While I agree with what you're saying I don't see the relevance. How are you showing there is faith involved in this situation, other than in the mayor's refusal?
In the mayor's refusal?!? What faith is involved in that?!?
From the CTV news report I linked upthread:
...
Shortly after the vote, Mayor Harold McQuaker, who voted against the proclamation, said, “There’s no flag being flown for the other side of the coin…there’s no flags being flown for the straight people.”
The tribunal called McQuaker's comment "demeaning and disparaging" of the LGTBTQ2S+ community and constituted it as discrimination.
...
Do you think "there’s no flags being flown for the straight people” was a faith-based claim, not a plain fact?!?
As for showing there's faith involved in the situation, do you think saying "there’s no flags being flown for the straight people” does in point of fact discriminate against gay people? Do you think saying "there’s no flags being flown for the straight people” does in point of fact demean and disparage "the LGTBTQ2S+ community"? Do you think L and G and T and the rest even are in point of fact one single community that's distinct from the community at large?
The tribunal believed those things with no factual basis for believing them. They believed it's discrimination because that's an article of progressive faith -- it's exactly the same faith-based conviction that leads progressives to believe applying identical admission criteria to black and Asian students discriminates against black students, and leads progressives to call people who oppose all racial discrimination "racists". It was in my list: "Content-neutral laws treating them the same as us are unfair to us." McQuaker treated singling out gays for special celebration the same as singling out straights for special celebration, and the tribunal believed gays being treated the same as straights was unfair to gays. They believed it on faith.