Post by Old Badger on Aug 15, 2018 17:52:57 GMT -5
"Add another layer to the legal drama surrounding the Colorado baker who refused to make a wedding cake for a same-sex couple — and took his case all the way to the Supreme Court. Jack Phillips, owner of Masterpiece Cakeshop in Lakewood, Colo., on Tuesday filed another federal lawsuit against the state alleging religious discrimination.
"This time, the cake at the center of the controversy was not for a wedding. In June 2017, Colorado lawyer Autumn Scardina called Masterpiece Cakeshop to request a custom cake that was blue on the outside and pink on the inside. The occasion, Scardina told the bakery’s employees, was to celebrate her birthday, as well as the seventh anniversary of the day she had come out as transgender. Masterpiece Cakeshop ultimately refused Scardina’s order on religious grounds. 'Phillips declined to create the cake with the blue-and-pink design because it would have celebrated messages contrary to his religious belief that sex — the status of being male or female — is given by God, is biologically determined, is not determined by perceptions or feelings, and cannot be chosen or changed,' the complaint stated." link
It is inevitable that at some point we're going to have a lawsuit when some baker decides that he/she can't make a wedding cake for a mixed-race wedding because it violates the religious conviction that God made the races separate and does not want them intermarrying. At which point the Supreme Court will have to decide whether to go back to Plessy v. Ferguson or stick with Brown v. Board of Education. You can't have it both ways; either the law allows discrimination in public accommodations (good by Civil Rights Act) or it does not.
"This time, the cake at the center of the controversy was not for a wedding. In June 2017, Colorado lawyer Autumn Scardina called Masterpiece Cakeshop to request a custom cake that was blue on the outside and pink on the inside. The occasion, Scardina told the bakery’s employees, was to celebrate her birthday, as well as the seventh anniversary of the day she had come out as transgender. Masterpiece Cakeshop ultimately refused Scardina’s order on religious grounds. 'Phillips declined to create the cake with the blue-and-pink design because it would have celebrated messages contrary to his religious belief that sex — the status of being male or female — is given by God, is biologically determined, is not determined by perceptions or feelings, and cannot be chosen or changed,' the complaint stated." link
It is inevitable that at some point we're going to have a lawsuit when some baker decides that he/she can't make a wedding cake for a mixed-race wedding because it violates the religious conviction that God made the races separate and does not want them intermarrying. At which point the Supreme Court will have to decide whether to go back to Plessy v. Ferguson or stick with Brown v. Board of Education. You can't have it both ways; either the law allows discrimination in public accommodations (good by Civil Rights Act) or it does not.