Not unless he licenses and advertises it as such, which means as a private co-op or club.
I think you are talking out of pure ignorance here, I've owned businesses in three states and not one of them has asked me to disclose whether I was doing business as a Christian, Buddhist, Muslim, etc...
Maybe you are thinking of Nazi Germany where Jewish Business were required to "register" with the government as such.
PureX said:
Commercial law makes that determination, as created and supported by the vast majority of your fellow citizens.
First, commercial law in Nazi Germany certainly did make that determination. No so much here....yet.
Second, the first amendment isn't a matter of public opinion.
Third, why is it that majority rule is great when it advances the liberal social agenda but when it doesn't they turn to the judiciary.
:think:
PureX said:
I know their will doesn't count for anything...
Not when it comes to curtailing religious liberty, nope, it sure doesn't.
PureX said:
to the mighty-righteous Christian, especially when they're busy passing God's mighty judgment on all mankind,
this is a textbook case of the kind of deflection used by those who want to tell everyone how to think while pointing fingers at those whom they consider "judgmental."
PureX said:
but nevertheless, they are that "we the people" that determined how commerce is to be conducted in their own land.
Unless those laws of commerce infringe on individual religious liberty, in which case those who pay attention to the First Amendment will realize that the reason it is there in the first place is to protect individual religious liberty against "mob rule."
PureX said:
Yes, I know. These Christians think they're the physical embodiment of God's right hand, and yet they live in a society that just won't accept their mighty judgments!
Translation: Yes, I know that the bible says that homosexuality is wrong, and that same sex marriages are perverted, but I don't care...
PureX said:
No, you don't. You don't even have to bake gay guys a wedding cake.
So you agree that religious freedom should guarantee the right for a "christian" baker to turn down baking a cake for a gay wedding, right?
Well then why didn't you just say so...
:chuckle:
Somehow I don't think that this is what you mean...
PureX said:
You just don't get to lie and cheat people...
Lie?
A man who says, "no thanks, I don't do gay weddings because I find them morally objectionable" is not lying, he is telling the truth.
It would be a lie to say, "wonderful, I would be happy to bake a cake for your celebration."
Cheat?
Whose getting cheated?
Move on and find someone who will happily bake your cake.
Now comes the tired old accusation...
PureX said:
because you think you're morally superior to them.
:yawn:
Christians don't believe we are morally superior,
we believe that God is, and that He has the right to tell to sexual perverts to repent and to tell the followers of His Son not to participate in the deeds of darkness.