eaglesdare
Member
- Country
England
Olympic level logic chopping.
The Supreme Court and the ECHR disagreed. Case closed.
Perhaps it's time to leave the ECHR now 🤭🤭🤭
England
Olympic level logic chopping.
The Supreme Court and the ECHR disagreed. Case closed.
Olympic level log chopping, i'm a lumberjack and i don't care!Olympic level logic chopping
The Supreme Court and the ECHR disagreed. Case closed.
Scotland
Go Dutch and try clog hopping.Olympic level log chopping, i'm a lumberjack and i don't care!
England
The owners were known to hold particular views so were targeted by political activists in an effort to expose them. Which they did. The fact that a Court ruled in the shop’s favour doesn’t change that. What it does is highlight the need to clarify the law so if it happened again they could not refuse.
The shop owners don’t have to make cakes with political messages. They don’t have to make any special cakes. They can just offer standard ones with a restricted list of messages. If though they offer to put a customer’s message on a cake they cannot impose their politics on the customer. The message isn’t theirs. They are the craftsmen.
England
They did refuse to sell him the cake! They might have been prepared to sell him an alternative but not the one they had contracted to make.
Any baker, whatever their religious beliefs, or none, who offers to make cakes to the customer’s specification, accepts an order but then refuses for any reasons other than technical impossibility or force majeure would face the same problems here. In majority Muslim countries things may well be different.
England
Secondly, asking anyone to produce something with the phrase “Support Gay Marriage” isn’t illegal. It’s campaigning. The same applies to printers producing signs or posters. Not just cake bakers. The cake, and its message, wasn’t theirs. Only the ingredients and their time were. If you cannot separate your personal beliefs from your duties to your customers then you ought not be in business. Whether it was Mr Lee’s sexuality or the message that caused the refusal it was still discriminatory.
I know what the SC held. It is very convoluted and spends a lot of time on the earlier judgements and whether the Courts followed correct procedures. Yes, the Asher’s bakery’s rights to hold opinions are considered under the Convention but their judgement turned much more on whether, under NI law, discrimination was proven. With this being very specifically defined this was the weakness that the Asher’s Barrister exploited and what has shown that the current law is inadequate to deal with this kind of discrimination.
England
England
My African wife inspired me to vote Reform with her, the last general election.have so far had 3 letters from reform with farages gormless tortoise face on, funny enough my african neighbour has had the same!
England
My African wife inspired me to vote Reform with her, the last general election.
I won't be voting for the new Tories in this one. Maybe I'll vote restore if they promise not to send my family home. Lol
England
I don't in a million years believe that Rupert Lowe is some kind of Steve Laws idiot.You married her, so no, that won't be happening.
England
I don't in a million years believe that Rupert Lowe is some kind of Steve Laws idiot.
I do however think some of his supporters would want the Steve laws approach.
Unfortunately this happens.
Many people were too stupid and emotional to understand Tommy Robinson in his earlier days and projected their own ignorance onto him.
They will do the same with Lowe.
I've seen some conservative podcasters like the lotus eaters and jolly heretic being very sympathetic to Steve Laws. That was unfortunate.
We have to a least try and get on. Deporting millions will not only not work, but will be impossible to implement.
England
This case was closed but the argument that lies behind it is alive and kicking. It might not be the most pressing of issues but it will be corrected in time.Olympic level logic chopping.
The Supreme Court and the ECHR disagreed. Case closed.
USA
Scotland
Because there were no merits to the case. Would you expect a gay baker to produce a cake endorsing anti-gay sentiment?This case was closed but the argument that lies behind it is alive and kicking. It might not be the most pressing of issues but it will be corrected in time.
Actually the ECHR said nothing about the merits of the case. They ruled it inadmissible because their procedures weren’t followed.
England
Well if you look at the context etc 🤦🤦🤦Because there were no merits to the case. Would you expect a gay baker to produce a cake endorsing anti-gay sentiment?
England
The ECHR said nothing on the case. The just ruled they couldn’t hear it.Because there were no merits to the case. Would you expect a gay baker to produce a cake endorsing anti-gay sentiment?
England
Accepting work for reward is optional is it not ?The ECHR said nothing on the case. The just ruled they couldn’t hear it.
Yes, I expect everyone, whatever their personal views, who offers a service not to discriminate between customers or messaging. They are not connected in any way to the finished product or any message on it. They are accepting work for reward.
I would no more expect a gay baker to produce their own cake endorsing anti-gay sentiment than I would the fundamentalist Christian bakers to produce their own cake promoting gay marriage. I do though expect both to honour offers made that are not specifically limited. Any cakes made by them in such circumstances are not theirs and if they are incapable of separating personal beliefs from commercial obligations they ought not be in the business.
Scotland
The Supreme Court said, “nobody should be forced to have or express a political opinion in which he does not believe”.The ECHR said nothing on the case. The just ruled they couldn’t hear it.
Yes, I expect everyone, whatever their personal views, who offers a service not to discriminate between customers or messaging. They are not connected in any way to the finished product or any message on it. They are accepting work for reward.
I would no more expect a gay baker to produce their own cake endorsing anti-gay sentiment than I would the fundamentalist Christian bakers to produce their own cake promoting gay marriage. I do though expect both to honour offers made that are not specifically limited. Any cakes made by them in such circumstances are not theirs and if they are incapable of separating personal beliefs from commercial obligations they ought not be in the business.
England
Because there were no merits to the case. Would you expect a gay baker to produce a cake endorsing anti-gay sentiment?