What do you mean? The dancers have the freedom to refuse.
What do you mean? The dancers have the freedom to refuse.
The Rockette has to contractually perform or she loses her job. Tough luck.
The right to someone's labor?
I agree that would have made the syntax more clear.
For most of these instances, it's an individual who finds a certain event objectionable. That event was a gay wedding. None of these cases had a blanket ban on serving homosexual people.
Duh, and I want them to do that.
Authoritarian?
Make the A.V. Club comment section safe again!
I'm not. However, it's amazing how leftists will harass shop keepers for their religious beliefs and then feel pain for the Rockettes who have to play at the inauguration.
I don't hate gay people.
Oh, you better believe there was glee in typing that because I knew I'd get a response.
Gay weddings are absolutely a thing. They are aberrant. When describing a couple, you say gay couple to show that they are gay. You never say straight couple because that's assumed.
Yes. Please leave when you know that you jumped the gun and made a mistake.
Erhm, sorry Mrs.
Because "gay wedding" is a cumulative adjective unit versus concordant adjectives. If I were calling the cakes gay, I would say "gay, wedding cakes."
There's no comma between the adjectives gay and wedding. You might want to learn English.
Oh really? Like the asshole florist who refused to serve a gay wedding on her religious beliefs but had served the gay couple for many times before requesting not to do their wedding?
She can quit.
I can pick up budget ones for that price in certain areas.
Because every state has different cultures, needs, and desires. The fact that there are more people in certain areas doesn't change that.