Saturday, December 30, 2017

The devil tightens his grip on post-America's throat

We're still awaiting the SCOTUS decision on Jack Phillips, the Colorado baker, but a couple plying that trade and sharing his faith in Oregon are at this juncture in their struggle to conduct business in accordance with what they know to be true about sin:

A husband-and-wife baking team must pay a $135,000 fine for declining to make a cake for the wedding of two women, Oregon’s second-highest court has ruled.
A three-judge panel of the Oregon Court of Appeals on Thursday upheld a decision by a state agency that led to the fine and forced Aaron and Melissa Klein to close their bakery.
The court ruled that baking wedding cakes is not “speech, art, or other expression” protected by the First Amendment. The judges said the state did not “impermissibly burden the Kleins’ right to the free exercise of religion” because it compelled the Christian bakers only to comply with “a neutral law of general applicability.”
Oregon law prohibits businesses from refusing service because of a customer’s sexual orientation, as well as because of race, gender, and other personal characteristics.
“We are very disappointed in the court’s decision,” Michael Berry, deputy general counsel at First Liberty Institute, which represents the Kleins, told The Daily Signal in a phone interview Friday. “I think that punishing people for their religious beliefs is … not American, and it’s wrong.”
“It does not matter how you were born or who you love,” one of the lesbians, Laurel Bowman-Cryer, said in a written statement following the ruling. “All of us are equal under the law and should be treated equally. Oregon will not allow a ‘Straight Couples Only’ sign to be hung in bakeries or other stores.”
Boyden Gray, former White House counsel to President George H.W. Bush, argued the Kleins’ case. Gray told the three judges that the state violated the two bakers’ rights to free speech, religious freedom, and due process.
The Kleins had owned and operated Sweet Cakes by Melissa, a bakery in Gresham, Oregon.

Not sure what they're doing for income these days so as to comply with the fine, should they come up short in every last measure to resist this tyranny, but it won't be from their bakery. They had to shut it down in 2013 due to protests.

3 comments:

  1. Nope. If there is a devil, he'd be busy destroying our rule of law, not men, despite what sin they may decry,

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  2. Rule of law can be a vehicle for evil. It would be wrong for the world to live with this court's decision. We are all morally obligated to say it's wrong - loudly and relentlessly.

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  3. You go then in freedom and in love maybe if you want.

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