Quote from: ZoeM on February 27, 2014, 01:00:28 PM
Religious freedoms are a civil right, Michelle. No more than any other right, but also no less.
9th Amendment to the US Constitution -
"The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people."
Sorry, but religious freedom inherently takes a back seat to other civil rights when it's used to deny others their rights.
Quote from: ZoeM on February 27, 2014, 01:00:28 PMFake examples of "my religion wants me to kill people" have no place here. That's a slippery slope argument - and nobody here is very fond of those, for obvious reasons.
In the first place, they're not fake:
http://www.examiner.com/article/honor-killing-muslim-man-from-mn-convicted-of-murder-of-mi-step-daughterThat argument is no more valid than "My religion wants me to discriminate against other people."
And the notion that a law that makes people behave in a just and civil manner is a slippery slope is in itself a slippery slope argument.
A "slippery slope argument" states that a relatively small first step (in this case, requiring businesses to treat all people the same) leads to a chain of related events culminating in some significant effect (ie: loss of religious freedom in the form of compelling people to do abhorrent things).
The validity of the argument depends on the warrant, meaning whether one can demonstrate the cause leading to the significant effect. So far that has not happened, especially in light of the absence of a clear Christian doctrinal statement (something like "Thou shalt not do business with same-sex couples, or with people who just make you uncomfortable).
Quote from: ZoeM on February 27, 2014, 01:00:28 PMWe're talking about, Christian family wedding businesses being forced by law to take part in ceremonies they consider celebrations of sin.
No, we're really not. We're saying that if you sell flowers then you sell flowers. Your responsibility for that ends as soon as you accept payment and fulfill your contractual agreement.
That's no more valid than if someone were buying flowers for the wedding of a couple who had lived together before marriage (sin), or where the bride was pregnant before she was engaged (sin) or that someone getting married was believed to be unrepentant for any other sin the florist considered to be particularly odious. Or maybe somebody's buying flowers for the funeral of somebody whom the business believed embodied or exemplified some other form of sin. Florists just do not have the right to police the morality of their customers.
When talking about anti-gay discrimination there's just no way to shine this up and make it sound holy. And there's just no way that requiring somebody to behave in a just manner can be made to sound evil.