A fundraiser for the owners of an Indiana pizzeria that became the target of widespread animosity after they said they wouldn't cater a same-sex wedding reception has collected more than $828,000 from anonymous donors.A GoFundMe page started by a producer from The Blaze, a conservative news network founded by Glenn Beck, has drawn more than 28,500 donors."The intent was to help the family stave off the burdensome cost of having the media parked out front, activists tearing them down, and no customers coming in. Our goal was simply to help take one thing off this family's plate as the strangers sought to destroy them," wrote Lawrence Jones, a producer who works for Blaze personality Dana Loesch. "But other strangers came to the rescue and the total just keeps going up."
Except they didn't say they'd refuse to serve gays. They said they wouldn't cater specifically to gay weddings.
I await Mordo, Turkey, aTallMidget, and Meta.
LOL I should come over to America. Open up a lemonade stand and refuse service to gays, brown people and women. I'd be cool with a tenth of that donation.
So, yeah, they would refuse service to gays.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on April 04, 2015, 02:57:21 PMExcept they didn't say they'd refuse to serve gays. They said they wouldn't cater specifically to gay weddings.But they would do a hetero wedding. Their objection isn't to catering weddings - it's to catering gay weddings.So, yeah, they would refuse service to gays.
Quote from: Mad Max on April 04, 2015, 04:50:33 PMQuote from: Meta Cognition on April 04, 2015, 02:57:21 PMExcept they didn't say they'd refuse to serve gays. They said they wouldn't cater specifically to gay weddings.But they would do a hetero wedding. Their objection isn't to catering weddings - it's to catering gay weddings.So, yeah, they would refuse service to gays.how DARE they have beliefs that they want to hold true to. I bet if they had beliefs as to not serve for hetero weddings you'd be all fine and dandy with their decision, because as long as they are only racist to the white man, or sexist to the man, or heterophobic, it isn't bigoted in your eyes, is it? the whole point that they were making was that people should have the right to refuse whatever kind of person they like, but just because that person is gay, or black, or a woman, suddenly they're run out of business because a bunch of bigots can't handle their beliefs.
As usual, I gotta point out that there's a significant difference between donating because you hate gay people, and donating to keep a small business afloat that was the subject of a mudslinging campaign in the media because of an isolated incident that is actually protected on a federal level and supported by the Supreme Court in other states.Also, holy shit, I just realized I have experienced something similar to this exact situation. I hadn't thought of bringing it up before because I didn't think it was unreasonable. No doubt some will call BS on this, but whatever. When I was finding a caterer for my wedding, we first approached a small business run by a lesbian couple. Theirs was one of my favorite restaurants, and I thought my friends would appreciate going to a local business for it (most of my friends, despite being Christians, are staunch liberals). They were initially really hesitant to do it because it was at a Christian church, and eventually they gave a price quote, but it was unreasonably high. It was basically an indirect way of telling us they didn't want our business. I was totally cool with that, and we went with another caterer. It wasn't because I was Christian, it's because they didn't want to cater for an organization that they viewed as unwelcoming. It's not exactly apples to apples, but I still find it funny how cliche it ended up being.
what if
Quote from: Not Comms Officer on April 04, 2015, 05:26:00 PMwhat ifThere are millions of ways to make a situation that fits an argument. There are so many hypothetical scenarios of Christian bakers refusing a gay wedding, when in reality there are definitely legitimate ideological reasons to not want to do something for some group. Regardless, this bill doesn't even cover the ubiquitous bakery example anyway, I'm just providing an anecdotal counterpoint.
Quote from: Mega Sceptile on April 04, 2015, 05:04:11 PMQuote from: Mad Max on April 04, 2015, 04:50:33 PMQuote from: Meta Cognition on April 04, 2015, 02:57:21 PMExcept they didn't say they'd refuse to serve gays. They said they wouldn't cater specifically to gay weddings.But they would do a hetero wedding. Their objection isn't to catering weddings - it's to catering gay weddings.So, yeah, they would refuse service to gays.how DARE they have beliefs that they want to hold true to. I bet if they had beliefs as to not serve for hetero weddings you'd be all fine and dandy with their decision, because as long as they are only racist to the white man, or sexist to the man, or heterophobic, it isn't bigoted in your eyes, is it? the whole point that they were making was that people should have the right to refuse whatever kind of person they like, but just because that person is gay, or black, or a woman, suddenly they're run out of business because a bunch of bigots can't handle their beliefs.No, if they refused service to hetero weddings, they'd probably have their establishment torched to the ground. I have no idea why you think that private business should have the right to discriminate against minorities....
it isn't discrimination, at all. discrimination is denying a basic, needed service to someone when there is no other option for them, refusing to serve a wedding that the owner feels isn't right isn't fucking discrimination.
Quote from: Mad Max on April 04, 2015, 04:50:33 PMSo, yeah, they would refuse service to gays.No. They would serve two gay men if they walked into their restaurant. They wouldn't cater a ceremony they feel is conflicting with their beliefs. Like, you might serve a skinhead, but you wouldn't cater their cross-burnings.
Memories Pizza has never discriminated against homosexual people as individuals. They just don't cater to gay weddings.
And yeah, just to add a little addendum, people were threatening to burn down the business simply for having the gall not to cater to a specific wedding.
Quote from: Madman Mordo on April 04, 2015, 09:20:25 PMMemories Pizza has never discriminated against homosexual people as individuals. They just don't cater to gay weddings.You don't see the conflict between these two sentences? Who do you think attends gay weddings?
Memories Pizza do not discriminate against gay people as individuals, which is what the left would like to you believe.
Quote from: Madman Mordo on April 04, 2015, 09:28:42 PMMemories Pizza do not discriminate against gay people as individuals, which is what the left would like to you believe....unless those individuals are getting married.
Quote from: Mad Max on April 04, 2015, 09:30:20 PMQuote from: Madman Mordo on April 04, 2015, 09:28:42 PMMemories Pizza do not discriminate against gay people as individuals, which is what the left would like to you believe....unless those individuals are getting married.And at the end of the day, that's the business' loss, not theirs. There are plenty of other wedding caterers out there that serve gay marriages. It's kind of what we call a free market.
Quote from: Madman Mordo on April 04, 2015, 09:32:07 PMQuote from: Mad Max on April 04, 2015, 09:30:20 PMQuote from: Madman Mordo on April 04, 2015, 09:28:42 PMMemories Pizza do not discriminate against gay people as individuals, which is what the left would like to you believe....unless those individuals are getting married.And at the end of the day, that's the business' loss, not theirs. There are plenty of other wedding caterers out there that serve gay marriages. It's kind of what we call a free market.Right, which is great. But to say that Memories doesn't/wouldn't discriminate against gays is disingenuous, given that they've publicly stated they would not cater a gay wedding.If catering a wedding wasn't something they did - fine. But if they would cater a straight wedding but not a gay wedding, that's different.