These men didn’t want a cake, they wanted to find a Christian and ruin him
This week, Christian baker Jack Phillips won the narrowest of
victories at the Supreme Court
writes
Benny Huang (thanks for the link,
Maggie),
when seven justices sided with him in a
case involving a Colorado private sector nondiscrimination law.
As many commentators have noted, the court seems to have dodged the
Big Question at the heart of the matter—whether private sector
nondiscrimination laws can be used to compel artisans to create messages
that they object to. In one of the greatest copouts of all time the
court ruled in Phillips’s favor only because members of the Colorado
“Civil Rights” Commission (chortle) displayed clear bias against his
religion.
“The neutral and respectful consideration to which Phillips was entitled was compromised here,” wrote
Justice Anthony Kennedy. “The Civil Rights Commission’s treatment of
his case has some elements of a clear and impermissible hostility toward
the sincere religious beliefs that motivated his objection.”
And that’s an understatement. One commissioner, Diann Rice, sounded much like that blithering idiot
who comments on every news item that involves our first freedom:
“Freedom of religion and religion has [sic] been used to justify all
kinds of discrimination throughout history, whether it be slavery,
whether it be the Holocaust. I mean, we can list hundreds of situations
where freedom of religion has been used to justify discrimination. And
to me it is one of the most despicable pieces of rhetoric that people
can use – to use their religion to hurt others.”
Yeah, because everyone knows that the Nazis were huge advocates for religious freedom.
Actually, no they were not. … The Nazis were opponents of both religious freedom and religion generally.
If the Holocaust teaches us a lesson it’s about state power and the
suppression of dissent not that religious freedom is dangerous.
And make no mistake about it, Diann Rice is terrified of religious
freedom. When arguments like hers are advanced, we’re no longer having a
conversation about what religious freedom means but rather whether it
should exist. …
In a way, this supposedly groundbreaking decision was anticlimactic.
Government bureaucrats will continue to use these abominable laws as
weapons against people of faith, they’ll just be more circumspect in
their remarks. No more comparing peaceful noninterference in someone
else’s wedding to the slaughter of eleven million innocents. No more
berating the victims of these laws as religious bigots. They’ll even
pretend, as Diann Rice didn’t, to respect religion and the free exercise
thereof.
But nothing will really change.
Why? Because these laws do not impinge on free exercise and free
speech rights by happenstance. This is not like a Muslim woman claiming
that she’s been discriminated against because she can’t board a plane
while wearing a veil over her face. This is targeted retribution against
people who harbor views that are disfavored by the state.
Which is what the First Amendment was designed to protect us from. If it fails us now it’s worthless.
When the government uses laws to target certain groups of people, it
is treading on constitutional thin ice. Liberals seem to understand this
which explains why they constantly argue that perfectly reasonable laws
that seem neutral on their face are in fact discriminatory. These laws
disproportionately impact one group or another—but usually blacks. The
reason for this, of course, is that blacks offend nearly all laws at
higher rates than the general population.
Nonetheless, liberals see discrimination hiding behind every law.
Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance, for example, recently announced that his
office will no longer prosecute possession of small quantities of
marijuana because that’s raaaacist! In 2016, Gotham also “decriminalized” littering and public urination because those laws are racist too.
Any law that liberals don’t like is immediately attacked as discriminatory. Felon disenfranchisement laws, literacy tests, mandatory minimum sentences, even laws against loitering. An Obama-appointed federal judge recently found Texas’s voter ID law to be racist in intent and effect. How the court discerned the intent is very much unclear because there was no smoking gun. If it feels racist it must have been intended as racist.
The voter ID case raises some interesting questions. Is a law’s
effect on one group sufficient to strike it down? Or is intent required
too? If the effect is so manifest that it can’t be denied, can intent be
inferred as the judge in the voter ID law case appeared to do?
I ask these questions because the law that Jack Phillips just beat in
court is actually biased in effect and intent. The impact here does not
just fall “disproportionately” on people of faith; it falls exclusively
on us! While liberals may pretend not to detect the bias inherent in
this law, I suspect that they really just love the discriminatory effect
too much to part with it.
There’s some evidence that Jack Phillips’s business was targeted
precisely because he was known around town as a deeply religious man.
Much like Hobby Lobby, faith was integral to his business’s brand.
Phillips had previously declined orders for Halloween-themed baked goods, divorce parties, and bachelor parties.
Then one day in 2012, Dave Mullins and Charlie Craig entered the shop
and tried to order a wedding cake, which was a strange request
considering the fact that they were actually having their ceremony 2000 miles away
in Provincetown, Massachusetts. They later claimed that they wanted a
pre-wedding party locally though I suspect that all they really wanted
was to provoke a fight.
Jack Phillips, who mistakenly believed that he lived in a free
country that respected its citizens’ rights to free speech and free
exercise of religion, thought that he could decline this order just as
he had other orders in the past. By Mullins’s own admission
he exploded in anger, shouting “Fuck you and your homophobic cake
shop!” …
And we’re supposed to believe that this was about equal access to goods and services.
There were plenty of other bakeries that would have gladly accepted
their money. Phillips’s rights should not hinge on this fact but it
happens to be true. These men didn’t want a cake, they wanted to find a
Christian and ruin him.
But that’s not all they wanted. Laws have the ability to change
hearts and minds—and not always gently. I don’t like this aspect of
laws, of course, because I am extremely wary of governments sanctioning
official beliefs and punishing all others.
New York Times columnist Frank Bruni, for example, wrote a column
in 2015 in which he expressed his view that church leaders need to face
pressure to “take homosexuality off the sin list.” (Note to Bruni: only
God can do that.) What’s worse is the context of Bruni’s column: he was
writing about the controversy surrounding Indiana’s religious freedom
law which he opposed. Clearly, he doesn’t like laws that might protect
Christians from the legal pressure he wants to put on them to change
their beliefs and eventually to change their churches’ doctrines.
I should really thank Bruni for his candor because he said what
defenders’ of Colorado’s law wouldn’t dare say in court. The reason we
have these laws is because society is in the midst of a revolutionary
change and there can be no hold-outs. Government must lend a hand in
corralling the last straggling institutions: churches.
Government has no business trying to change religious doctrine, not
even by proxy. But that’s what it’s doing. It sees Big Religion as the
last citadel of “homophobia,” a supposedly odious ideology that must be
stamped out. They intend to achieve this by forcing Christians to make
small compromises with their faith until they fully accept the
homosexual agenda. Severe governmental penalties, including the loss of
livelihood, have a tendency to make people rethink their core beliefs.
This change in the individual Christians’ minds will put pressure on the
churches to “take homosexuality off the sin list.”
And that’s why these laws offend the first amendment—not to mention
the thirteenth and fourteenth amendments. Though the Supreme Court was
too cowardly to decree it, there’s nothing neutral about “sexual
orientation” nondiscrimination ordinances.
I’m happy that Jack Phillips was able to hold out against his
tormentors but the rest of may not be so lucky because the state is on
the tormentors’ side. Be forewarned: this fight isn’t over.
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