http://themattwalshblog.com/2014/02...ve-the-right-to-refuse-service-to-gay-people/
It's long, but for those actually interested in getting past all the overblown assumptions and mischaracterizations, it might provide some insight to an opposing perspective. You will likely disagree, but hopefully you will at least understand. Here is a short selection near the end:
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In none of these cases did the business owner forgo service to a gay person out of some kind of disgust or animosity towards gays. They simply wished to take no part in a gay
wedding. To call this discrimination against gays is to make no distinction between the
person of a homosexual and the
activity of a homosexual.
It’s absolutely nonsensical. It also, again, makes any comparison to “Jim Crow laws” seem insane. Blacks were denied basic services
because they were black — not because of their activity.
The gay people in these cases are asking Christians to specifically
participate in a morally objectionable act. You can tell me that gay weddings are not morally objectionable, but that isn’t up to you. That’s your belief. This is their belief. In America, we are supposed to be free to live according to our convictions. We can only be stopped from living our convictions if our convictions call us to do harm to another. Were any of these gay couples “harmed” by having to go back to Google and find any of a thousand other options?
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No other group is afforded such privileges. I can’t force a Jewish deli to provide me with non kosher meat. I can’t force a gay sign company to print me “Homosexual sex is a sin” banners (I’d probably be sued just for making the request). I can’t force a Muslim caterer to serve pork. I can’t force a pro-choice business to buy ad space on my website. I can’t force a Baptist sculptor to carve me a statue of the Virgin Mary.
I can’t force a private citizen to involve himself in a thing which he finds abhorrent, objectionable, or sinful.
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It is, of course, ridiculous to insist that any man or woman has a “right” to have a cake baked or t-shirt printed. It’s equally ridiculous to put the desire and convenience of the would-be cake consumer and t-shirt wearer above the First Amendment rights of the cake maker and t-shirt printer.
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I haven't read the law as put forth, but I'm guessing none of you have either, so I suppose there's no point in debating what it actually says or how it will likely play out in the real world. However the above falls largely in line with the distinction I make between discriminating against a person, and discriminating against an activity. A cake shop that refuses to sell any kind of cake to a gay person is discriminating against the person. A cake shop that sells birthday cakes, celebration cakes, etc to a gay person, but then refuses to make a wedding cake for a gay wedding is discriminating based on an activity, not a person.