The liberty principle for this Freedom Friday is that there are some occasions when we must make a stand. That time is when we know good from evil and choose to defend good and spurn evil. Kate Anderson published such a story in The Daily Signal.
According
to Anderson, Bob Updegrove, a Christian wedding photographer, won a lawsuit
against the State of Virginia. In 2020, Updegrove filed the lawsuit against
Mark Herring, then-Virginia Attorney General “after a state law required him to
affirm same-sex marriage in his photography business, according to court
documents.
Alliance Defending Freedom, the nonprofit
public interest law firm representing Updegrove, announced Monday that the
state had agreed to settle, following the recent Supreme Court decision in 303
Creative LLC v. Elenis, which determined that the government cannot compel a
business owner’s speech.
“Free speech is for everyone. As the
Supreme Court recently affirmed in 303 Creative, the government can’t force
Americans to say things they don’t believe,” Johannes Widmalm-Delphonse,
counsel for ADF, said in the press release. “This victory for Bob underscores
how the 303 Creative decision will protect countless Americans from government
censorship and coercion. The U.S. Constitution protects his freedom to express
his views as he continues to serve clients of all backgrounds and beliefs.”
The Virginia Values Act prohibits
businesses from discriminating based on sexual orientation, and Updegrove
argued in the lawsuit that the law aims to “regulate Bob’s views – that marriage
should be between a man and a woman – out of existence.” He claimed that under
the law, he would be unable to publicly state anywhere on his website or
business social media that he believes marriage is between a man and a woman, ultimately
violating his right to freedom of expression under the First Amendment.
A district court ruled in March 2021 that
while the case “creates ‘the odor of a case or controversy’ .. the scent is not
strong enough” for the court to rule in its favor, according to the opinion, forcing
Updegrove to appeal. However, the Supreme Court ruled in June 2023 that the
state of Colorado could not force Lorie Smith, a Christian web designer, to
make websites celebrating same-sex marriage and chill her right to free speech.
As a result, the state agreed to settle to
“avoid further costs and expenses of litigation,” according to the court
documents.
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