I disagree. I believe that Phillips is discriminating against a type of person, and is doing a very poor job of trying to cover that up.
I don't know why you believe that. You haven't produced any evidence for it. And it's not clear that you care enough about the distinction for your opinion on that technicality to remain uncontaminated by your disapproval of Phillips' unwillingness to help celebrate transitioning.
I am not litigating this in a court of law, and it is only my belief. As stated before, I think Phillips is lying about his belief, and as far as I know there is no direct evidence of his lying in this case. I will note, however, that people in legal trouble often tell self serving lies when they think there is no evidence out there to the contrary. There are other things the lawyer could have done to set this up properly to show some evidence that he is lying, even without direct statements from Phillips, but we do not know at this point if that is the case.
And the cake in question is an artwork; a cup of coffee at Woolworth's lunch counter is not an artwork.
A cake is not artwork. A cake is food.
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I snipped your images, as they are irrelevant. The baker was not being asked to add any artistic design whatsoever to the cake. All of the pictures presented are cakes with artistic designs, we can't even be sure if they were made to be eaten, as they could simply be decorations on a cake shaped foam core.
No one decorates their home with cake.
It's called the "Masterpiece Cakeshop", for crying out loud! You don't go there because you want food. If you want a cake that isn't an artwork you can get one a ton cheaper at a Safeway.
If they
only sell artistically designed cakes, and
never sell two-color undecorated cakes to anyone, then I will agree that the baker has the right to refuse this customer on the grounds that he would not sell an undecorated cake to anyone. I do not know if that happens to be the case with the Masterpiece Cakeshop, but that is where I draw the line in this kind of situation.
This is a simple two color cake with no symbolism other than a perception of what those two colors mean.
It's not a "perception". The customer
told him what the symbolism was, in the customer's language, same as if the customer had told him he wanted some innocuous-sounding words because they were actually an ethnic slur in the customer's language.
It is perception. The lawyer may have colored that perception by what she said, but anyone else walking into the shop who saw the cake without that context would not perceive that message.
Are you contending that if the protestors at the Woolworths lunch counter had been attempting to purchase cake instead of coffee, then it would have someone been just fine for them to be refused service,
Oh, for the love of god! Are you even
trying to make sensible arguments? I said "And the cake in question is an artwork". I didn't say, "All cake is artwork because it's cake." Woolworths amounted to an assembly line; it employed cooks in the food business. Phillips is an artist in the art business. The fact that he specializes in edible party decorations rather than house decorations no more makes him a non-artist than the fact that Jorn Utzon specialized in buildings rather than house decorations made him a non-artist. In contrast, if the Woolworths lunch counter sold cake it was undoubtedly as generic as a Safeway cake.
And if that distinction is too subtle a nuance for you to accept, the SCOTUS does not share your disability. There's a line of cases where they upheld artists' rights against one or another state claiming something wasn't art.
I believe this distinction is open for debate, and as noted previously, if Masterpiece Cakeshop only bakes artistically designed cakes then I will concede that I have been in error, and the baker should not be expected to sell a plain, undecorated two color cake to anyone.
And all that's on top of the fact that Woolworths was discriminating against a type of person, not a viewpoint.
It is my contention that Masterpiece Cakeshop is discriminating against transgenders. They are not only a type of person, but also protected by law from discrimination in Colorado.
and abused by the other customers?
Okay, now you've just gone off the deep end.
Have I?
It seems to me that it was the above customers who went off the deep end.
Even if this was art, if this strange Art Gallery/ Bakery was to refuse to sell same "artistically designed two color cake to a transgender that they would have sold to a cisgender, then they would be engaging in illegal discrimination as well and should be forced to stop doing so, or go out of business.
If she takes that argument to the SCOTUS she'll need to produce concrete evidence that Phillips isn't discriminating against a viewpoint, but against a type of person. If she says, "I believe that Phillips is discriminating against a type of person, and is doing a very poor job of trying to cover that up.", that won't do the job.
It is not like I am at SCOTUS making that argument, of course they are going to have to meet a burden of proof. As noted previously, we really only have half of the story. We don't know what else was done to lay the groundwork before ordering this cake.