Sultan Knish
What do a reality show star, a cakemaker and a photographer have in
common? They're all victims of a political system in which the mandate
to not merely recognize gay marriage, but to celebrate it, has
completely displaced freedom of speech.
The
issues at stake in all three cases did not involve the Orwellian
absurdity of "Marriage Equality". The cases of a Christian cakemaker and
a Christian photographer whom state courts have ruled must participate
in gay weddings or face fines and jail time were blatant violations of
both Freedom of Speech and Freedom of Religion in the name of outlawing
any dissent from gay marriage.
That is why Phil Robertson of Duck
Dynasty was suspended. Robertson, unlike Bashir, didn't take to the air
to make violent threats against an individual. He expressed in plain
language that he believes homosexuality is wrong. And that is something
that you aren't allowed to do anymore.
The left sneers that
A&E isn't subject to Freedom of Speech because it's a private
company. And they're right. But then they insist that a cakemaker and a
photographer aren't protected by Freedom of Speech or Religion because
they're private businesses.
In their constitutional universe,
companies have the right to punish speech in the name of gay rights, but
not to engage in protected speech in dissent from gay rights. And
that's exactly the problem. It's not just gays who have been made into a
protected class, but homosexuality itself. To dissent from it is
bigotry that you can be fired for, fined for and even jailed for.
Gay rights were not settled by legalizing gay marriage. We are facing an ugly choice between freedom of speech and gay rights.
In
these three cases, gay rights activists have made it clear that we can
have one or the other. But we can't have a country where we have both
gay weddings and people who disagree with them.
And that's
unfortunate because even the most generous interpretation of the
benefits of two men marrying each other would struggle to prove that it
is more beneficial to a society than the ability to speak your own mind
and to practice your own religion without being compelled to violate it.
If
we have to choose between gay rights and the First Amendment, the moral
arc of the universe that liberals like to invoke so often will not
swing toward the bullies who insist on dealing with their self-esteem
problems by forcing everyone to consent and approve of their lifestyle.
Gay
marriage was sold to Americans by cunningly crafted "gay families" on
popular sitcoms. Now Americans are discovering that real gay activists
aren't friendly people who just want to make jokes between commercial
breaks, but are neurotic and insecure bullies who attack others from
behind the safety of the politicians that they bribed with the massive
disposable incomes that comes from not having families or long-term
relationships.
Most Americans still believe that homosexuality,
adultery and a range of other deviant sexual behaviors are sins. They
also, like Phil Robertson, believe that disapproving of a behavior does
not mean rejecting the person. That's where they part company with gay
activists who are unable to tolerate Phil Robertson as a person if they
are also unable to tolerate his opinion of their sexual habits.
The
American tolerance for things like homosexuality comes from a mindset
that is a lot closer to Phil Robertson than it is to Barack Obama. It's
that very Phil Robertson attitude which allows Americans to disapprove
of homosexuality, while accepting that homosexuals should have spaces
for expressing their need for political identity ceremonies. That
tolerance led to civil unions and then gay marriage. And that tolerance
has been woefully abused.
Americans are far more tolerant of
sexual misbehavior than they are of people trying to take away their
civil rights. And that is something that gay rights activists need to
consider carefully.
American
tolerance for homosexuality is not a blank check. It's not the
"progressive" endgame that the left believes it is in which tolerance
for a thing is mistaken for the Stalinist willingness to punish dissent
from that very thing.
When ordinary Americans talk about tolerance, they mean tolerance. When the left talks about tolerance, it means intolerance.
Now
the gay rights movement, which is just another pimple on the bony arm
of the left, is showing its true colors. It is showing that its calls
for tolerance are really mandates for intolerance.
It isn't
looking for public spaces in which to be gay, but the elimination of
public and even private spaces that reject homosexuality. It's not gay
rights that we are talking about, but gay mandates.
If Americans
are forced to choose between Freedom of Speech, Freedom of Religion and
gay rights; the Pajama Boys of America may not like which way they will
vote.
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