I Think, Therefore I Am . . . Not . . . Maybe
In a 6 - 3 opinion, the Supreme Court said that the First Amendment's free speech protections permitted the web designer, Lorie Smith (303 Creative LLC), to refuse to extend her services to same-sex marriages. For the first time in history, the Supreme Court granted a business open to the public a constitutional right to discriminate against would-be customers. Ms. Smith has never created a wedding website (gay or straight), but "thought about it"! What stood in her way was a Colorado public accommodation law that requires all businesses open to the public to offer full and equal access to goods and services that the business offers. Her argument was that this law violated her free speech to services people who might offend her. This is a statement from the Boulder County Chamber, Colorado: "If you have never watched your rights be taken away on television, you ...