Hate just had a really rough week.
I'm truely concerned this will be next. Christians and churches will be sued or charged with discrimination beause of their beliefs.
I can't seem to find the sacasterics in these stories either.
http://blogs.findlaw.com/free_enter...it-ore-bakery-loses-again.html?DCMP=cfeatures
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...aker-sued-refusal-make-gay-marriage-cake.html
No, that's in fact not next. Churches already refuse to marry hetero couples all the time, for any number of reasons.
Anything else we can clear up for you?
I'd be willing to bet, at the very least, this will be looked at. The blood is in the water, and the "oppressed" can smell it. These types of "issues" are no longer about equality. It's about the "oppressed" forcing changes that cater to their WANTS, not needs, and just because they can.
No church has ever been forced by the U.S. or state government to marry interracial (or both black, like the case in Hazelhurst a few years ago) couples if they don't want to, nor divorced-and-remarrying couples, nor interfaith couples, nor couples who cohabitated beforehand, or who didn't meet whatever other rules that denomination put on marriage.
But now you think all that precedent will just get thrown out over the gays? That's just silly fearmongering. If your denomination (not religion -- many Christian churches perform gay marriages and the anti-marriage equality denominations don't have a monopoly on what's "Christian" and what isn't) wants to continue making rules about who can and can't get married, that's your choice. The government would never be able to prevent that, short of a Constitutional amendment (which likely wouldn't pass any state legislatures, much less 38 legislatures)
Wait and see....wait and see. I'm not saying it WILL be changed, but that doesn't mean it won't be attacked. And you're severely underestimating the power of the "oppressed", as well as the government's eagerness to coddle them. They just want their inches, man. Just a few miserable inches, not miles.
Whether you like gay marriage or not, the thought of two dudes kissing and making out just makes me want to puke!! And if you like to see that then your gay too.
I'm truely concerned this will be next. Christians and churches will be sued or charged with discrimination beause of their beliefs.
Why would the government force churches to marry homosexual couples when they can funnel all of it to the Justice of the Peace and make new revenues off court fees?
They won't even have to force churches, because most of them will just adopt it on their own in the next couple decades.
50 years ago, it would have been nearly impossible to find a Southern Baptist church in Mississippi to marry an interracial couple. Nowadays, there are still some holdouts, but most of them will do it. Similarly, as the years go by and the leadership of these anti-marriage equality churches die or retire, they'll be replaced by younger people who support marriage equality in their churches.
Within 20 years you'll see most denominations allowing gay marriages, or at least "gay blessing ceremonies" that aren't technically called marriage (letting some older people save face) but serve the same purpose. That's just the way public opinion is going -- the government won't have to force anything.
Whether you like gay marriage or not, the thought of two dudes kissing and making out just makes me want to puke!! And if you like to see that then your gay too.
Gays know how to throw a hell of a party after all, amirite?
Yeah, there is. Certainly this ruling has left open the question of whether other types of marriages might be equally considered a "right" protected by the Constitution, but there are still legal grounds to prevent it. Today's opinion went though a long iteration of the social importance of TWO people committing their lives to each other. Although polygamy has popped up throughout history, and legally exists in some countries today, it does not have the same historical significance in our society as two people getting married. Its not a slam dunk argument either way, I'm just saying there is still plenty of room to deny polygamous marriages.
I do. And 57 is right.
The baker in question singled out gays, but was willing to make cakes for divorced remarriers, cohabitants, etc., so the argument that he was just following his denominational beliefs, rather than some kind of bias against gays in particular, doesn't exactly hold water, does it?A Christian Baker was sued, (and lost), in Oregon because they refused a gay couple. They were sent to sensitivity training as part of the settlement. It is not hard to see how a pastor who refuses a gay couple will be held to the same standard along with the Church in question. It's coming.
I think the fear (or supposed fear -- hard to tell whether it's real or just thrown out for effect) of the government forcing churches to alter their dogma is silly, childish, ridiculous, etc. However, I am very certain that no gay marriage ceremony will be performed within the Roman Catholic faith. However, renegade strains of Catholicism may arise and have same-sex marriages, but they would only be calling themselves catholic as they would not be under the umbrella of the pope's church.