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Anti-gay legislation proposed in Northern Ireland

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Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,039 ✭✭✭B_Wayne


    Just to confirm, those who support this are fine with refusal to serve single mothers? Shops that will not serve gay people at all?


  • Registered Users Posts: 904 ✭✭✭Drakares


    - Economy in tatters - Check
    - Heath Service in need of massive improvements - Check
    - Unemployment rate at an all time high - Check
    - Homeless people sleeping on the streets - Check


    Lets concern ourselves with the most important of all, what two consensual adults are allowed do with their bodies! The windowlicking is strong in this group.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 20 no_car


    gozunda wrote: »
    As already explained above - not a comparable scenario. Such a request would fall under Incitment to Hatred, and not even remotely the 'same principal'

    the example is the same principal , it just has a different charechter

    both involve the state forcing its definition of morality on private citizens


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 20 no_car


    B_Wayne wrote: »
    Just to confirm, those who support this are fine with refusal to serve single mothers? Shops that will not serve gay people at all?

    the bakers didnt refuse to serve , they refused to play a role in a political campaign , a cake is a food product , a car is a mode of transport but if i drape the car in anti fox hunting slogans and drive around town , it becomes political


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,775 ✭✭✭✭Gbear


    gozunda wrote: »
    You don't need to be a racist to oppose the state interfering in businesses right to choose their own clientèle. But it sure as hell helps :rolleyes:

    Segregation laws not only enforced but also permitted discrimination. Hair splitting does not further your argument. Without the US government 'sticking their oar' into segregation and outlawing it, there would still be states with 'black people at the back of the bus"

    Here is some information on personal beliefs translated into active discrimination for you

    http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montgomery_Bus_Boycott

    Hair splitting? Jesus christ.:rolleyes:

    They're completely and totally different.

    It's the difference between allowing the sale of alcohol, including to alcoholics, and forcing everyone to be an alcoholic.
    It's the difference between allowing the existence of private schools that teach climate change and evolution denial and enforcing bull**** like that in all public schools.

    That you can dismiss such a fundamental difference as hair splitting is simply unbelievable.

    Your 2nd point is absolute bollocks.
    The civil rights movement won in spite of the government because it had popular support.

    Yes. The government really did a bang up job when it was coerced into giving black people their rights back.

    Society get's less ignorant and then drags archaic laws, kicking and screaming, into modernity.
    It does not work the other way around.

    You're always going to have a few outlier racist dickheads but such is life. A few dopes aren't a good reason to keep the progress of civil society shackled to a plodding monolith like our legal system.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,039 ✭✭✭B_Wayne


    no_car wrote: »
    the bakers didnt refuse to serve , they refused to play a role in a political campaign , a cake is a food product , a car is a mode of transport but if i drape the car in anti fox hunting slogans and drive around town , it becomes political

    Under conscience law, it would be fine to have businesses that don't serve gay people at all. Businesses where one's morality can allow them to ignore groups they abhor...


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 20 no_car


    B_Wayne wrote: »
    Under conscience law, it would be fine to have businesses that don't serve gay people at all. Businesses where one's morality can allow them to ignore groups they abhor...

    ok , we are now debating the proposed bill , i was refering to the bakers who refused to contribute to a political campaign

    i still dont have a problem with private business refusing to serve certain people , i dont believe the state can perfect society and that this kind of ( over reach ) will completely eradicate prejudice

    ive no desire to impose my will upon people who have a different outlook , the likes of the christian bakery did not go looking for confrontation , confrontation came looking for them


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Will somebody bake them that cake already.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,996 ✭✭✭✭gozunda


    no_car wrote: »
    the example is the same principal , it just has a different charechter

    both involve the state forcing its definition of morality on private citizens

    No They Are not the 'same principal'

    Incitement to hatred is a criminal offence and an individual engaging in such behaviour can be prosecuted. The state defines laws. Citizens of that state are obliged to obey those laws.

    Discrimination is also against the law. Anti discrimination legislation protects individuals against discrimination in the provision of goods and services.

    I presume from your last statement that there should be no laws whatsoever as by enacting laws the "state (is) forcing its definition of morality on private citizens".

