• Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!

Web designers vs Hom0se/uals

37818

Well-Known Member
Wouldn't her rights as a website designer be protected under the first amendment of our U.S. Constitution?
 

Bible Thumpin n Gun Totin

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
It was never enough for the BLT crowd to have gay mirage. They need to have approval from Christians to assuage their sin guilt. Approval comes in the form of cakes, websites, and diversity HR groups.

The entire culture war can be boiled down to Christians and their cobelligerents vs Humanists and other warped believers (like woke Christians).

The Christian side refuses to call evil good, while the Humanist side demands it. And once the Humanists get what they want on a current issue, they move onto the next issue. They point at the next issue and tell Christians to say that it's not sin and the cycle begins again. It's quite demonic.

An interesting observation is that this tidal wave of evil coming out of the Humanist side is causing Protestant Christians to have some sort of rapprochement with Conservative Catholics, which feels very weird considering the theological gulf between the two groups. I suppose since we're both getting shot at from the same direction we might as well work together to squash it.
 

JonC

Moderator
Moderator
Wouldn't her rights as a website designer be protected under the first amendment of our U.S. Constitution?
Probaly not. They'd probably look at it like running a business but discriminating against homosexuals (which now equates ti discrimination against race, religion, ect).

I think there'd be a stronger case if they only offered a Christian specific product (make the "might" have Scripture to "will" have Scripture).

Better yet, don't be a business that provides services to the public in general (work with churches).
 

Salty

20,000 Posts Club
Administrator
Just wondering?
Suppose a female lawyer who specializes - say in Divorce - will only take on female clients.
Would she have a right to do so?

Are there any other professionals who have a "right" to accept only certain clients

I did find this on Quora - NOTE: this is not legal advice -
I did find this:

hard is it to open a man only gym?
Incredibly hard. The only reason for doing this is if you have absolutely no regard for your safety or public appearance. Anything that excludes women is essentially a game over for your business and life. On the other hand, Women only gyms are suprisingly not regulated by discrimination laws.



Then I found this
Jennifer Ellis
·
Follow
I'm a lawyer in PA, USA. Nothing I write is legal advice.
There are circumstances under which it is legal to have a business which refuses to serve people based on gender. Some golf clubs, for example, refuse to serve women. There are some fitness clubs which serve only women, though many of those have gotten in trouble.

Such places must conform with the law to be entirely private organizations or clubs. Private Clubs That Aren't Private Under the Law
 
Top