>> Earlier in the thread I listed many, many exercises of legislation to discriminate against Christian groups and businesses.
> Could you please include them here, I can't find them.
Sure. These are just SOME of what has happened, but enough to give a picture.
In 2011, InterVarsity Christian Fellowship (IVCF) groups around the country were excluded from college campuses because they had leadership policies requiring that leaders follow Christian principles. Even though they were minding their own business, they were chased off campuses by the LGBTQ+ groups. They had done nothing to vilify or legislate against LGBT.
In 2012 & 2013, bakers in CO (Jack Philipps) & OR (the Kleins) were sued and fined for not making a specific cake for a gay couple. They had not vilified or legislated, but they took them to court and they were fined.
In 2016, the US Commission on Civil Rights vilified Christians, churches, and ministries as discriminatory, intolerant, racism sexist, homophobic, Islamophobic, and supremacist.
In 2017, the SPLC labeled churches and Christian organization as "hate groups." Mark Potok (a former SPLC spokesman) said he wanted to "destroy these groups, completely destroy them." These churches and ministries are neither vilifying nor legislating anything or anybody.
In Feb, 2018, the University of Central Oklahoma, where Drag Queen shows and safe sex carnivals are welcome on campus, refused to let Ken Ham speak about creationism. The LGBT activists got his invitation disapproved. His speech was to be on Genesis, not gay issues. There was not going to be any vilifying or legislating. (Disclaimer: I don't agree with Ken Ham, either, but he should be free to speak.)
Feb, 2018. A Christian couple in Edmonton, Alberta, were turned down for adopting a child because they believe in the Bible and for not fully endorsing LGBT values and practices. They had done nothing to vilify or legislate.
Feb 2018. A student organization at Harvard Univ. was placed on probation because they believe in traditional marriage. They had done or said nothing to vilify or legislate, and yet they were told they give "hate a platform." There had been no hate.
May 2018. A motivational speaker at a high school in Michigan was disparaged because his website said he was Christian. On that basis alone he was tossed out.
June 2018. The IVCF group at the Univ of Iowa was kicked off campus for requiring leaders to be Christians. They were tossed off by the LGBT community.
June 2018. A Christian high school teacher in Brownsberg, IN, was forced to resign when he refused to call transgender students by their chosen names instead of—as had been his policy for years—to call all students by their last names. Is this vilifying transgendered students? I don't think so.
June 2018. The Canadian govt refuses to recognize a Christian lawyer because he believes in traditional marriage. He had said or done nothing to vilify or legislate. The govt also refused Trinity Western Univ the right to start a law school because of LGBT activists. The school had not vilified or legislated anything.
Nov 2018: a Christian student senator at UC Berkeley was harassed for abstaining from a pro-LGBTQ vote. She was harassed by the LGBT community and called hateful because she said, "I don't discriminate against anyone, but I'll abstain from this vote."
June 2019. The CA legislature promoted a bill (ACR 99) to force pastors to embrace pro-LGBTQ ideology.
July 2019. A speaker who was a Christian was disinvited from speaking at a conference about graphics designing.
July 2019: A private Christian school in CA is being forced to shut down because it is not 100% accepting of all same-sex relationship.
Sept 2019: Young Life voted off of Duke Campus because of LGBTQ.
> Oh, you're citing a specific case where the wording on the cake was at issue? Hmm. I'm not sure how I feel about that. Could you provide a link so we can see exactly what the circumstances were?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lzI5KTRt-qIhttps://www.newsweek.com/colorado-baker ... te-1077250There are plenty of articles out there if you want to investigate it.
> It doesn't sound like there was anything vulgar, sounds like he's discriminating because it's for a gay couple. I think that's wrong. If he doesn't want to make cakes as a business, for everyone, then he should not be in the cake making business. On the surface, this is simple discrimination.
I don't think the message they wanted was vulgar; it was just contrary to his religious beliefs. In a case where one discrimination (against a gay couple) clashes with another discrimination (freedom of religion and religious expression), the courts decided that discrimination against religion was a higher discrimination than that against the gay couple. As I mentioned before, the Bill of Rights supersedes civil rights. The couple could easily go to another shop to get their cake; they chose instead to sue and harass Philipps.
> Not sure if you're trying to be insulting by making this assumption or not.
Oh, no, I'm not trying to be insulting at all. Instead, I was aiming at trying to be emphatic. Sorry if that attempt failed.
> when I was a kid and through my teens, I was an asshole to gays or anyone else who I thought was different. I just didn't have a bible to justify it, so I grew out of it.
Whoa, this is harsh. The Bible doesn't justify treating people poorly. As a matter of fact, it says just the opposite: "Love those who mistreat you." "Love your enemy." "Do good to all people."
> to be so confident that you know what this god wants
That's what the Bible is: God's revelation of Himself and what He wants. What he wants is a love relationship with you, and with all humans. He wants to set you free from the sins and enslave you and are killing you, and bring you into a place of goodness, peace, and harmony with Him.
> when you can't even reliably demonstrate that this god even exists.
This is a completely different conversation.