This whole issue is a statement - against the right of two men or two women to be married.
(Truncated since the issue isn't a question of how sincere a belief is, just that belief was stated.)
And? People are allowed to make statements without violating the letter of the law. That's not possible to legislate against.
What stopped the couple from getting 'accidentally' endorsed by asking for the cake they wanted, having it made by
the same baker (who apparently volunteered a cake so long as he didn't have to call it wedding) and then using it
in their wedding instead of
requiring it be listed under 'wedding cake' in the bill of sale? The baker knew damn well anything they asked for would resemble their original request but from what I can tell he
didn't refuse to make a cake and call it something else for form's sake; that would have been mentioned.
To me making a cake to be used in a wedding is a wedding cake, no matter what some fool tries to call it so he can still collect moneys for 'getting around' his badly executed belief structure. The letter and not the spirit, imagine that.
I'd think selling them a cake that'll be used in their wedding is
awfully similar to selling them a wedding cake when everyone is aware of particulars. Offering his product when the baker was aware of its intended use is itself a type of endorsement, tho I dunno that any of them have realized it. The 'degrees of separation' is a bit odd because the use of the product, the product itself and the participants sexualities never change, just the title of the product.
They both seem to be making a statement and I'm not real keen on either of 'em at the moment. It'd be difficult to claim that the statement is an unwillingness to provide cake at a gay wedding when he volunteered other cake under a different heading to be (obviously) used
in a wedding. Not impossible to claim, but it's really fucking hard to argue 'No Service' when service was offered.
The only thing I can see that's left is what the baker believes a 'real wedding' is,
not actually providing cake for a gay wedding.
Well, this might be a new concept for some people, but
you can't make someone say they believe in you.
In that vein,
I'm shocked,
shocked I say, that not
one person noted the double standard regardin' accessibility of space in my bathhouse example. It was a good example of
not selling a product because
'definitions don't scan for everyone. The couple still had access to a service - at least it looks like they could've gotten their wedding cake from the guy under other cakely headings. I can't say similar when I asked about entrance policy compared to the squirrelly definition they were using. But for refusing to sell based on the
conception of a definition, it was pretty spot on.
I'm just about positive there's people stupid enough to reply with 'But their belief you don't meet the definition trumps your right to access a public business' which,
entirely by accident I'm sure seems to be the
same argument the baker is using. If queer guys get their own definition of a word, so does everybody else.