Subject: Hm...
Author:
Posted on: 2016-11-19 19:47:00 UTC

So - at least from my point of view, there's something of a spectrum between "doing business with a person" and "supporting a person's belief system". To try to illustrate that spectrum, here's some examples, revolving around a fictitious coffee shop:

1: Selling a customer a cup of coffee.

2: Selling a group of customers coffee, which they then drink in the shop while talking about their politics.

2: Selling a group of customers coffee, which they then drink in the shop while talking loudly about their belief system.

3: Renting out the shop for an open-to-the-public political event.

4: Doing nothing while a customer stands up and lectures the shop at large about their ideology. (without forewarning)

5: Letting a customer leave a stack of pamphlets about their ideology in the shop.

6: Helping a customer plan (and perform) a lecture to the shop about their ideology.

Regardless of the ideology in question, I hope you can see the progression there. Denying someone the first example is pretty clearly discriminatory. Denying someone the last example is entirely legit - the right to free speech is a thing, but it's very specifically not the right to a venue or an audience.

So, when it comes to cake-baking, there's a lot of possible scenarios that fall on various parts of the board. A simple "happy birthday" cake is probably down towards example 1, really not something to be denied to anyone. On the other hand, decorating a cake with burning crosses and white hoods and "happy birthday to the KKK!" is, in my mind, very much closer to examples 5 and 6- you aren't just providing a service, at that point, you're using your skills and resources in a way that's inescapably glorifying an ideology of violence.

And that's where I'm very much okay with picking and choosing what ideologies should and shouldn't be supported. And comfortable applying value judgements to the ideologies in question - "don't hurt people", a quite universal rule, makes the comparable guideline of "I won't support ideologies that advocate hurting people" and value judgement of "ideologies that advocate hurting people are bad" pretty straightforward, in my mind.

The comparable guideline of "I won't support an expression of queerness" is a thing - but if you chase that one backwards towards a universal rule, it doesn't really go anywhere - the underlying rule seems to be "queer people are gross."

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