K
I think treating the gay ''rights'' issue as a civil rights issue is the main and first problem, and as long as people don't see that, this will continue to be an issue.
I believe nobody should be refused certain services, like medicine, health treatments, or other services which are mostly catalogued as public services , like water, electricity,etc.
But besides those services, a business owner should have the right to do business whichever way they want, and reserve the right to refuse their services to anyone. If I'm a Christian, and I go to a Muslim photographer, I would understand if they refuse to shoot my wedding. Or if I have a bakery, and a neo-nazi comes and wants me to bake a cake with a nazi sign on it, I would refuse to. I believe those are rights people should respect. I think there are limits though, on both sides of the spectrum, and those are hard to define outside of a Christian worldview, where ''everything goes''.
I believe nobody should be refused certain services, like medicine, health treatments, or other services which are mostly catalogued as public services , like water, electricity,etc.
But besides those services, a business owner should have the right to do business whichever way they want, and reserve the right to refuse their services to anyone. If I'm a Christian, and I go to a Muslim photographer, I would understand if they refuse to shoot my wedding. Or if I have a bakery, and a neo-nazi comes and wants me to bake a cake with a nazi sign on it, I would refuse to. I believe those are rights people should respect. I think there are limits though, on both sides of the spectrum, and those are hard to define outside of a Christian worldview, where ''everything goes''.