From
The New York Times:
You
need the First Amendment precisely when your ideas offend others or
flout the majority’s orthodoxies. And then it protects more than your
freedom to speak your mind; it guards your freedom not to speak the mind
of another. Thus,
in classic “compelled speech” rulings, the Supreme Court has protected
the right not to be forced to say, do or create anything expressing a
message one rejects. Most famously, in West Virginia v. Barnette (1943),
it barred a state from denying Jehovah’s Witnesses the right to attend
public schools if they refused to salute the flag. In Wooley v. Maynard
(1977), the court prevented New Hampshire from denying people the right
to drive if they refused to display on license plates the state’s
libertarian-flavored motto “live free or die.”
On
Tuesday, the court will consider whether Colorado may deny Jack
Phillips, the owner of Masterpiece Cakeshop, the right to sell custom
wedding cakes because he cannot in conscience create them for same-sex
weddings. Mr. Phillips, who has run his bakery since 1993, sells
off-the-shelf items to anyone, no questions asked. But he cannot deploy
his artistic skills to create cakes celebrating themes that violate his
religious and moral convictions. Thus he does not design cakes for
divorce parties, lewd bachelor parties, Halloween parties or same-sex
weddings.
Colorado’s
order that he create same-sex wedding cakes (or quit making any cakes
at all) would force him to create expressive products carrying a message
he rejects. That’s unconstitutional. Some
fear a slippery slope, arguing that anything can be expressive. What if
someone refused to rent out folding chairs for the reception? Or what
about restaurant owners who exclude blacks because they think God wills
segregation? If we exempt Mr. Phillips, won’t we have to exempt these
people from anti-discrimination law? (Read more.)
From
Matt Walsh:
The First Amendment is on trial, not Jack Phillips. If Phillips
loses, free speech is effectively finished in this country. If a
Christian business owner can be forced by the state to create something
that goes against his deeply held religious beliefs — beliefs shared by a
majority of the world, by the way — then what function does the First
Amendment really serve?
Phillips doesn’t need the First Amendment
when he makes a birthday cake. He doesn’t need it when he cooks a batch
of brownies. He doesn’t need it when he’s doing innocuous things that
no one — not even the gay lobby — could possibly find offensive or
upsetting. He needs it precisely when he’s faced with the dilemma that
Mullins and Craig presented. He needs it when he makes a decision,
grounded in his religious convictions, which will be upsetting to a
powerful group like the LGBT lobby. If he doesn’t have it then, he
doesn’t have it at all.
If the Supreme Court decides in favor of
the gay lobby, what next? If gays have a mystical right to force their
fellow citizens to participate in their gay weddings, where does that
right end? I’ll tell you: it doesn’t. If Phillips goes down, the
churches will be next. And why not? If we’ve just established that gays
are a special and superior class of human beings, and their desire for a
cake decorated a particular way now must supersede everyone else’s
First Amendment rights, why should the churches be exempt? Indeed, if
Phillips doesn’t have the right to withhold his cake, why should the
local priest have the right to withhold his church? He doesn’t, in that
case. He won’t. Mark my words. (Read more.)
More from Matt Walsh:
A person does, usually, basically, according to our modern laws, have
the right to be served by an establishment that’s open to the public.
Now here’s the good news: the gay couple were served. They were allowed
to enter the store and they were allowed to purchase any item they
desired. They could have walked right in and shouted, “We’re gay and
we’re buying cookies!” And nobody would have stopped them from buying
the cookies. Or cake. Or whatever they wanted. Phillips did not refuse
to serve them. Rather, he refused to serve an event.
Ah. So
that’s the right? They have a right to compel someone to provide a
service, or create a product, for any event they’re planning? But wait.
Nobody even pretends that this is a universal right. Again, it is
understood that a Jew cannot be conscripted to serve a Nazi rally, a
black person cannot be forced to serve a Klan meeting, a Muslim cannot
be compelled to serve a conference of pork enthusiasts, a gay man cannot
be told that he must create special cupcakes to be enjoyed at the next
Westboro Baptist demonstration. (Read more.)
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1 comment:
This is an example of the power of the State over individual freedoms and religious freedoms such as forcing a Catholic hospital to perform abortions. By the way, it was not the baker who filed the suit...it was the homosexual couple. Even the liberal media believes that filing such a suit was over the top.
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