    Yeah ...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,905 ✭✭✭✭Bob24


    gozunda wrote: »
    The poster said



    Leaving aside the fact I didn't refer to the article above - the two statements are NOT Synonymous. I would suggest you read the actual letter sent by the Equality Commission for the actual wording regarding the breach of legislation

    Could you post a link to what is your reference of the facts then? I don't believe any of the links in the thread are saying the customer was refused because he is gay (as a matter of fact, what it seems like is that the order was originally accepted but later one declined by the management due to the message to be printed).

    Also I don't believe the baker was fund guilty of anything he was accused of?


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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 7,102 ✭✭✭Stinicker


    The real bigots here are those opposed to the DUP's legislation, people have a right to make decisions and hold beliefs, this is really a case of the thought police at work. Not everybody is in favor of homosexuality or gay marriage and they are entitled to hold those beliefs and not be bullied by anyone who thinks otherwise. The liberals here really show their hypocrisy on this issue.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,106 ✭✭✭Daith


    Stinicker wrote: »
    The real bigots here are those opposed to the DUP's legislation, people have a right to make decisions and hold beliefs

    Once again the victims of bigotry are the bigots.

    Maybe if you operate a business you should just follow the law?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,689 ✭✭✭Karl Stein


    Gbear wrote: »
    Yes. The government really did a bang up job when it was coerced into giving black people their rights back.

    What do you mean by 'give back'? Were Black people living in some sort of utopia before the darn gubberment snatched it all away?

    Black people were kidnapped and brought to the US and sold as livestock - if they didn't do as they were told they were tortured. That was called the slave trade - it was big business. The government put a stop to the slave trade and the government put a stop to segregation.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,905 ✭✭✭✭Bob24


    Stinicker wrote: »
    The real bigots here are those opposed to the DUP's legislation, people have a right to make decisions and hold beliefs, this is really a case of the thought police at work. Not everybody is in favor of homosexuality or gay marriage and they are entitled to hold those beliefs and not be bullied by anyone who thinks otherwise. The liberals here really show their hypocrisy on this issue.

    One issue though is that the legislation is only quoting religion as a valid source for personal beliefs.

    Does it make sense that an atheist baker would not be covered by the same legislation?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,361 ✭✭✭✭One eyed Jack


    gozunda wrote: »
    Yet segregation laws DID include private businesses as with the present case of discrimination by sexual orientation case in NI. And with the proposed legislation in NI - what happens when you get a bigoted individual working in a public service? Will they be able to claim a 'conscience' :rolleyes: exemption from serving a gay/coloured/gender specific person based on their 'religious belief'! Seriously?


    You're still mixing up public sector and private sector provided services. If a person is employed in the public service providing services to the public, they may raise their objections with their employer, but they themselves are not entitled to discriminate against anyone if there is a policy in place which says they cannot discriminate against a person. The same rules do not apply to service providers in the private sector.

    A business' ethos could discriminate against a person for any particular reason, and employees of that business would have to abide by the business' ethos or could face disciplinary action or dismissal.

    What you 'want' is immaterial.


    Careful now :p

    Seriously though, that sort of pronouncement could easily be turned against you in that I could just as handy say to you that what you want is immaterial... but it's no way to conduct a discussion, is it?

    Your 'wants' do not trump another persons civil rights not to be discriminated against. Yes discrimination is 'terrible' and should never be condoned whether by religious belief or otherwise


    Actually, my wants are protected under what are called 'personal liberties', and your personal liberties don't trump my personal liberties, nor does your perceived entitlement to what you see as your civil rights trump my constitutionally protected fundamental rights. Discrimination in and of itself isn't terrible either, in fact in some cases it's absolutely necessary, and in other cases, such as 'positive discrimination' public policies, it's absolutely futile.

    So you live in a small town in a rural area, that has for example one chemist / one bakery / one shop - what do you do? Travel in the hope of finding a non bigoted purveyor of goods and services.


