Court Upholds Right of Christian Company Not to Print T-Shirts With ‘Gay Pride’ Messa

Angel4Truth

New member
Hall of Fame
Court Upholds Right of Christian Company Not to Print T-Shirts With ‘Gay Pride’ Messages

In the first decision of its kind upholding the rights of a Christian business, an appeals court has ruled that a Christian t-shirt company did not violate the law when it declined to print t-shirts for a local “gay pride” event.

As previously reported, the Gay and Lesbian Services Organization of Lexington (GLSO) had wanted the company Hand On Originals–a company that identifies as “Christian outfitters” on the home page of its website–to print t-shirts for the 2012 Lexington Gay Pride Festival. When manager Blaine Adamson declined the order due to the company’s biblical convictions, GLSO filed a complaint with the Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government Human Rights Commission.

“I want the truth to come out—it’s not that we have a sign on the front door that says, ‘No Gays Allowed,’” owner Blaine Adamson said following the filing of the complaint. “We’ll work with anybody. But if there’s a specific message that conflicts with my convictions, then I can’t promote that.”

During a hearing regarding the matter last June, GSLO representative Aaron Baker admitted to the commission that his desire to force Christians to print pro-homosexual messages works both ways, and that the homosexual companies could be forced to print messages that are against homosexuality.

“I believe that a gay printer would have to print a t-shirt for the Westboro Baptist Church,” he stated, referring to the controversial organization whose messages express a desire for Americans to burn in Hell rather than repent and be saved. “And if the Westboro Baptist Church were to say, ‘Look, we’re a church; we’re promoting our church values by having our name on a T-shirt,’ I don’t see how you could refuse that.”

HRC examiner Greg Munson therefore ruled in October that Hands On Originals violated the law by not printing the shirts for the event. The company was then ordered to undergo diversity training so that it would not decline to print such messages in the future.

But Hands on Originals filed an appeal with the Fayette Circuit Court via its legal counsel, contending that the ruling violated its constitutional right to freedom of religion and its freedom of expression.

No one should be forced by the government to endorse or promote ideas with which they disagree,” Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) Senior Legal Counsel Jim Campbell told reporters. “A book editor or ghostwriter could be forced to write a book advocating messages they find contrary to their convictions based on this ruling.”

On Monday, the circuit court reversed Munson’s ruling, noting that the company regularly does business with homosexuals, and so the decision not to print the shirts was not based on any person’s sexuality, but rather the message that the company would be forced to convey.

“In short, HOO’s (Hands on Originals) declination to print the shirts was based upon the message of GLSO and the Pride Festival and not on the sexual orientation of its representatives or members,” the court wrote in its 16-page decision. “In point of fact, there is nothing in the record before the Commission that the sexual orientation of any individual that had contact with HOO was ever divulged or played any part in this case.”

“The Commission … says that it is not trying to infringe on the constitutional rights of HOO, but is seeking only to have HOO ‘… treat everyone the same.’ Yet, HOO has demonstrated in this record that it has done just that. It has treated homosexual and heterosexual groups the same,” it declared.

The court noted that from 2010-2012 Hands on Originals declined 13 orders from various groups because of the message that was to be printed.

“Those print orders that were refused by HOO included shirts promoting a strip club, pens promoting a sexually explicit video and shirts containing a violence-related message,” it explained. “There is further evidence in the Commission record that it is standard practice within the promotional printing industry to decline to print materials containing messages that the owners do not want to support.”

“Nonetheless, the Commission punished HOO for declining to print messages advocating sexual activity to which HOO and its owners strongly oppose on sincerely held religious grounds,” the court continued. “The Commission’s order substantially burdens HOO’s and its owners’ free exercise of religion, wherein the government punished HOO and its owners by its order for their sincerely held religious beliefs. This is contrary to established constitutional law.”


ADF says that it is pleased with the outcome and is in agreement with the court’s conclusion... read more at link
http://christiannews.net/2015/04/27...ot-to-print-t-shirts-with-gay-pride-messages/

Excellent news! A court that actually follows the constitution.
 

drbrumley

Well-known member
Indeed. And it's also basically exactly what I've been calling for. A business can control its expression, but it can't control who its customers are.

Meaning what? A baker baking a wedding cake for gays....he wouldn't have to right?
 

Jose Fly

New member
Good ruling and it makes sense. As one of the comments noted, there's a fundamental legal difference between a gay couple saying "We'll take cake #4 from your catalog" and a gay pride group saying "We'd like 100 t-shirts that say 'Gay Pride' on them".
 

PureX

Well-known member
You can control what you bake. You just can't control who you bake it for. It's really not complicated.
It's complicated by the fact that these "Christians" want to punish those sinners by refusing to do business with them. It's their way of showing the sinners that they are sinners. And it's their way of making those sinners feel morally inferior. That's really what this is all about, which is why they cannot accept your simple differentiation between controlling the service offered, and controlling who they offer it to.
 

Lighthouse

The Dark Knight
Gold Subscriber
Hall of Fame
I posted about one of these stories on Facebook. The first person to comment is a lesbian. She agreed with me. The very next gay person to comment also agreed with me.:think:
 
Top