SCOTUS Arguments in Anti-Gay Marriage Web Designer’s Case - Ketanji Brown Jackson Is Negress

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Kentaji Brown Jackson Being a Petty Negress
"When Waggoner spoke again, she again tried to work Hamilton into her argument. Jackson again shut Waggoner down, saying “all right, thank you,” as soon as Waggoner mentioned the Pulitzer Prize-winning play."

What a petty little bitch.

The attorney attempts to address Kentanji Brown Jackson point and the Justice just refuse to let the attorney speak.

Fucking Negress!

Utterly unprofessional and unqualified.


The Supreme Court heard oral arguments Monday in 303 Creative, LLC v. Elenis, the case of a Christian web designer who claims she is being “forced” by the state of Colorado to support same-sex marriage.

Lorie Smith is the owner of a Colorado website design company named 303 Creative, LLC. Colorado’s public accommodation law prohibits businesses of public accommodation from refusing to serve patrons because of their sexual orientation. Smith says in court filings that she and her company are “generally willing to create graphics or websites for lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender (‘LGBT’) customers,” but that she “sincerely believes, however, that same-sex marriage conflicts with God’s will.” Therefore, Smith says she plans to refuse to create websites for same-sex couples.

The case initially presented a bit of a procedural wrinkle in that Smith does not currently offer wedding-related services, and that she filed her lawsuit proactively. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit agreed that Smith’s case could move forward despite its early timing, because Smith could reasonably expect to face legal jeopardy under the Colorado law. Ultimately, the 10th Circuit sided with Colorado on the case’s merits and found that the state’s public accommodation law could withstand even the highest level of legal scrutiny.

The court said that Colorado has an interest in protecting LGBTQ individuals from discrimination, and that given Colorado’s history, the risk of discrimination is especially potent in the Centennial State (the 1996 Romer v. Evans struck down an amendment to the Colorado constitution that would have specifically withheld equal protection guarantees to members of the LGBT community).

Chiefly at issue is whether Smith seeks to discriminate based on her prospective clients’ status, or whether she is simply refusing to make an artistic statement with which she disagrees. If Smith’s refusal is deemed status discrimination, it would likely be illegal. On the other hand, if the justices agree that she is merely refusing to make an artistic statement with which she disagrees, she will likely prevail just as did the baker in the 2018Masterpiece Cakeshop, Ltd. v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission.

In that case, SCOTUS sided with a baker whose “sincere religious beliefs” precluded him from baking a cake for a gay couple. The ruling, though, had been a narrow one. The justices said that a custom wedding cake was a protected form of expression under the First Amendment, and that the Colorado Civil Rights Commission (“CCRC”) had been hostile to the baker’s religious beliefs. There is no such argument against the CCRC in the web-design case.

Furthermore, in the Masterpiece Cakeshop decision, then-Justice Anthony Kennedy was clear to point out that the ruling might have been different had the challenged activity been something less creative than baking a custom wedding cake. Smith’s case Monday gives the justices an opportunity to uphold Kennedy’s legacy — or not.

The marathon oral arguments Monday spanned close to three hours. During that time, the number of cringeworthy moments seemed to snowball — perhaps one reason for Justice Neil Gorsuch’s repeated references to the lengthy time frame.

Justice Elena Kagan grilled Smith’s attorney, Kristen Waggoner at length about whether a wedding-website designer is really speaking at all — a line of questioning that ran through the hours of oral argument. Kagan noted that a pair of her current clerks are engaged to be married and said that most wedding websites simply list logistical details about the wedding and tell the couple’s personal story from the couple’s point of view. Nothing in the wording of the website specifically endorses same-sex marriage.

That being the case, “it’s not really the content” Kagan told Waggoner. Kagan went on to remark that the site could promote a wedding of “Mike and Pat,” in which it is unclear whether Pat is a man or a woman.

Justices Ketanji Brown Jackson and Sonia Sotomayor continued along the same logical line, pressing Waggoner repeatedly about how Smith’s website could be considered compelled speech when she is not making any specific statements in her websites.

The first moment that stood out was Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s question for Waggoner. Barrett asked about a hypothetical cisgender heterosexual couple who came to Smith to prepare a website for their own wedding, in which they made an explicit statement that their sexual orientations and identities are “irrelevant to [their] relationship which transcends such categories.”

“Would your client publish that site?” asked the justice, apparently attempting to draw out Waggoner’s argument that her client would object to any messaging with which she disagrees, even if advanced by non-LGBTQ individuals.

Waggoner, however, struggled and answered, “Yes, assuming the marriage is between a man and a woman.”

Barrett continued her questioning and gave Waggoner a boost by presenting another hypothetical, in which a straight couple wanted to publicize their love story which included adultery.

To that, Waggoner regained composure and answered that her client would likely not publish the site, which helped Barrett land on the helpful conclusion: “It’s about the message.”

