Gospel said:
The Baker is not forced to register his business as he can take it elsewhere (it's a big world).
Let me try again another argument. Suppose it's not the government, but the mob. Suppose they tell business owners to agree to pay for 'protection', or else. But they allow people to shut down their business and leave town. Would you say that they are not forced?
Or think of women in Poland. Are they not forced to refrain from aborting, as they can move elsewhere?
Gospel said:
He willfully decided to register his business.
Not more than bikers 'willfully decide' to get licenses to ride their bycicles, even if they oppose say helmet mandates, or licenses in general.
The baker was forced not to sell the cakes without registering the business and complying with a number of conditions. Maybe he actually agreed with that. Maybe he did not. I do not know. He certainly did not willfully decided to bake custom cakes for gender transition parties, nor did he expect the rules would be so interpreted.
Gospel said:
I don't understand why you believe the government is forcing him to do business because they'd have to force him to do business to force him to follow the rules.
The government is forcing him not to do business without a business licence. The government is now apparently coercing him to make custom cakes for gender transition parties. Are they using force, or the threat of force?
Yes. He is already in the business of making custom cakes, and they are telling him to make them or else they forcibly shut down his business.
If he hadn't yet opened a business and they made clear that one condition is to make custom cakes for gender transition parties, I guess one could argue that they're forcing people not to do stuff (i.e., not do sell custom cakes without selling in particular gender transition cakes), and we could be debating the semantic nuances of that. Hair splitting and all. But as it is, they're forcing him to bake the cake, or punishing him for failing to do so.
Gospel said:
He agreed with the rules and thus subsequent force.
1. The matters at hand in that part of the exchange were whether the government was forcing him, and whether Walmart forced people to be their employees. The answers are 'yes' and 'no' respectively. The matter was not whether he had agreed previously to be subjected to that use of force.
2. No, he surely did not agree to be forced to make custom cakes for gender transition parties. That is something that was not in the laws, and some people in the government made up.
3. While he did agree to get the license, that is an agreement under the threat of force if he chooses to do his business without so agreeing. Whether he actually was willing to do that or chose the lesser evil I do not know. But for example, take the bikers who protest helmet laws in my example. They protest but they are forced to use them if they ride their bicycles. If you like, they're forced to either not ride their bycicles or wear a helmet, though this is hair-splitting. But they're forced alright. And they agreed to get their license but did not agree freely but already coerced to some degree.
Gospel said:
You seem to be making the argument in a way that said force has materialized out of thin air and the government is imposing itself on an individual that had no prior knowledge of its existence and wasn't in an agreement with them. At least that's the argument I've been arguing against. If that's not your argument then we're wasting pixels on screens.
That's a different part of the exchange. So, while I also hold that the government made that up - the government enforcers anyway - , the point about license vs. Walmart was to reply to a side debate about whether Walmart and the government were doing the same in re. force.