My VIP for this week is Lorie Smith, a graphic and website designer from Colorado. Her case, 303 Creative vs. Colorado, was heard today by the U.S. Supreme Court. The case is against her, but it is also against all Americans. According to Mary Margaret Olohan at The Daily Signal, Smith said the following:
I am a graphic and website designer from
Colorado. I want to create and design for weddings. And I want to do that
consistent with my faith.
But the state of Colorado is censoring and
compelling my speech and forcing me to create custom artwork, custom
expression, that goes against the core of who I am and what I believe. So the
court heard the case today. I’m hopeful that the Supreme Court will stand to
protect everyone’s right to create and speak consistent with their own beliefs.
After the hearing, Smith reported that she
was feeling “incredible, I’m just so grateful for this opportunity.” She
continued, “My hope and prayer is that the court will protect everyone’s right
to speak freely, whether your views are similar to mine on marriage or perhaps
different, the right to speak freely is guaranteed to each of us, and I am
hoping the court protects that right.”
Alliance Defending Freedom represented
Smith, and the president of the organization is Kristen Waggoner, who made the
following statement: She said that Smith’s case “involves whether all of us
have the right of free speech. Colorado has taken the position that it can
compel all kinds of artists and speakers to say things they don’t believe. That
includes Lorie.” Waggoner continued, “I hope the court issues a broad decision
that protects all speakers. Many states have public accommodation laws and some
states have up to 20 different categories in those laws. They’re sweeping, and
a number of government officials are using them to compel people to say things
that they just don’t believe.”
According to Waggoner, the case not only
threatens the personal rights of Americans, but it is “actually a threat to the
principle of fundamental government and allowing authoritarian governments to
tell people what ideas are worthy of celebration.”
Colorado seems to be intent on suing
artists who want to practice according to their religious beliefs. A few years
ago, there was a case between Masterpiece Cakeshop owner Jack Phillips and the
State of Colorado because Phillips declined to create a wedding cake for a
same-sex wedding due to his religious beliefs. His case went to the Supreme
Court also, and he won the case – only to be taken to sued again as soon as the
first case was settled.
Phillips claimed that Smith’s case,
Phillips’ case, and other similar battles are “about the government’s
responsibility to respect the right of each of us.
No comments:
Post a Comment