dianaiad wrote:
Alchemy wrote:
If you can't show that EVEN ONE church has been forced to provide services against their will or that ANYONE AT ALL is asking for it to happen, then your argument fails and your elaborate marriage scheme remains unecessary. If you could show that a priest was forced to marry two chaps or even run a funeral service for one of them, then you might have a point. Until then, you are constructing a strawman to knowck down.
The problem here is that every example I give you, you turn into a circular argument.
For instance, isn't forcing a church to allow it's property to be used for events and services (like gay weddings and receptions) forcing it to 'offer services?" How about if the problem is not just the physical space, but the catering, janitorial, cleanup and everything else that goes WITH it?
Isn't that 'offering services?" Most reasonable people would say so, but you would not; you would say that if the law says you must, then of course you aren't being 'forced to.'
Please point out the specific arguments of mine that are circular. i.e. This book is true. How do you know? Because it says it is.
These people are conducting a business and are therefore subject to anti discrimination laws. If they were not conducting a business, if they did not offer their pavilion for hire, then I would agree with you. It could be a clear cut case of a government wrongly forcing a church to go against it’s values. It would be equivalent to you or I being forced to conduct a ceremony on our front lawns against our will. Plain wrong. I’ll address your controversial idea of Wild West, anything goes style discrimination further down.
dianaiad wrote:
Then there is the problem of what a church actually is: that is, rather like corporations, churches are collections of people with common interests. If one can force individual members of a church to go against their core beliefs and doctrines, one IS 'forcing the church' to do so.
The first amendment, which text I've already provided, first tells the government that it cannot establish an official church. Then it talks about not being allowed to abrogate the free practice thereof. Here's the problem; a CHURCH does not 'practice.' The MEMBERS of the church do. Individuals who believe. So, if you force a member of a religion to do something against their beliefs, or provide services that are fundamentally against their beliefs, you are 'forcing the church' to do so.
It actually says “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. Depending on the context, religion and church can sometimes be used interchangeably but not always. Those are just semantics though. What is a little more than semantics is your incredible stretch that forcing an individual member of a church is in turn forcing the entire church/religion. Using that logic, forcing a divorce on one Catholic person is forcing divorce on the entire Catholic Church.
dianaiad wrote:
Now we have that photographer who was sued, penalized, and pretty much had her business destroyed because she refused to photograph a 'commitment ceremony.' Mind you, she advertised that she did WEDDINGS, not commitment ceremonies, but hey, that didn't matter. She is now forced to photograph commitment ceremonies if someone wants her to do so, whether she wants to or not. In fact, while she can refuse to 'shoot' a wedding for any reason she likes, or a birthday party, if she wants to refuse a request to shoot a gay commitment ceremony she has to first prove to the court that she's NOT refusing simply because her religion forbids it, because if THAT'S the reason...sorry, she'd better pick up the camera.
This is happening far more often that it should.
And yes, sir, I don't care how bigoted or discriminatory someone ELSE thinks it is...or even how bigoted or discriminatory I think it is...anybody has a right to refuse to do something; to allow his land to be used or to provide services for anything that is against his/her religious beliefs.
It’s really quite simple. The laws of the State always trump the laws of Religion. This logically has to be the case except in a Theocracy. To deal with conflicting religious freedoms without this concept, would require either an arbiter to judge which religious law wins in a conflict or you say, as you do, that religious freedoms do not apply if they would conflict with someone else’s religious freedom. Either way, you have a State law right there that trumps Religious law. There is no way around this unless you have a single religion Theocracy or Theocratic Anarchy where anything goes as long as you can justify it with scripture.
The State law in most western democracies says, “Businesses shalt not discriminate based on sex, age, gender, sexual orientation, religion…�. These laws are in place to protect the weak and vulnerable against a system of free for all, survival of the fittest as you propose.
dianaiad wrote:
The Kosher butcher has the right to refuse to stock or sell pork products, even if another Jewish deli owner will.
The Buddhist restaurant has the right to refuse to serve meat of any sort, even if another Buddhist restaurant does.
The Amish baker has the right to refuse to drive a cab, even if his brother does.
The Mormon grocer has the right to refuse to carry booze, if s/he chooses, even if OTHER Mormon grocers decide to sell it.
I’ve cut and pasted your strawmen here out of order for ease of reading. None of these examples show anyone being discriminated against and no one is arguing that a Buddhist restaurant has to serve meat. They just can’t refuse to serve someone because they don’t believe the same thing.
dianaiad wrote:
The Christian photographer belonging to a sect that does not recognize gay marriage has the right to refuse to photograph gay weddings, whether the competition does or not.
No they do not have that right. Plain and simple. At least in civilised western democracies that have anti discrimination laws to protect weak and vulnerable people. The courts have proven this. You might want them to have that right but the fact is, they currently do not have it.
dianaiad wrote:
The first amendment states that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;"
Please note; 'prohibiting the free excercise thereof" is aimed at the actions of individuals who want to live their faith, NOT some amorphous entity, 'the church."
The US Constitution certainly does say that however, as shown above and by yourself below, State Law (i.e. anti discrimination law) must take precedence over “free exercise thereof� to avoid Theocratic Anarchy.
dianaiad wrote:
Atheists should not only be grateful for this provision, but should do their level best to defend it with everything they have. After all, they are the ones whose 'religious' opinions are personal and not dependent upon any set of official doctrines, and this provision protects them even more than it does the theists.
One last thing: it has been mentioned that nobody accepts the right of someone going out and committing murder for religious reasons. This is used as a justification to regulate all 'lesser' matters. Here's the thing: one's freedom to practice one's faith is ALSO interpreted as an inability to force someone else to abrogate HIS. Could you tell me how killing someone...an unwilling someone...for one's own religious reasons is NOT abrogating the victim's right to practice his/her religion?
If I go out and shoot you to satisfy my faith, how am I not 'prohibiting' YOUR free exercise of YOUR religious (or lack of) beliefs? Therefore this argument is invalid. If I refuse services to you...such as the right to use my property or my talents...how am I harming you? If my rights to practice my faith end at your nose, your rights to anything end at mine. I do not have the right to tell you that you cannot have a wedding reception. I DO have the right to tell you that you can't do it on my property, using my services. Period.
Yes you do have the right to tell me I can’t hold a service on your property. That right is lost when you regularly hire your property to the public. At that point, you no longer have the right to discriminate.
The only example you’ve been able to provide of the government forcing a religious organisation to do anything is a church running a business that made a clear violation of anti discrimination law. ANY business whether it is run by a church or anyone else is subject to anti discrimination law. You have not been able to produce a single case of a church being forced to marry someone they didn’t want to, nor have you provided a single case where someone is arguing that churches should marry people they don’t want to. If you can provide a single case of a church being forced to marry someone they didn’t want to, I’ll consider your argument won. Until then you are arguing that the government is trying to do something which it is not in fact trying to do. Your argument is a strawman.
What Jesus fails to appreciate is that it's the meek who are the problem.