Later, Justice Jackson introduced a hypothetical that she said would test Waggoner’s suggestion that there’s “something different” if her client were to refuse services to customers based on their race. Jackson asked about a mall photographer who offered customized “Scenes with Santa” photos that sought to recapture nostalgic Christmas scenes from the 1940s and 1950s.

“But precisely because they’re trying to capture feelings of a certain era, they will only take pictures of white children,” Jackson said. She then asked Waggoner, “Why isn’t your argument that they should be able to do that?” — and commenting skeptically, “maybe it is.”

Waggoner then told Jackson that “there is a direct overlap in the musical of Hamilton.”

“In that case, we know they’re expressing a preference for who they are hiring because of race,” Waggoner continued, before Jackson cut her off.

“You’re sort of slipping into a thousand different analogies,” Jackson said.

When Waggoner spoke again, she again tried to work Hamilton into her argument. Jackson again shut Waggoner down, saying “all right, thank you,” as soon as Waggoner mentioned the Pulitzer Prize-winning play. As discussed before with respect to other cases, the Hamilton analogy is not generally useful to analysis of anti-discrimination laws, as those law generally would not apply to casting choices for a musical.

When Colorado Solicitor General Eric Olson took the podium to advocate for the state law, he pointed out that Waggoner stipulated that the Colorado law applied to her client, whereas the same would not be said for artists such as Lin-Manuel Miranda.

Justice Samuel Alito pressed Olson on the limits of his argument, and offered a set of contrasting hypotheticals involving websites for two Jewish people that wished to marry versus a Jewish person marrying a non-Jewish person. The ensuing exchange was noticed.

Following up on his own hypothetical, Alito then asked Olson about a Jewish person asking a photographer to take a photo of him for his “JDate” profile.

A seemingly confused Alito said, “JDate … is a dating service, I gather, for Jewish people.
...
Justice Kagan confirmed, “It is.”

Alito then responded to much courtroom laughter, “Maybe Justice Kagan will also be familiar with the next website I’m going to mention …AshleyMadison[dot]com” — a reference to the dating website that caters to married people seeking affairs.

Alito upped the ante on mall Santas by asking about “Black Santa.”

“If there is a Black Santa at the other end of the mall and he doesn’t want to have his picture taken with a child who is dressed up in a Ku Klux Klan outfit, Black Santa has to do that?” asked the justice.

Olson readily explained that Klan outfits do not constitute “protected characteristics” under the law, making Alito’s hypothetical inapplicable.

Kagan jumped in to clarify that the wearing of Klan outfits would not be protected regardless of whether the wearer were Black or white.

Alito then joked, “You do see a lot of Black children in Ku Klux Klan outfits,” all to raucous (or perhaps nervous?) laughter in the courtroom.
...

Justice Barrett later joined the fray by pitching a hypothetical: What if the New York Times chooses to exclusively highlight gay wedding announcements during Pride month?

Justice Sonia Sotomayor, for her part, remarked that the Supreme Court’s eventual ruling in this case could be the first time in history that SCOTUS rules a business of public accommodation could legally refuse to serve a customer based on race, sex, religion, or sexual orientation.

P.S. I have removed Twitter comments from journoscum that was cited in the article. Removed portions are signified with an ellipsis.
 
I am so sick of this notion that "If you are a business you have to do work for who ever shows up at your door and you have to do whatever they want".

I can't sue a kosher deli becase they wont make me a bacon sandwich.
I can't sue an import car mechanic becase he wont work on my Ford
I don't see why bakers are forced in to making homo wedding cakes or why this lady cant refuse to make a web page becase she doesn't feel like it.

There is no freedom of association unless there is freedom of disassociation.
We need an amendment to the constitution that says "You have the right to refuse service to anyone."

Forcing people to serve customers becase they are a "protected race" was stupid enough.
Has there ever been a case where a minority has had to pay damages to a white person?
As bad as that is extending special protections based on who you screw is even worse.

There is no blood test for being a homo.
DNA can't tell you who isn't and isn't a pillow biter.
This leads me to believe it is a behavior.

Cleveland Clinic refuses to hire smokers.
One of the reasons is they run up insurance cost.
Sounds like a great reason to refuse to hire homosexual men.
However that is already illegal.

What if you are a doll fucker?
Do they have to hire you then?
Would this lady have to make a webpage for a man marrying his real doll?
Or is it only deviances practiced by members of the court that are protected?




They don't need to.

Muslim bakeries refuse to make homo cakes and the law wont get involved.

Who is a much bigger issue than what anymore.
It's very simple.

Their tools > your rights.
 