    Yes? Not sure what other answer you were expecting there? In the same way as you would travel to avail of a better quality of service regardless of the fact whether they be a chemist, bakery, shop, etc. That's people's personal choice to travel. It's an inconvenience, and nothing more, and no private services provider is obligated to provide a person with services just because that person feels they are entitled to a service.

    Businesses such as the Bakery at the centre of this debacle ARE in business for the bottom line (sic). They are there to make money as a business. If they are a business they are obliged to do so lawfully and not discriminate against customers.


    They are there to provide a service to whomever they choose to provide that service to. The money they make from providing that service is obviously a secondary concern if they are prepared to deny their services to certain people. They are operating within the law already, and the law protects their right to choose who they will provide their services to, and also their right to choose what services they will provide to whomever they choose.

    If they do not want to provide their services to a person, that person is entitled to choose to take their business elsewhere. If I go into the local convenience store run by Muslims and I'm told they don't stock ham, then there's nothing I can do as there's no law that says convenience stores have to stock ham. There's also no law that says a bakery providing customised cakes has to provide a service to a person who wants a political message on a cake which contravenes their personal and religious beliefs.

    All you're doing by trying to force the issue is giving private businesses a reason to refuse business that's going to be an issue for them. It's no different to publicans that close their businesses when there's a traveller wedding in town rather than have to deal with the potential fallout that could lose them a lot more business.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,495 ✭✭✭✭eviltwin


    The bakers didn't refuse to deal with the customers, they just refused to make the cake they wanted. Its totally different.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,336 ✭✭✭wendell borton


    hfallada wrote: »
    Imagine trying to have functioning Dail if there was a unification of the 32 counties. Instead of discussing important economic matters. I have a feeling, there would be a lot of debating over **** like this. Like the only reason why this law is being proposed as its clearly the views of a sizeable minority of NI.

    How is that England is liberal and yet NI is so backwards. They both have Church of Ireland/Catholics. But their social views are literally polar opposites.

    I have to disagree. The border enabled the existence of a sectarian state and a catholic theocracy to exist by demagogy.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,106 ✭✭✭Daith


    eviltwin wrote: »
    The bakers didn't refuse to deal with the customers, they just refused to make the cake they wanted. Its totally different.

    Exactly

    However the law they want is the ability not to deal with customers at all.

    Both side are blowing things up.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,039 ✭✭✭B_Wayne


    no_car wrote: »
    ok , we are now debating the proposed bill , i was refering to the bakers who refused to contribute to a political campaign

    i still dont have a problem with private business refusing to serve certain people , i dont believe the state can perfect society and that this kind of ( over reach ) will completely eradicate prejudice

    ive no desire to impose my will upon people who have a different outlook , the likes of the christian bakery did not go looking for confrontation , confrontation came looking for them
    And it in my honest opinion, this would be a significantly regressive leap back in terms of Western Europe. It's a return to the days where one could refuse clientele because of the colour of their skin. This is much bigger than Ashers, it's much more regressive than what Ashers did. It's carte blanche to refuse to serve whoever they want with feck all limits as long as you use conscience as your objection. Northern Ireland has much intolerance as it is, bringing in laws that allows more intolerance to fester is the work of bigots. The DUP are bigoted creationists with nuttier views than most religions even hold.
    Stinicker wrote: »
    The real bigots here are those opposed to the DUP's legislation, people have a right to make decisions and hold beliefs, this is really a case of the thought police at work. Not everybody is in favor of homosexuality or gay marriage and they are entitled to hold those beliefs and not be bullied by anyone who thinks otherwise. The liberals here really show their hypocrisy on this issue.
    Just to clarify? You're fine with a business that won't serve gay people, single mothers, Asians, black people? Freedom of conscience can bring with it many horrible views.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,905 ✭✭✭✭Bob24


    Daith wrote: »
    Exactly

    However the law they want is the ability not to deal with customers at all.

    Both side are blowing things up.

    Is there a draft of this law people can look at to make their own opinion?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 7,102 ✭✭✭Stinicker


    The most fundamental human right has been the right to religion and to practice and believe as you wish. For hundreds of years countries have fought and millions have died for their religious beliefs. Equality legislation that erodes these rights is it not equality.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,039 ✭✭✭B_Wayne


    Stinicker wrote: »
    The most fundamental human right has been the right to religion and to practice and believe as you wish. For hundreds of years countries have fought and millions have died for their religious beliefs. Equality legislation that erodes these rights is it not equality.

