Ben Lowenthal: Supreme Court Ruling In Same-Sex Wedding Case Sets A Dangerous Precedent
Using the First Amendment as an excuse to discriminate is nothing new.
July 14, 2023 · 6 min read
About the Author
Using the First Amendment as an excuse to discriminate is nothing new.
A wedding these days can call for a variety of businesses and vendors to create the perfect day.
Photographers, catering companies, musicians, bakers and florists are just some of the artisans usually hired for an event. It can cost a fortune. Planning the event may take a year or several months. On top of that, Hawaii is often marketed as a desired destination combining tourism with the wedding industrial complex.
It鈥檚 tragic and ironic that the Supreme Court of the United States used this industry 鈥 an industry that is supposed to celebrate love and commitment 鈥 to breathe new life into an old constitutional claim to discriminate.
Denver-based web designer Lorie Smith said she was called by God 鈥渢o explain His true story about marriage.鈥 That meant creating wedding websites for couples. And while her lawyers would later stipulate that Smith was 鈥渨illing to work with all people regardless of classifications such as race, creed, sexual orientation, and gender,鈥 she would not create something contradicting her 鈥渂iblical truth,鈥 which, according to her, limits marriage to a union between a man and a woman.
If asked 鈥 and if anyone did ask 鈥 to create a wedding website for a same-sex couple, she wouldn’t do it. Smith was concerned that holding her business open to the public while simultaneously saying she would refuse services of certain things for certain people would run afoul of the law.
Colorado is among the 45 states that have public accommodations law preventing businesses from discriminating against specific and distinct members of the public. Half of those states 鈥 鈥 prohibit businesses from refusing service based on 鈥渟exual orientation.鈥
Represented by , a nonprofit legal organization “committed to protecting religious freedom, free speech, the sanctity of life, parental rights, and God鈥檚 design for marriage and family,鈥 Smith鈥檚 company sued the director of Colorado鈥檚 civil rights enforcement division. Smith claimed the public accommodations law forces her to assist a same-sex couple into making a website. And that violated the First Amendment because it compelled her to express something she did not want to express.
Her case went up to the United States Supreme Court, and on the last day of its term this year, it .
Writing for the Court, Justice Neil Gorsuch characterized the issue as a contest between public accommodations laws and the constitutional right to free speech in the First Amendment, in which the latter must prevail. He wrote that to rule otherwise would allow the government to 鈥渄eny speakers the right to choose the content of their own messages鈥 and would force Smith to send a message that may align with the state, but 鈥渄efy her conscience about a matter of major significance.鈥
The right to 鈥渢hink for ourselves and to express those thoughts freely is among our most cherished liberties and part of what keeps our Republic strong,鈥 he wrote. And so the public accommodations law must yield.
Justice Sonia Sotomayor was joined by Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson in her dissent. She pointed out that using the First Amendment to discriminate is nothing new: 鈥淎 business claims that it would like to sell wedding websites to the general public, yet deny those same websites to gay and lesbian couples. This Court grants the business a broad exemption from state law and allows the business to post a notice that says: Wedding websites will be refused to gays and lesbians.鈥
Sotomayor wrote that the First Amendment doesn’t grant special privileges. If Smith wants to make her services available to the public, she must make those services available for all. If her religious beliefs don’t allow her to do that, then she doesn鈥檛 have to serve the public. There was no government boogeyman telling her what she can and cannot say.
No one really knows what鈥檚 going to happen next. While most wedding vendors are inclusive 鈥 the Oahu Wedding Association sponsored an “allyship and inclusivity” training session two days before the Court issued its opinion 鈥 and will gladly cater to same-sex couples, what鈥檚 to stop a business from announcing it will no longer serve people from the mainland?
Can a business now say it will not create websites, bake cakes, arrange flowers or take pictures for mixed-race couples or for people of color? Can it defy the public accommodations law and announce it will only serve Christians and say that Jews, Buddhists or any other faith is not welcome?
Why stop at weddings?
Businesses claiming a constitutional right to discriminate isn鈥檛 anything new.
Maurice Bessinger was an ardent segregationist and proud owner of pit-style barbeque drive-ins in South Carolina. In the 1960s, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People brought a class action against his business, Piggie Park Enterprises, and the company did not deny its extremely limited service to people of color. His lawyers argued that Bessinger鈥檚 Christian faith compelled him to treat Black people differently and that the Civil Rights Act of 1964 鈥渃ontravenes the will of God.鈥
Unlike Smith, Piggie Park lost. And when the Supreme Court ordered the company to pay for the NAACP鈥檚 attorney鈥檚 fees, it noted Bessinger鈥檚 claims were 鈥減atently frivolous.鈥
Years later, at Piggie Park headquarters adorned with aging pictures of Confederate generals and stacks of literature expounding a 鈥渂iblical view of slavery,鈥 Bessinger told the press that his old case was about his rights, not the other way around.
鈥淚 went to the Supreme Court to defend a freedom,鈥 he said, 鈥渁 freedom to choose my customers the way I wanted to choose them.鈥
He died in 2014 鈥 nine years before the Supreme Court started to see it his way.
Sign up for our FREE morning newsletter and face each day more informed.
Read this next:
Jonathan Okamura: Biden Commission On AANHPI Policy Was A Mixed Bag Of Ideas
By Jonathan Y. Okamura · July 16, 2023 · 7 min read
Local reporting when you need it most
Support timely, accurate, independent journalism.
天美视频 is a nonprofit organization, and your donation helps us produce local reporting that serves all of Hawaii.
ContributeAbout the Author
Ben Lowenthal grew up on Maui. He earned his undergraduate degree studying journalism at San Francisco State University and his law degree at the University of Kansas. He is a deputy public defender practicing criminal defense in trial and appellate courts. He also runs . The author's opinions are his own and don't necessarily reflect those of Civil Beat.
Latest Comments (0)
I had a question about this case. If I am the owner of a domain name and the associated website and I want to say something either commercial or personal on it, then isn't it my speech? How does it become the speech of the website designer? I think the reason that this issue didn't get fleshed out was because there was no real website to look at and we don't know what the specifics of the dispute. This case was something like what lawyers call declaratory relief--a ruling about the law as it might affect a future situation. That is not to say this is necessarily a wrong ruling or something the Court can't do; it is to help "explain" the limited facts the Court was working with and some of the controversy which has arisen from it. Facts matter to legal conclusions.
Fallback25 · 1 year ago
This was a win-win decision. It protects everyones free association. If a gay baker doesn芒聙聶t want to to write something on a cake for a heterosexual couple then so be it. Whatever
StateWorker · 1 year ago
Seems the facts here matter. An open shop that won't serve gay people, no can. A hotel that won't let gay people stay there, or restaurant won't seat gay people, no can. A website that says it won't serve gay clients, no can. Cake shop has a cake in the window for sale, and won't sell it to gay people, no can. But you order up a custom cake or a website with a message the maker doesn't agree with, no can force the business to create the message. That's the issue here. Should a bigot be able force a website maker who was gay to create a hateful anti-gay website? Would the race of the bigot matter?
jizzyray · 1 year ago
About IDEAS
IDEAS is the place you'll find essays, analysis and opinion on public affairs in Hawaii. We want to showcase smart ideas about the future of Hawaii, from the state's sharpest thinkers, to stretch our collective thinking about a problem or an issue. Email news@civilbeat.org to submit an idea.