I find the decisions handed down by the Supreme Court to be injurious to my mental health and I have decided that the only thing I can do is to explain at length my reactions to them. What I say will obviously have no effect on the world but maybe I will feel better when I am finished.
Let me begin with the simpler of the two decisions, that concerning the website designer. Forget about the fact that she has not yet actually designed any websites – that is irrelevant.
Consider the following
series of cases, designed to approach the issue slowly. Suppose that a devout
Catholic decides to open a bookstore called The St. Thomas Aquinas Bookstore in
which he proposes to stock and sell only books by Catholic authors on Catholic
topics. Can anyone attempt to take him to court on the grounds that he does not
carry books on fishing or baseball or books on Islam? Of course not. He has a
perfect right to open a bookstore that sells books only by Catholic authors on
Catholic topics. Does he have a right to refuse to sell a book to a customer who is
not Catholic? Of course not. If it offends him to sell books to people who are
not Catholic, then he does not have to open a bookstore, but if he does, then
he is required by well-established laws to sell books to any customers who wish
to buy them, regardless of whether those customers believe that the religious
doctrine set forth in those books are true.
By the same token, he can if he wishes open a shop that only sells
Yankees memorabilia (like the “bookstore” in downtown Chapel Hill that only
sells Tar Heels memorabilia.) But he does not have the right to refuse to sell
his wares to a Red Sox fan.
Suppose a painter decides to open a business that offers to
paint portraits of customers in Orthodox Jewish garb. When a customer enters
the shop and asks to have his portrait painted, the salesman shows him a
variety of possible Orthodox Jewish outfits and asks which of them he wishes the
portrait artist to use in painting his portrait. Does the customer have the
right to demand that his portrait be painted in the garb of a Catholic saint?
Obviously not. That is not what the owner of the shop is offering. Does the
painter have a right to refuse to paint a portrait of a customer who is not Jewish?
Clearly not. He has a right to insist that any portrait he paint portray the
subject of the portrait in Orthodox Jewish garb because that is the nature of
the business he has decided to run. But if a customer is content to have his
portrait painted in Orthodox Jewish garb even though he is not himself Jewish,
then so long as the painter is offering his services to the public, he does not
have a right to choose which customers he will accept. If the painter holds that it is inconsistent
with his religious faith to paint the non-Jew in Orthodox Jewish garb, then the
he should not open a shop that offers to paint customers in that garb. No one
can compel him to paint portraits of non-Jews in Orthodox religious outfits –
indeed, no one can compel him to paint portraits at all. But if he starts a
business that is open to the public, then he has no right refuse to serve
certain customers on the grounds that doing so violates his religious freedom.
Suppose a web designer decides to open a business offering
to design websites for people who are getting married. Can she specify that she
will only design websites that are appropriate for the weddings of a man and a
woman? Certainly. If a gay couple asked her to design a website for them,
adjusting the design so that it is appropriate for the wedding of a man and a
man, does she have a right to refuse? Of course, she has as much right to
refuse to do that as the bookshop owner of the St. Thomas Aquinas Bookshop has
to refuse to carry books that are not about Catholicism by Catholics. But
suppose that the gay couple agree to have the web designer design for their
wedding a website appropriate for the wedding of a man and a woman. Never mind why they want that, suppose they
agree. Does the web designer have the
right to refuse on the grounds that it violates religious freedom? No. She has
a right not to open a business but if she chooses to open a business and offer a
certain service, she has an obligation to offer to any customer who is willing
to pay her price.