    Tell me sir, how is it eroding your beliefs to expect a non religious business to operate as any other business? A business is not a religious organisation.....


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,106 ✭✭✭Daith


    Stinicker wrote: »
    The most fundamental human right has been the right to religion

    No it's not. You can practice your religion but should not be expected to force your religious beliefs on anyone who does not follow your religion.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,905 ✭✭✭✭Bob24


    Stinicker wrote: »
    The most fundamental human right has been the right to religion and to practice and believe as you wish. For hundreds of years countries have fought and millions have died for their religious beliefs. Equality legislation that erodes these rights is it not equality.

    Sure :-)

    Ahead of things like personal safety, access to food, reasonable freedom of movement, etc.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 156 ✭✭Cuban Pete


    Stinicker wrote: »
    The most fundamental human right has been the right to religion and to practice and believe as you wish. For hundreds of years countries have fought and millions have died for their religious beliefs. Equality legislation that erodes these rights is it not equality.

    I demand the government recognise my right to offer human sacrifices to Nyarlathotep. All those who are not believers serve only as fodder for the great Crawling Chaos. These are my religious beliefs and, as such, are both above reproach and supersede anyone else's rights.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,495 ✭✭✭✭eviltwin


    Stinicker wrote: »
    The most fundamental human right has been the right to religion and to practice and believe as you wish. For hundreds of years countries have fought and millions have died for their religious beliefs. Equality legislation that erodes these rights is it not equality.

    The right to practice and believe what you want is one thing, using that as a reason to exclude certain groups in society is not acceptable.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 7,102 ✭✭✭Stinicker


    B_Wayne wrote: »
    Tell me sir, how is it eroding your beliefs to expect a non religious business to operate as any other business? A business is not a religious organisation.....

    If a person does not want to offer his/her services due to their religious convictions then that is something that should be protected and freedom of conscience is what this is about.
    Daith wrote: »
    No it's not. You can practice your religion but should not be expected to force your religious beliefs on anyone who does not follow your religion.

    No one is proselytizing here, this is about freedom of choice, the baker should be allowed to decline business if he/she wishes, Just like the customer is allowed to choose who bakes their cake.
    Bob24 wrote: »
    Sure :-)

    Ahead of things like personal safety, access to food, reasonable freedom of movement, etc.

    The right to life and the right to religion are the two most important human rights in the Western Developed World, the first Amendment of the US Constitution recognises the right to freedom of religion and the second amendment is the right to bear arms.
    Cuban Pete wrote: »
    I demand the government recognise my right to offer human sacrifices to Nyarlathotep. All those who are not believers serve only as fodder for the great Crawling Chaos. These are my religious beliefs and, as such, are both above reproach and supersede anyone else's rights.

    The right to life supersedes such beliefs and such an outrageous beleif system would be even classified as religion and would be more suited under the categorization of terrorism and mental illness.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,361 ✭✭✭✭One eyed Jack


    Daith wrote: »
    No it's not. You can practice your religion but should not be expected to force your religious beliefs on anyone who does not follow your religion.


    By that same token, you as an individual should not be able to force your personal moral and ethical standards on anyone else, and if a person tells you that they have a personal religious, moral or ethical objection to providing you with a service you feel you should be entitled to, they're not breaking the law.

    Why would anyone want to support a business which they know would discriminate against them anyway? It's no different to suggesting that a person going where they know they're not welcome, is only inviting trouble on themselves.

    If enough people decide not to support the business, that would have them take a quicker look at their policy, than trying to force your will upon them to force them to change to suit you.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,106 ✭✭✭Daith


    By that same token, you as an individual should not be able to force your personal moral and ethical standards on anyone else

    We don't. That's why we have law in countries so everyone follows the same rules.
    It's no different to suggesting that a person going where they know they're not welcome, is only inviting trouble on themselves.


