Okay, you're not going to get this unless you've seen "What About Bob?" and you remember the part where Bill Murray is tied to the front of the sailboat. In light of that
I'm blogging. I can blog. I'm a blogger.
Felt compelled to get that out of the way as I have a strange sensation that as I venture into this world of blogging, a first for me, a sense of eventually being "tied" to it is quietly percolating in the back of my mind. Do I have to submit as many blogs as the other Alaska Voices bloggers? Do I really have time for this? Is there a blog for other bloggers who are feeling blogged down?
Anywayonto the subject cyber monday michael kors at hand.
Picture this scenario. A man walks into Mad Myrna's, the gay bar in downtown Anchorage, intending to apply for a recently advertised bartender position. He is wearing a tshirt that boldly says either Exodus International or Love Won Out, two wellknown ministries that provide encouragement and resources to those in the homosexual community who are looking for help to escape what has become a burdensome and conflicting lifestyle.
"I'm sorry," the Mad Myrna's General Manager says, "our business caters to those who actually embrace the gay, lesbian, transgendered, bisexual michael kors outlet online and questioning lifestyles. Your tshirt makes it obvious that you hold a different viewpoint. We can't, in good conscience, employ someone who is actively and obviously at such odds with the values of this bar. You'll have to look for employment elsewhere."
Is this discrimination? If it is, is it a bad thing? More importantly, should it be allowed in the Municipality of Anchorage?
As I represent a conservative, profamily, prolife organization, it might surprise some that my answer to the last question would be an emphatic "yes." The owner of Mad Myrna's has an indisputable First Amendment right to operate their business within the Municipality of Anchorage under the dictates of their own conscience.
Just as another business owner with a differing set of values has the same right to not have to surrender their First Amendment rights at the market gate in operating their Christian bookstore, run their condominium complex or make hiring decisions at their private school.
We have to start having honest dialogue about this effort by those on the Anchorage Assembly who are pushing this agenda as fast as they can before Dan Sullivan takes office. There is simply not any evidence of systemic or even isolated incidences of gays and lesbians being turned down for loans, housing or jobs based on their sexual orientation.
This is about a movement among activists promoting the homosexual legal agenda to persecute and prosecute anyone who won't be coerced into fully and openly endorsing their agenda. Christians and others of different faiths are now being targeted across the country who decline to endorse, facilitate, or participate in activities that violate their conscience or religious convictions.
That it is happening is not up for debate.
If you read this article, you'll find that this was not a matter of the lesbian couple searching high and low for a business that would take the pictures. It was about a lesbian couple who targeted an individual who wouldn't do it based on her deeply held and personal convictions.
In another well known case, the Boston Archdiocese was forced to close the doors on its adoption agency, a group that was involved in adoptions for more than 100 years, simply because it could not, in good conscience, abide by the local sexual orientation ordinance that mandated the group adopt children out to gay and lesbian couples.
In the end, this is not a civil liberties issue. It is a religious liberties issue. Infringement of those liberties is guaranteed should this ordinance be forced upon the people of Anchorage.
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