They had to take this retarded case all the way to the Supreme Court to figure out that these homosexuals were hostile to an individual because he was religious?
I wonder if these homosexuals had targeted the baker because he was Christian, because we have other incidents of homosexuals doing this to other businesses and trying to cause trouble for them.
I remember a few years ago watching a YouTube video of a homosexual man filming himself driving an hour and a half away to visit a Christian pizza shot and picking up like 10 pizzas for a gay wedding reception, and put it on YouTube just to mock the establishment.
***Edit***
I looked it up and found it.
How the Indiana Pizza Shop Responded After Being Tricked Into ‘Catering’ a Gay WeddingWhen the owners of Memories Pizza—a small-town pizzeria in Indiana—were posed a hypothetical question about whether they would cater a gay wedding last year, the “intolerance” of their simple response that they would not resulted in a threat to burn down their shop.
They did not answer threats with threats, but continued to calmly explain that they would happily serve gay customers; they just didn’t want to be a part of the wedding. Of course, none of this mattered to those not interested in seeking the facts.
It now appears that a man ordered two pizzas from Memories Pizza, without stating his reasons (as is quite normal when ordering pizza), and brought them back to serve at his same-sex wedding. He recorded the event on video and claimed that Memories “catered” his gay wedding—without knowing it.
While the charade itself is sort of childish, it does hold several lessons for us. Let us first consider that, in response to the video, Memories owner Kevin O’Connor has…
Threatened to burn something down? Nope.
Called someone a bigot? Nope.
He’s actually not really too interested in the actions of his customer after selling him the pizza.
So what’s the point?
It is an undisputed fact that Memories Pizza served a man regardless of his sexual relationships. Its owners did not deny him service. They didn’t “turn him away.” They didn’t quiz the man when he came in, asking whether he identified as a homosexual or what he would use the pizza for.
Those truly seeking to understand the conflicts in the “wedding vendor cases” should study what happened here, for they will see that no one involved is interested in simply turning away customers based on how they identify sexually.
People are interested in exercising the teachings of their faith regarding marriage, and in continuing to live quiet and peaceful lives in harmony with their communities, as they have been doing for years.
They haven’t sought a fight; it has come to them.
They closed down just this past April.
The Indiana Pizzeria That Refused to Cater Gay Weddings Has Closed for GoodThe tiny Indiana pizzeria that made national headlines in 2015 after declaring gay weddings couldn’t serve its cheese pies or breadsticks has officially thrown in the towel: The South Bend Tribune reports that a sign out front of Memories Pizza informs patrons that they’ve decided to close. The spot’s notoriety came in the run-up to the Supreme Court’s landmark gay-marriage case: Memories was one of Indiana’s first businesses to publicly refuse to cater gay weddings, precisely what LGBTQ activists feared would happen when then-governor Mike Pence signed the state’s controversial Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
Memories’ owners — Kevin O’Connor and his daughter Crystal — told press at the time that gay people were still within their technical rights to visit their eight-table restaurant in the 2,200-person town of Walkerton. But if the order was intended to celebrate a gay wedding, that would conflict with their Christian beliefs and they’d “have to say no.”
The O’Connors’ stance was met with such derision that the restaurant had to temporarily close.
They got death threats (one local high-school coach was fired for tweeting, “Who’s going to Walkerton with me to burn down Memories Pizza”), Walkerton police were put on constant Memories patrol, and the restaurant quickly became a conservative punching bag: It’s almost inconceivable, for instance, that anyone planned on Memories catering their same-sex wedding, but the O’Connors’ loud objections to the idea inspired at least one gay couple — two comedians — to trick the pizzeria into “accidentally” catering theirs anyway.