    Operating a business and not following the law is asking for trouble too. If you don't like the rules, don't open a business. Works both ways!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,996 ✭✭✭✭gozunda


    Gbear wrote: »
    Hair splitting? Jesus christ.:rolleyes:

    They're completely and totally different.

    you said
    Gbear wrote:
    You don't need to be a racist to oppose the state interfering in businesses right to choose their own clientèle.

    How is that even remotely related to "forcing everyone to be an alcoholic" as you detailed below for some strange reason?

    Laws that protect the rights of citizens force nothing. Such laws prevent illegal behaviour and activities such as discrimination
    Gbear wrote: »
    It's the difference between allowing the sale of alcohol, including to alcoholics, and forcing everyone to be an alcoholic.
    It's the difference between allowing the existence of private schools that teach climate change and evolution denial and enforcing bull**** like that in all public schools.That you can dismiss such a fundamental difference as hair splitting is simply unbelievable.

    If you wish to bring in paradoxical examples then that's you choice. It makes it no less hair splitting imo.
    Gbear wrote: »
    Your 2nd point is absolute bollocks.
    The civil rights movement won in spite of the government because it had popular support.

    Yes. The government really did a bang up job when it was coerced into giving black people their rights back.

    Society get's less ignorant and then drags archaic laws, kicking and screaming, into modernity.
    It does not work the other way around.

    You're always going to have a few outlier racist dickheads but such is life. A few dopes aren't a good reason to keep the progress of civil society shackled to a plodding monolith like our legal system.

    And how is the civil rights movement for LGBT rights any different? What is different is that the perpetrators of discrimination by reason of sexual orientation are breaking the law. The Equality Commission have taken up this case. What is being fought is the rise of bigots who would assert their 'rights' to discriminate against others whilst claiming 'religious belief' as an excuse.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,394 ✭✭✭Sheldons Brain


    eviltwin wrote: »
    The bakers didn't refuse to deal with the customers, they just refused to make the cake they wanted. Its totally different.

    Actually I think they were happy to provide a the cake, they only refused to write the message on it.

    If I go into a bakery and ask for a cake with "Save Ulster from Sodomy" written on it, must the bakery write this?


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,063 ✭✭✭Kiwi in IE


    Stinicker wrote: »
    The most fundamental human right has been the right to religion and to practice and believe as you wish. For hundreds of years countries have fought and millions have died for their religious beliefs. Equality legislation that erodes these rights is it not equality.

    Hence why it's removal from the public sphere is essential to the progress of a modern, equal society.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,312 ✭✭✭Paramite Pie


    md23040 wrote: »
    Not that I agree with this nonsense but why don't you go onto a Muslim cafe and demand a bacon buttie or else go into a kosher bakery and ask for a National Front style cake with a big swastika on it and see how far you get in Liberal UK or anywhere else for that matter.

    If the Muslim Cafe actually kept bacon in stock, cooked it and added it to the Menu then you'd actually have a comparable argument. Not stocking a product is not discrimination.

    The National Front Cake is a better argument but the bakery itself could be heavily fined or even shut down for putting an illegal symbol on the cake.

    However writing a slogan on a cake is not the same as endorsing it. It really shouldn't matter if they disagree with the slogan or not.
    There are many bakeries in Belfast and I do wonder if this bakery was chosen intentionally to make a point. Their website mentions that their name is derived from the bible (from a tribe of Israel of something). It's not unknown for some activists in general to stir the pot & seek persecution to highlight an issue. It's rare (i hope!) but it happens.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,495 ✭✭✭✭eviltwin


    Actually I think they were happy to provide a the cake, they only refused to write the message on it.

    If I go into a bakery and ask for a cake with "Save Ulster from Sodomy" written on it, must the bakery write this?

    I agree with you. I'm sure if a gay person went in to buy an eclair they would serve them no problem. The issue was the message on the cake, not the customer and while I don't agree with them I defend their right to do it otherwise you set a precedent where retailers have to create any message their customers want.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 156 ✭✭Cuban Pete


    Stinicker wrote: »
    The right to life supersedes such beliefs and such an outrageous beleif system would be even classified as religion and would be more suited under the categorization of terrorism and mental illness.

