Did it look like I'm asking? Did you see a question mark? I'm assuming you probably still disagree, so I'm challenging you to cough up some empirical evidence for your claim.
What claim?
According to you, "Its primary purpose is to ensure that US citizens adhere to its provisions." According to it, there are about nine hundred things public officials must do and one thing US citizens must do. So show your work. Show some evidence that ensuring that US citizens adhere to its provisions is its primary purpose.
Ok seems I have to make myself clearing for the people in the back. I'd prefer not to take a side quest especially one that is not clearly related to the topic. I didn't intend to delve into but I can at least keep it brief. I only ask that you do the curtesy of tying it into the argument I've been making on this topic.
The Constitution was ratified as the supreme law of the land, and once established, its authority became
binding on all states
and their citizens.
I'd like to remain focused on the primary discussion regarding the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act (CADA) and its review by the SCOTUS in the context of the web designer's case. Could you clarify how this question ties into our main topic before I delve into any tangential discussions?
Sure thing. Toni wrote:
"That said, I do not believe that it furthers justice to compel speech, religion, creativity."
You replied:
"If that's your stance, then you're essentially opposing the entire US Constitution. Its primary purpose is to ensure that US citizens adhere to its provisions."
You're wrong. She's upholding the entire US Constitution; you're the one opposing it. The US Constitution's primary purpose is to ensure that
public officials adhere to its provisions. Since one of the provisions is equal protection of the law, that means public officials are required to protect
everyone's constitutional rights. One of those rights is the right not to have one's "speech, religion, creativity" compelled by the government. "Everyone" includes business owners. If a public official compels a business owner's "speech, religion, creativity", or anyone else's, then he is failing in his duty under the Constitution. The Constitution doesn't say "equal protection of the law provided you're in a protected class".
Conversely, since the Constitution doesn't say word one about requiring business owners or any other private citizens to provide the public with equal protection of their personal services, a business owner who discriminates is in no way opposing the US Constitution. She's only opposing a bunch of public officials. The Constitution doesn't prohibit us from opposing public officials. The chief purpose of the First Amendment is to guarantee our right to oppose public officials.