USA TODAY US Edition

‘Inclusive’ restaurant turns away Christian group. Who’s the bigot?

- Ingrid Jacques Ingrid Jacques is a columnist at USA TODAY. You can contact her at ijacques@usatoday.com or on Twitter: @Ingrid_Jacques

Last week, the Metzger Bar & Butchery in Richmond, Virginia, canceled a reservatio­n from the nonprofit Family Foundation just an hour and a half before its scheduled dessert reception with supporters.

Why?

Employees at the restaurant had looked up the group online and decided not to serve its members because of their advocacy for biblical principles, including traditiona­l views on marriage and protection of unborn lives.

The restaurant’s staff felt “uncomforta­ble and unsafe” by the prospect of having these Christians (who weren’t there to cause a scene or to be disrespect­ful but to discuss their organizati­onal goals) in their establishm­ent.

In an Instagram post about the incident, the restaurant, which prides itself on being an “inclusive environmen­t,” observed: “Many of our staff are women and/or members of the LGBTQ+ community. All of our staff are people with rights who deserve dignity and a safe work environmen­t. We respect our staff’s establishe­d rights as humans and strive to create a work environmen­t where they can do their jobs with dignity, comfort and safety.”

Apparently that same dignity and comfort aren’t afforded to those with the “wrong” politics or beliefs.

Supreme Court case

The timing is ironic.

Just days later, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments in a case that seeks to find a balance between constituti­onal free speech liberties and statutory civil rights.

Lorie Smith, the woman who brought the case, is a website designer who didn’t want Colorado to force her to design sites for same-sex weddings, as this goes against her religious beliefs about marriage.

Yet the state’s anti-discrimina­tion law left no caveat for her to exercise her conscience.

Progressiv­es often paint artists like Smith as bigots who shouldn’t be allowed to deny anyone service, regardless of their beliefs.

Similarly, Jack Phillips is a Colorado baker who has been stuck in legal battles for years because of his refusal to create special cakes for same-sex weddings and gender transition­s.

So what’s the takeaway here? That artists with religious beliefs must be forced to create messages that they fundamenta­lly disagree with while LGBTQfrien­dly establishm­ents can deny basic services like eating a meal? That’s hardly a consistent standard. A concern I often hear from the left regarding cases such as Smith’s is that allowing her not to create a website in celebratio­n of same-sex marriage will spill over to other public accommodat­ions, including restaurant­s.

Yet that’s what the Metzger Bar & Butchery did to the Family Foundation.

‘The double standard of the left’

“Welcome to the double standard of the left, where some believe Jack Phillips must be forced to create a wedding cake as part of the celebratio­n of a same-sex ceremony but any business should be able to deny basic goods and services to those who hold biblical values around marriage,” wrote Family Foundation President Victoria Cobb, in a blog post about the experience.

This isn’t the only time when those on the right have faced shunning in public. In 2018, several conservati­ve women who worked in the Trump administra­tion or were running for office encountere­d similar disrespect. Then-White House press secretary (and now Gov.elect of Arkansas) Sarah Huckabee Sanders was asked to leave the Red Hen restaurant, also based in Virginia, because of her job.

Can you imagine the uproar that would follow if a conservati­ve-owned restaurant did that to an LGBTQ group?

Artists like Smith and Phillips open their businesses to everyone, and they have worked with people in the LGBTQ community. But they don’t want the government to compel creative speech that goes against their beliefs – something that’s very different from a restaurant’s refusal to provide a basic service. Tolerance is a two-way street. Perhaps it’s progressiv­es who need to take a hard look in the mirror.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States