    Who are you to declare what is and is not a religion? Much less classify my beliefs as "mental illness". These are my religious beliefs and I expect them to be respected.

    If, as you say, "The most fundamental human right has been the right to religion and to practice and believe as you wish" then why does the right to life supersede this, when religious belief and practice is the most fundamental right?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,106 ✭✭✭Daith


    eviltwin wrote: »
    I agree with you. I'm sure if a gay person went in to buy an eclair they would serve them no problem. The issue was the message on the cake, not the customer and while I don't agree with them I defend their right to do it otherwise you set a precedent where retailers have to create any message their customers want.

    I'd agree with that also! The issue is with the slogan whereas the proposed bill is about the customer.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,361 ✭✭✭✭One eyed Jack


    Daith wrote: »
    We don't. That's why we have law in countries so everyone follows the same rules.


    You're forcing your personal moral and ethical standards on other people when you demand that because their personal moral and ethical standards differ from your own, that their opinion has less validity in society than your own opinion.

    Operating a business and not following the law is asking for trouble too. If you don't like the rules, don't open a business. Works both ways!


    Yes it does, so I assume that rather than campaigning for a change in the law to legislate for marriage equality, you'll be moving to a country where same-sex marriage is already legal, right?

    Of course you wouldn't, because that would be silly, just as silly as suggesting that a private company should not be allowed to choose who they provide their services to.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,759 ✭✭✭jobbridge4life


    Of course you wouldn't, because that would be silly, just as silly as suggesting that a private company should not be allowed to choose who they provide their services to.

    Private businesses are already constrained from being allowed to choose who they provide their services to. There is nothing remotely silly about it.

    Also private businesses like private individuals operate in the public sphere and as such are subject to the law that governs interpersonal contact.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,802 ✭✭✭✭suicide_circus


    Nee naw nee naw the thought police are on their way!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,106 ✭✭✭Daith


    You're forcing your personal moral and ethical standards on other people when you demand that because their personal moral and ethical standards differ from your own, that their opinion has less validity in society than your own opinion.

    Utter nonsense. You're asking a business to follow the law. It's not about opinion. It's about following the law.
    Yes it does, so I assume that rather than campaigning for a change in the law to legislate for marriage equality, you'll be moving to a country where same-sex marriage is already legal, right?

    Of course you wouldn't, because that would be silly, just as silly as suggesting that a private company should not be allowed to choose who they provide their services to.

    Not at all. They're campaigning to have a bill to do what they want. I've no problem with them wanting to get a bill passed. I've a problem with the bill though.

    I can't get married until the law changes.
    I can't discriminate against customers based on my moral beliefs until the law changes.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,759 ✭✭✭jobbridge4life


    Nee naw nee naw the thought police are on their way!

    Its funny anti-discrimination gets referred to as the thought police, the mystical sky friend who apparently determines what cakes one can bake and what ones will land you in eternal hell fire meanwhile....


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,996 ✭✭✭✭gozunda


    You're still mixing up public sector and private sector provided services. If a person is employed in the public service providing services to the public, they may raise their objections with their employer, but they themselves are not entitled to discriminate against anyone if there is a policy in place which says they cannot discriminate against a person. The same rules do not apply to service providers in the private sector.

    There was no mix up. But I do think your argument is confused. Regarding public and private sector - The Anti Discrimination laws remain the same. It is illegal for any business or service to discriminate against people on a range of characteristics including sexual orientation.
    A business' ethos could discriminate against a person for any particular reason, and employees of that business would have to abide by the business' ethos or could face disciplinary action or dismissal.

    Ashers had no 'business ethos' one way or the other. They are obliged by law to provide their goods and services without discrimination.
    Seriously though, that sort of pronouncement could easily be turned against you in that I could just as handy say to you that what you want is immaterial... but it's no way to conduct a discussion, is it?