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Like if the KKK wanted to hire a Jewish web designer, would the Jew be obligated to design a site for them?
The argument would be "You are a Jew by birth, KKK is just a belief you can decide to stop believing, therefore it is ok to discriminate against KKK but not Jews. because one is an immutable characteristic."
Unfortunately for immutability as standard, religious protections exist, which would imply that the limiting line for constitutional anti-discrimination protection is not birth, but belief that is sufficiently ingrained in a person as to be "religious."

Your honor I put forward that this KKK member's beliefs are sufficiently ingrained through birthplace, culture, and association to be constitutionally protected from discrimination as freedom of religion.
 
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Just once, can't they get a Muslim to stand up for these cases? This would get shut down real quick.
i agree with this point & taking bet this is a gay-op to turn around the win of the bake the cake you bigot person .

we keep digging on how far do we have to do work for leafiest morality police trolls.
 
What's stopping the cake shops from making shitty cakes for the faggots?

plain cake with "happy marriage adam and steve" in cheap dollar store icing. Is that discrimination too?
 
“But precisely because they’re trying to capture feelings of a certain era, they will only take pictures of white children,” Jackson said. She then asked Waggoner, “Why isn’t your argument that they should be able to do that?” — and commenting skeptically, “maybe it is.”
If you can do it for Hamilton, you should be able to do it for your "Ein Volk, Ein Reich, Ein Fuhrer!" photography collection, no?

Or is this another case of "we don't pay attention to those rules when it's niggers or women"?
 
The argument would be "You are a Jew by birth, KKK is just a belief you can decide to stop believing, therefore it is ok to discriminate against KKK but not Jews. because one is an immutable characteristic."
Unfortunately for immutability as standard, religious protections exist, which would imply that the limiting line for constitutional anti-discrimination protection is not birth, but belief that is sufficiently ingrained in a person as to be "religious."

Your honor I put forward that this KKK member's beliefs are sufficiently ingrained through birthplace, culture, and association to be constitutionally protected from discrimination as freedom of religion.
There are actual white supremacist religions, like the World Church of the Creator which, essentially, worships the concept of being white.
 
Fringe "religions" with limited followings area generally regarded as cults and have much lower constitutional protection.
They've been around for long enough that they can argue that it's a bona fide religious belief without a major issue. It's a strange religion, but it's not less of a religion than, say, Scientology, Falun Gong, or the Moonies.

In this case, it's a bit irrelevant, though. The distinction I think the attorneys should want to make is that producing a marriage website is an artistic project, not mechanically substituting their names into a WordPress template. The company bringing the suit trapped themselves here - they haven't tried to create anything yet, so they can't explain what creative work they do on these projects easily. Religion is only brought into it because religion is the source of the belief that the artist does not want to express.

Kagan's example of the mall Santa is a very strange construction that tries to attack this sort of argument; the mall Santa is soliciting clients and then cherry-picking them to produce an image, but being a mall Santa is largely a mechanical action.
 
They've been around for long enough that they can argue that it's a bona fide religious belief without a major issue. It's a strange religion, but it's not less of a religion than, say, Scientology, Falun Gong, or the Moonies.

In this case, it's a bit irrelevant, though. The distinction I think the attorneys should want to make is that producing a marriage website is an artistic project, not mechanically substituting their names into a WordPress template. The company bringing the suit trapped themselves here - they haven't tried to create anything yet, so they can't explain what creative work they do on these projects easily. Religion is only brought into it because religion is the source of the belief that the artist does not want to express.

Kagan's example of the mall Santa is a very strange construction that tries to attack this sort of argument; the mall Santa is soliciting clients and then cherry-picking them to produce an image, but being a mall Santa is largely a mechanical action.
How many members in Canada and United States (doubt this nutter bullshit would have any traction in Europe). There is a case from the 70s where a bunch of nutter who believed that consumption of canned cat food was conducive to their spiritual betterment was found to be a cult.

All the hypothetical by the libs were absurd and ham fisted. Those people are not as bright as they think. Egan is a beneficiary of nepotism and Jewish privilege, Sotomayor and Jackson from having brown and black skin.

A much better soltuion--a small to midsize privately held company owned by an individual or company should have the right to refuse service for any reason. That included black owned businesses that don't want to serve whitey.
 
I don't understand why someone would want to hire someone who hates them to provide a service for them.
It's about causing harm to others.

IIRC the whole "bake the cake" shit with that one bakery was orchestrated by a corrupt gay activist group that explicitly called up several dozen bakeries to find one that wouldn't bake a gay wedding cake purely to sue the bakery into oblivion as a sadistic as fuck power flex designed to "send a message" to the masses over "who the new masters of the world were".
 
Man, I remember when this was a slippery slope circa 2015 and how LGBT people insisted all they wanted was marriage.
Now we have web designers being sued, kids getting transitioned, and an uppity negress occupying the highest court in the land who doesn't know what a woman is.

Since Congress codified same sex marriage, opposing it makes you an enemy of the state now.
 
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