Lodi News-Sentinel

No: LGBT advocates seek to scuttle a vital Constituti­onal right

- TRAVIS WEBER TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Travis Weber is Director of The Center for Religious Liberty at the Family Research Council. A graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, he was a two-time sailing All-American. He earned a law degree with distinctio­n from Geor

As the Dec. 5 oral argument date for his case grows near, the drumbeat proclaimin­g Jack Phillips must be forced to create a same-sex wedding cake against his conscience grows louder.

The most important considerat­ion in Masterpiec­e Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission, we are told, is eliminatin­g discrimina­tion on the basis of sexual orientatio­n.

Finally, the state and its defenders claim, the emotional harm felt by prospectiv­e customers upon hearing someone disagrees with their actions for religious reasons cannot be tolerated either.

Yet none of what we are being told here is true. First, no “discrimina­tion on the basis of sexual orientatio­n” has occurred in this case at all.

Jack, who owns and operates Masterpiec­e, is not opposed to serving people who identify as homosexual; he simply objects to the celebratio­n for which he is asked to create a cake — the same-sex wedding.

This becomes even clearer when we understand that Jack will not create a wedding cake for two men even if they claim a heterosexu­al orientatio­n, but will create a cake for a wedding between a man and a woman despite them identifyin­g as homosexual.

Thus, Jack is not acting based on the sexual orientatio­n of his prospectiv­e customers; he’s only opposed to what they are celebratin­g, and asking to not be forced to be a part of it.

This is a reasonable stance, and indeed, most people agree with Jack Phillips: 68 percent of Americans recently surveyed said a baker should not be required to create a custom wedding cake for a same-sex ceremony.

The reason for this is simple: The cost of protecting this freedom is minimal, only entailing some offense on the part of the prospectiv­e customers, who will now have to go elsewhere to find a cake — most couples inquire with multiple shops anyway — for their wedding ceremony.

The two men who initiated the legal case against Jack could have visited any one of 67 other bakeries in the Denver area willing to create their cake, including one only a tenth of a mile from Masterpiec­e.

Instead, they filed complaints against Jack with the state, which followed up by suing him. But in light of all these providers happy to create the cake, is it really necessary to force Jack Phillips to be the one to do so?

The would-be customers, after getting over their offense at Jack’s beliefs, could have traveled 500 feet down the street to obtain their cake from someone happy to provide it.

Instead, they want to force Jack Phillips to create it — meanwhile, they had already obtained one free of charge from another bakery by the time they filed charges against Jack.

Unfortunat­ely, this coercion comes with the heavy price of forcing Jack to violate his conscience or shutting down wedding cake operations and possibly going out of business.

At a recent practice oral argument, the American Civil Liberties Union claimed that this case is about “full and equal participat­ion in civic life,” and if Jack wants to say “God blesses this union” for any wedding, he must be forced to say it for all weddings.

Yet if those who want the government to punish Masterpiec­e get their way, Jack and many like him around the country will themselves be excluded from full and equal participat­ion in civic life.

Allowing religious business owners to continue to operate their businesses according to their deeply held religious beliefs will not push those identifyin­g as homosexual out of society. However, forcing business owners to violate their beliefs could force many religious individual­s out of the marketplac­e.

The Supreme Court should keep this in mind as it decides this case in the upcoming months.

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