Quote from: Jamie de la Rosa on February 27, 2014, 06:54:24 PM
The Federalist Papers are authoritatively quoted by the Supreme Court because they represent the observations and views of two of the persons (Madison and Hamilton) who were responsible for much of the Constitution's original content.
This thread has been very entertaining but it's gotten past the point where it ceases to make any sense. The Federalist Papers is an important work, but it's not law. The Constitution, however, IS law.
Let's break this thing down to the basics -
Person 1 (Joe) says "I don't want to sell wedding cakes to this guy because I suspect he's gay and that would be a violation of my religious beliefs, and my religious expression is constitutionally protected."
Person 2 (Bob) says "My partner and I are committing to each other in a church ceremony. We're decent, religious people and our church sanctions this even though same sex marriage is not legal or recognized by the state, and my religious expression is constitutionally protected."
Bob wants to be treated just like any other customer, Jim wants to deny Bob equal treatment. Two people with claims to religious freedom, but they're in conflict. So who's right? Who takes precedence?
Neither, if the argument is solely religious. The 1st Amendment prohibits making a law that respects one over the other, so these interests would cancel each other out based merely on religious merit. This then falls to other laws to break the tie. As I've pointed out, the 9th Amendment answers this issue quite nicely by protecting Bob's civil rights.
Do Jim's rights become infringed? No, despite the fact that conservative media crybabies are saying that it does. Making Jim sell the cake to Bob just means that Jim is doing his job and treating everyone the same, and that's all the law requires. He suffers no loss of equal status (but Bob would if Jim made him have to find a gay bakery), he receives no unfair or inequal treatment (but Bob would if Jim prevails), and he continues to have full access to all the rights and benefits of society (but Bob would not if Jim continues to unlawfully restrict him).
Making Jim do his job does not deprive him of any rights. Discrimination is not a religious right, it's not a religious value, there is no doctrinal commandment in any of the holy texts I have ever read that tell followers to mistreat their fellow man because they sin in a different way.