicking this back down to the states. Maybe that is best, I'm not sure.
An example of that "blurriness":
- A caterer refuses to serve at a gay wedding
- A restaurant refuses to host the reception after the gay wedding
- A pizza delivery service refuses to deliver to a known gay married couple's house (for that reason)
- A grocery store refuses to allow the gay couple to enter the premise
- A community food bank refuses to allow gay homeless into the line for food
- A government health inspector worker refuses to visit a restaurant that hosts gay wedding receptions
I could go on and on. Does it matter whether each of the above is a sole proprietorship or a large corporation? Whether the government worker's choice is individual or department policy?
Chic-Fil-A can choose to be closed on Sunday. Because they are closed for EVERYONE on Sunday. But they can't declare they'll only serve Christians on Sundays.