The Supreme Court Has Another Chance to Save the First Amendment

POLITICS & POLICY
Lorie Smith, owner and founder of 303 Creative. (Courtesy Alliance Defending Freedom)
The Lorie Smith case gives SCOTUS a chance to reaffirm that we don’t coerce people to say things — or refrain from saying things — in ways that violate their conscience.




NRPLUS MEMBER ARTICLE

S
imply because a person engages in a commercial interaction doesn’t give that person the right to compel others to say things that violate their conscience. If it does, then the First Amendment is useless.

Colorado is notorious for manipulating public-accommodation laws to coerce speech and punish thought crimes. The state’s most famous victim is Jack Phillips, the man who refused to create a specialized cake for the marriage ceremony of a same-sex couple (before gay marriage was even legalized) because of his religious objections. Phillips’s decade-long, and ongoing, struggle against the imperious bigots of the Colorado Civil Rights Commission, and their

To Read the Full Story

Articles You May Like

Howard University cancels graduation mid-ceremony after angry family members pound on doors and break window
Young woman fights back against alleged carjackers who pistol-whipped her in Michigan parking lot: ‘Something in me snapped’
Illegals make list of demands for FREE ‘culturally appropriate food,’ housing, and immigration lawyers
Bill Gates Wants a Vaccine to Stop Cow Farts, Save Planet From So-Called Climate Change
Polish spy master claims Russia planning to test NATO response by INVADING neighboring countries

Leave a Comment - No Links Allowed:

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *