Emily Lake
Might be a replicant
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2014
- Messages
- 8,441
- Location
- It's a desert out there
- Gender
- Agenderist
- Basic Beliefs
- Atheist
That would imply that a seller can never refuse to serve anybody ever, for any reason.The availability of a multitude of other options is completely irrelevant.This captures the heart of my position. If it were a standard case, it would be clear cut discrimination to me, and I would oppose the baker's position of denying the sale. But since it's a custom cake, and because there are a multitude of other cake options available, I end up falling on the side of the baker in this situation.To begin with, we must differentiate between denying a service based on a customer's identity or beliefs and refusing a service that compels a provider to support something they fundamentally oppose. If a baker, for instance, refuses to sell a standard cake to someone from the LGBTQ+ community, it's unequivocally discrimination. However, refusing to customize a cake that endorses a message or event they deeply disagree with presents a more layered issue. It's not about the customer's identity, but rather the message being promoted. The baker may even compromise and make a custom cake that lacks the controversial message, but refusing to do so reverts the issue back to discrimination.
Wouldn't that mean that you would now have the power to compel Jasper Johns to make a painting for you, and he has no right to say "Nah, I don't want to"? You could compel Margot Robbie to play the role of Ophelia in your way-way-off-broadway backyard performance of your modernized restyling of Hamlet!