    It related only to your pronouncement that you didn't like the current set up of the anti discrimination laws. Well tough that's the way they are. That is not up for debate.
    Actually, my wants are protected under what are called 'personal liberties', and your personal liberties don't trump my personal liberties, nor does your perceived entitlement to what you see as your civil rights trump my constitutionally protected fundamental rights. Discrimination in and of itself isn't terrible either, in fact in some cases it's absolutely necessary, and in other cases, such as 'positive discrimination' public policies, it's absolutely futile.
    Let's deal with the present case any perceived 'civil liberties' do not trump anti discrimination laws.
    Yes? Not sure what other answer you were expecting there? In the same way as you would travel to avail of a better quality of service regardless of the fact whether they be a chemist, bakery, shop, etc. That's people's personal choice to travel. It's an inconvenience, and nothing more, and no private services provider is obligated to provide a person with services just because that person feels they are entitled to a service.

    It's nothing to do with 'entitlement' but it is everything to do with businesses providing goods and services without discrimination as laid out in law.
    They are there to provide a service to whomever they choose to provide that service to. The money they make from providing that service is obviously a secondary concern if they are prepared to deny their services to certain people. They are operating within the law already, and the law protects their right to choose who they will provide their services to, and also their right to choose what services they will provide to whomever they choose.

    Not according to the Equality Commission they ain't ...
    If they do not want to provide their services to a person, that person is entitled to choose to take their business elsewhere. If I go into the local convenience store run by Muslims and I'm told they don't stock ham, then there's nothing I can do as there's no law that says convenience stores have to stock ham. There's also no law that says a bakery providing customised cakes has to provide a service to a person who wants a political message on a cake which contravenes their personal and religious beliefs.

    That type of ridiculous argument has already been debunked many times. See the Gay Cake thread for full details...
    All you're doing by trying to force the issue is giving private businesses a reason to refuse business that's going to be an issue for them. It's no different to publicans that close their businesses when there's a traveller wedding in town rather than have to deal with the potential fallout that could lose them a lot more business.

    And your point is?


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,711 ✭✭✭keano_afc


    gozunda wrote: »
    A That is YOUR interpretation and is unsupported by the evidence to date

    Ashers have said this is the reason the customer wasnt served. I see no reason to disbelieve them. If a gay person entered the shop and ordered a croissant or a rock bun or whatever they would have been served.
    B Again that is your supposition on the issue and interestingly is at odds to what the NI anti discrimination authority has found and which looks likely to go before the courts

    Again, the customers sexuality had nothing to do with the reason they were not served.
    C So as detailed previously would you hold that the civil rights movement in the US should have shut up and put up with discrimination?

    Nasty 'noisy' minorities actually speaking up and seeking the same rights as everyone else? Shame on them you say?' -shame on you!

    Same rights as everyone else? They deliberately targetted an establishment for publicity purposes. Pretty scummy way to go about getting equal rights.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,802 ✭✭✭✭suicide_circus


    Its funny anti-discrimination gets referred to as the thought police, the mystical sky friend who apparently determines what cakes one can bake and what ones will land you in eternal hell fire meanwhile....
    The cake wasn't the problem, it was the socio political slogan that conflicted with their admittedly wacky beliefs


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,905 ✭✭✭✭Bob24


    Daith wrote: »
    I'd agree with that also! The issue is with the slogan whereas the proposed bill is about the customer.

    I finally found the proposal of legislation: http://dev.mydup.com/images/uploads/publications/Freedom_of_Conscience_Consultation_Document_Final.pdf

    Looking at it, I don't think what you are saying is correct. The following section seems clearly to contradict the argument saying that the bill would allow to discriminate a gay customer just on the basis that they are gay:

    "Mindful of this my Draft Bill:
    - Would not mean that a n Evangelical grocer would be able to refuse to sell apples to a gay man.
    The selling of apples would not involve the Evangelical grocer being required to
    endorse, promote or facilitate a same-sex sexual relationship in violation of his/her faith identity so there is no conflict.
    - Would not mean that a Muslim printer could refuse to print a brochure publicising coffee tables made by a lesbian cabinet maker.
    The printing of a brochure outlining different coffee table designs would not involve the Muslim printer being required to endorse, promote or facilitate same-sex sexual relationships in violation of his faith identity so there is no conflict.
    - Would not mean that a Catholic photographer could refuse to take a photograph of recipes created by a bisexual chef.
    Taking such photographs would not have the effect of endorsing, promoting or facilitating a same-sex sexual relationship in violation of his or her faith identity so there is no conflict"


