“I was mistaken on this one. I had thought that it was merely a pastor who was being persecuted here, I didn’t know that he was also a government-appointed marriage commissioner. Not that this justifies anything and the Canadian government’s actions were, as usual, pure evil in this regard. This case just wasn’t quite as sensational as the cases that I have posted below which show an even more scary side of Canada that will soon be a reality for Americans if the gay agenda continues unchallenged.
Remember, Canada legalized gay “marriage” in 2005… Maybe this will be what the US looks like in a few years.”
It already is. For instance, if a justice of the peace’s religion requires them to oppose interracial marriage, they would have to go against those religious beliefs in their job. However, I am guessing you mean that it will look like this just for people who oppose same-sex marriage.
If the government would ban same-sex marriage just for the sole purpose of protecting those who oppose it, then it must also ban interracial marriage just for the sole purpose of those that oppose it. The government is not allowed to put one religion above another, that would be respecting the establishment of a state religion.
Anyway, none of the issues you pointed to concern gay marriage in the least.
- Hate speech fliers. Hate speech is legal in America, first of all. Second of all, even if you are worried about hate speech being criminalized (which would require a constitutional amendment, since the Supreme Court has consistently ruled against banning it), it has nothing to do with legalizing same-sex marriage. Hate speech could be banned while same-sex marriage is still illegal, or same-sex marriage could be allowed while hate speech is still allowed.
- This has nothing to do with same-sex marriage being legalized. Two people standing next to each other and saying “we are married” is not illegal anywhere in this country. And if you rent out a reception hall, you are not allowed to discriminate against whom you will rent it to, even if they are just two people who want to stand up in there and claim they are married. Legalizing same-sex marriage does not affect that in any way. Any person, or organization, that provides a public service is not allowed to discriminate based on race, gender, age, creed, or sexual orientation.
- Private organizations in the US have always been allowed to act as they please. Look at the boy scouts, who have won supreme court decisions allowing them to ban gay people (discrimination which, according to the Church, is immoral). Canada is not the US, they have different laws than we do, and this always has been and always will be illegal.
- Whether or not people in the US can speak negatively against homosexuals has nothing to do with whether or not same-sex marriage is legal.
“I wish this were true, but the daily news makes it clear that it is not”
So will the Church be forced to marry atheists?
If so, shouldn’t we make marriage between atheists illegal?