Hardcore6erFan wrote:I haven't been following this whole Indiana but I just want to say that the LGBT community is the epitome if hypocrisy. Accept my lifestyle, but I'm not going to accept your lifestyle of not accepting my lifestyle.
So if my religion says I should get to punch you in the nads, but you think that is not OK...I should still be allowed to do it because you should accept that I don't accept your lifestyle? I'm really struggling to understand where the hypocrisy is...
This is from a blog post I wrote after I came out, and I think it addresses your hypocrisy argument pretty well:
Even though I have known for a long time that I am gay, they think that I am a different person now that I have told them. I have no expectation that everyone will approve of it. Would it be nice? I don’t think that people would be so harsh toward me if I were an atheist; I think that they would be able to conceive of a person not believing in god. But being gay? No, that is a choice not just to be sinful, it is a choice to be amoral.
I am destroying the moral fiber of America, because of me traditional institutions and values are under attack. But is it not the Christian thing to do to show kindness to your neighbor? How can you say those things and then claim that you love me anyway?
The government has a history of systematically punishing people that are gay, infringing upon their freedom, destroying their liberty, regulating their speech and sterilizing any vestiges of “non-traditional” activity in the public and private sphere. My government and fellow citizens discriminate against me because of something that is innately a part of who I am. Everywhere I go they say “states have the right to make laws as they see fit,” and “it is up to the citizens to decide how their state is run.” And even though they institutionalize discrimination, the people greet it with a smug approval…or at least tolerate it despite their disagreement. They don’t fight for me, they don’t fight with me. Instead they just say “if you don’t like it, you can move.”
States that fight for “traditional Christian values” are celebrated for their lack of fear in fighting against a government attack on individual rights. But how can you not see that the ability of citizens to arbitrarily decide that someone should lose their job based on their sexuality is wrong?
“God loves the sinner but hates the sin.” As a Christian, you must understand something being at the core of who you are, central to your being. You must feel the pulse of god in your veins, his spirit guiding your every action. Based on your conception you must be able to empathize with the fact that romantic and sexual attraction are just as central to who other people are. Hold whatever beliefs you may about the sinfulness of homosexuality, but keep in mind Jesus’ prime directive, the golden rule. I would never tell someone that their religion is invalid because of science, do not tell me that my sexuality is invalid because of religion. God loves us all, god tells us to judge none. You have no authority to say that the things I do are things that god hates just as I have no authority to dismiss the things you feel as a Christian.
Arbitrary discrimination is unacceptable, and that is the heart of this issue. Denying someone services because they are gay is arbitrary
Arbitrary: based on random choice or personal whim, rather than any reason or system
The reason people discriminate is because minority groups seem "icky" or their god doesn't "like" those people. And really, who cares about that? Religion is a private enterprise between men, commerce is a societal enterprise that provides necessary goods and services to everyone. When you create loopholes that allow discrimination based on individual beliefs, you create a system that places certain individuals at greater risk of not being able to provide an equivalent quality of life to themselves and their families even if all things are held equal. That is an inherently unfair system that lacks the elements of liberty and equality of opportunity (but not of outcome) that was the foundation of our country. RFRAs like Indiana's, Arkansas' and Arizona's places minorities at a greater risk of being unable not just to enjoy a high quality of life, but also to have access to life necessities. When businesses can decide not to serve someone for arbitrary reasons it is harmful to that individual and the integrity of our nation. When they decide to fire someone for arbitrary reasons it is even more harmful, and can lead to people becoming homeless or dying when they no longer have access to medical facilities because of a lack of money...or even possibly the lack of doctors willing to serve them.
Now deciding not to serve something like a cake may not represent an imminent harm, imagine that a couple lives in a rural town that is hours away from any bakery outside of where they live. In that case, they have to significantly modify their behavior in order to simply get a wedding cake. That baker serving them, on the other hand, does not have to modify their behavior, they just have to make a cake.
Our Constitution and Bill of Rights are in place to ensure "liberty" in the American system. I particularly like this definition of Liberty:
the state of being free within society from oppressive restrictions imposed by authority on one's way of life, behavior, or political views.
Allowing commercial enterprises to discriminate greatly changes the behavior of those who are discriminated against. It denies them access to basic services, while at the same time marginalizing and demeaning them. It is an OPPRESSIVE restriction. I see no reason why serving gay people in your BUSINESS would be oppressive, unless you want to make a religious argument, and there is no current judicial precedent to say that religious beliefs are ample grounds for discrimination.