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 46,938 ✭✭✭✭Nodin


    It's going to be blocked, afaik, so no need to panic.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,106 ✭✭✭Daith


    Bob24 wrote: »
    - Would not mean that a Catholic photographer could refuse to take a photograph of recipes created by a bisexual chef.
    Taking such photographs would not have the effect of endorsing, promoting or facilitating a same-sex sexual relationship in violation of his or her faith identity so there is no conflict"[/I]

    The photographer could refuse to take pictures of a same sex wedding.

    Would it be okay for a photographer to refuse to take pictures of an interracial wedding? Or at a children's party where the child has a single parent?


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,711 ✭✭✭keano_afc


    Daith wrote: »
    I think you're getting mixed up.

    The bill would allow you not to serve a customer because of your religious beliefs. So you could refuse a customer because they were gay or black or a single mother.

    It actually has nothing to do with the slogan or message printing.

    I think the thread topic is fine but the original post should be less about Ashers and more about the actual bill.

    I fail to see the connection here, can you explain it to me?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,996 ✭✭✭✭gozunda


    no_car wrote: »
    ok , we are now debating the proposed bill , i was refering to the bakers who refused to contribute to a political campaign

    i still dont have a problem with private business refusing to serve certain people , i dont believe the state can perfect society and that this kind of ( over reach ) will completely eradicate prejudice

    ive no desire to impose my will upon people who have a different outlook , the likes of the christian bakery did not go looking for confrontation , confrontation came looking for them

    Well there you are. Your starting point is already flawed. The bakery management refused to bake the cake as the 'order was against their religious beliefs'

    This statement was openly and clearly made by the manager of the bakery in the video carefully put together by a well publicised Christian institute. They make no mention of any 'political campaign' in their statement whatsoever.


    Regarding the second point, the state does have a problem with "private business refusing to serve certain people". Hence why the bakery is in trouble.


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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 7,102 ✭✭✭Stinicker


    Cuban Pete wrote: »
    Who are you to declare what is and is not a religion? Much less classify my beliefs as "mental illness". These are my religious beliefs and I expect them to be respected.

    If, as you say, "The most fundamental human right has been the right to religion and to practice and believe as you wish" then why does the right to life supersede this, when religious belief and practice is the most fundamental right?


    Because human sacrifice is illegal and murder, read the laws.

    The right to life supersecdes religion because you cannot have a situation like where the ISIS are killing all non-beleivers in the name of Islam. The Islamic Koran instructs its followers to kill the infedel, I do not consider this as religion but rather a xenophobic racist hate-group.
    Kiwi in IE wrote: »
    Hence why it's removal from the public sphere is essential to the progress of a modern, equal society.

    The removal of Religion is the removal of ethics and morals from our society and not something to be encouraged or applauded. Should we have a poltiically correct society like in Sweden where they are rewarding Jihadists with Civil Service jobs for killing Christians? Should we accommodate pedophiles?

    The Frankfurt school of Cultural Marxism is responsible for this in an attempt to destroy western society with political correctness and to introduce a left-wing anarchical society in an attempt to finally succeed in their failed global revolution.

    Over the years we have seen this with leftwing idealogies of political correctness, abortion on demand, massive immigration into Europe, declining morals of society, persecution of Judeo-Christian beliefs, feminsim, contraception leading to a demographic crisis, a self-centered greed-driven society, the homosexual agenda, destruction of the core family unit. Masive welfare states leading to dependency.

    I could go on and on but what is the point? People have their beliefs and I might not like them but I respect them and support their right to express their opinions no matter how contradictory to what I myself believe in. All of this is part of a greater decline in Western Society which unless there is major changes soon will see the collapse of Western values and the future in 100 years will be alot different to today unless some strong political figures emerge soon. Ironically it is in the East where Marxism once thrived that the very future of Western Society now lies.


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