Subject: Really?
Author:
Posted on: 2016-11-14 18:23:00 UTC

a) You cannot be a victim of beliefs — thoughts can't come out of someone's head and bite you; you can only be a victim of deeds. A homophobe is entitled to his homophobia — as morally repugnant as it is — because everybody is entitled to their beliefs and opinions. A homophobe is not entitled to act on his homophobia, because that would hurt people.
The essence here is "people are entitled to think and feel whatever, and discriminating against them solely on the basis of that is bad", not "the KKK are evil".
Consider the following scenario: A is a gay baker. B is a Klansman. B beat the living daylights out of A and got an appropriate sentence (I have no idea what's the sentence for aggravated assault over there in the States). After serving his prison term, B goes to to A's bakery and orders a cake.
No matter what A's feelings on the matter are, they are obliged to sell B the cake. Not selling it is a) discriminatory and b) taking the law into their own hands (which, frankly, you really shouldn't argue for if you think you're a victim — usually the perps are crueller than the victims and have less problems with being nasty).

b) If you think what Nesh and Scape and the rest said isn't serious enough, go ahead and address SoH directly. Nobody here is obliged to fight your battles for you and nobody's preventing you from talking to SoH and arguing your case.

Anyway: while I find what SoH argues for w.r.t. the wedding cakes for Gay people pretty immoral — and I've said as much, I think — I find your stance, which seems to be "only people I approve of deserve civil rights", to be hypocritical and immoral. I think that before you criticise anybody out of a civil-rights position, you should ask yourself whether you really agree with all of its implications, because right now that doesn't seem to be the case.

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