Religious Exemption

Curtis Cavanaugh commented on this.
Curtis Cavanaugh
20 hrs ·

She had no problem serving members of the LGBT community, but she just could not provide services for a gay wedding. Of course, she must lose everything because of her religious beliefs.
Christian florist: Why I can’t agree to provide service to gay weddings
“It’s me now, but tomorrow it’s going to be you. You’ve got to wake up.”
hotair.com
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Cathie Vargo McAdams likes this.

Art Joly No Curtis. When I walk into a bakery and order a cake that says Congratulation on your wedding day Lynn and Art I expect my order to be taken and delivered. When the baker says no I don’t like what you’re doing so take your business somewhere else its discrimination. Period.
17 hrs · Like
Curtis Cavanaugh Sure, it’s discrimination, but the basis of the discrimination must be taken into account.
16 hrs · Like
Art Joly No. Discrimination is discrimination. And I say it ends now. You have a right to your religious beliefs. You do not have a right to impose your beliefs on me. If you run a bakery and you sell decorated cakes you don’t get to pick and choose your customers.
15 hrs · Like
Curtis Cavanaugh I would agree if the product was simply a decorated cake sitting on the shelf. However, you don’t have the right to require someone to design and create something for you that would violate their religious beliefs.
8 hrs · Like · 1
Art Joly
Okay, I just want to make sure that I understand what you are saying here. If a bakery owner, a bakery that does business with the public in general, if the owner has sincerely held religious beliefs it’s okay for that owner to pick and choose his or her customers?
So in your mind Black people, Jewish people, Irish (Catholic) people are okay. But because of sincerely held religious beliefs gay people, faggots and queers, lezzies and dykes can be excluded from your bakery?

About Art

55 years old. By training, ability and experience I am a master toolmaker. My most recent projects include designing and building a process to grind a G rotor pump shaft with four diameters and holding all four diameters within plus or minus 4 microns of nominal. This was an automated process using two centerless grinders refitted to my specifications using automatic load and unload machines plus automatic feedback gauging. I also designed and built an inspection machine to check for the presence and size of a straight knurl on a hinge pin using a vision system for non-contact gauging.
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