Nor can I so be legally compelled to create something specifically for any person.
You seem to be glossing over the principle of public accommodations. This concerns a company's duty to ensure equal service, not necessarily the individual's. If someone's uncomfortable extending their creative expertise to all, they might want to think twice about setting up shop in locales with clear inclusivity mandates. Nobody's holding them here or pushing them to open a business. They have the liberty to operate privately, or even jet off to a nation that aligns more with their beliefs. They're not being stopped from practicing their faith or running faith-based ventures within religious organizations or on their own. However, launching a business in a state with specific laws and later challenging those very laws raises eyebrows. Instead of seeking non-existent First Amendment loopholes, why not engage our representatives to amend laws like everyone else?
Nope. I’m not. Please note that I differentiate between between already created/made/manufactured and created specifically for an individual.
For the umpteenth time: I see it as a conflict between what is guaranteed through anti-discrimination laws and first amendment rights. It’s not pretty—in fact, it’s quite ugly in cases where someone discriminates on the basis of sex, gender, race, etc.
But if we do not have First Amendment rights, we have no rights at all.
There is nothing to differentiate from. The general public is mandated to have access to both "already created/made/manufactured and created specifically for an individual" equally. If you disagree with the mandate take it up with your local representative or utilize other options available to you, but don't pretend like you're being compelled to not take the liberty to operate privately, jet off to a nation that aligns more with your beliefs, & stopped from privately or publicly practicing your faith considering you have the option to run faith-based ventures within religious organizations or on your own.
WHERE does it specify already created/made/manufactured AND created specifically for an individual equally? Aside from your posts, I mean. It's the 'created specifically for an individual' part that is the issue, apparently with the current SCOTUS who seem to disagree with your interpretation.
Generally, businesses that provide services to the public can't refuse
service based on protected characteristics. Anything classified as a service falls under this mandate.
Gosh!
Can you cite federal legislation that agrees with what you posted?
I believed we were discussing the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act (CADA) and the SCOTUS' examination of its constitutionality. What gave you the impression I was referencing federal law in a conversation centered on state legislation?
I'd recommend being straightforward in our discussion instead of using indirect tactics. Are you trying to say that if it's not a federal law, it doesn't count as a law?
The SCOTUS has over ruled the Colorado Supreme Court in this matter.
And that's what we are discussing. Your point?
SCOTUS has the legal authority and power to supersede any state law.
What's your point? Are you trying to say I need to shut my uppity negro mouth and not question the authoritah of the SCOTUS? Why state the obvious?
Nope. I'm saying that the US Supreme Court has over ruled the Colorado Supreme Court. As it can and has done with many other states, often in ways that you and I would both agree with.
If you want me to say that I am deeply troubled by the current SCOTUS, yes, I am. I thought that was obvious.
Ok yeah. sorry I just don't know what that has to do with my argument.
And I'm not sure why you're still making an argument that the SCOTUS has over-ruled.
I'm sorry. I think we're just posting at cross purposes here.
WTF? This is a discussion board. So you
are saying that I need to just shut my mouth and not have an opinion on SCOTUS decisions?
Not at all. I'm saying that I think we're talking past each other or misunderstanding one another or talking about different things.
Are you telling me that I should just leave all the real thinking to the men folk?
Er, your view point seems naive, blinkered, short-sighted to me.
Er, you don't seem able to express why you have Faith in that belief.
I don't really expect one either.
Tom
well, there was the complacency about Roe vs. Wade
There was the belief that WWI was the war to end Wars
There was early 20th-century complacency about increasingly civilized Europe that could never go back to the vicious persecutions of the past.
There was the belief that it was okay in the 2020s to talk about issues around sexuality and gender identity in Amurican schools.
There was the belief that it was completely uncontroversial to teach American schoolchildren that American slavery was very bad.
There was the belief that wonderful, lovely literate 21st-century America could never facilitate the rise of a would-be tyrant.
There was the belief in Canada that, without in the leas understanding of thinking about our history with the indigenous peoples and slavery, we were morally superior to the Americans by 1960 or 1970; when residential schools were still a thing here; when incarcertation rates and police stop rates for non-whites were and are higher up to the present; when non-white children in difficult situations were more likely to be removed from there families than white children in similar situation--deliberately so in the 60s Scoop; and when (to pick one example of missing and murdered indigenous women) , Robert Pickton got away with torturing and murdering mostly indigenous sex workers from the 1980s into the 2000s, even though one of his 1997 victims escaped with serious wounds, and he was picked up by the police (the victim was a drug-using indigenous prostitute, the murderer was a white male pig farmer); and when armed stand-offs, including the death-dealing Oka stand-off over land claims, happened in this time period.
Mainstream USA after 1920 believed "Indian" issues were settled and buried the Osage murders of the 1920s, and were surprised by Wounded Knee.
Right-wing violent extremism in USA was quashed with Timothy McVeigh, so forget about it going forward.
There was the general complacency in Canada that we were so much better that most other countries when it came to gay rights that we allowed Bruce McDonald to continue to kill in the 200s even after one report of assault and one report of attempted murder, with him in the police station in both cases.
English believed the bloody annexation of Ireland was worth forgetting in 1700s, though Swift was mad when he reminded them of problems in Ireland and were surprised by the Irish troubles of the 1800s & 1900s.
British believed the European union question had been settled consensually and were shocked when Brexit went back to the past.
English believed that Scottish amalgamation was settled circa 1700, and were surprised and hurt by recent attempts to secede.
There was a belief that book banning was a thing of the past.
Yeah, your view seems naive, blinkered, short sighted, ignorant.