-
8 votes
-
The future abortionists of America
15 votes -
India decriminalises homosexuality
12 votes -
The other political correctness: America's elite universities are censoring themselves on China
11 votes -
Whole Foods workers seek to unionize, says Amazon is ‘exploiting our dedication’
13 votes -
‘Gay sex is not a crime,’ says Supreme Court of India in historic judgement
Article from Times of India: ‘Gay sex is not a crime,’ says Supreme Court in historic judgement Video from Times of India: LGBT community celebrates across the nation Article from NDTV: Section...
-
Article from Times of India: ‘Gay sex is not a crime,’ says Supreme Court in historic judgement
-
Video from Times of India: LGBT community celebrates across the nation
-
Article from NDTV: Section 377 Verdict Live Updates: "History Owes Apology To LGBT," Says Supreme Court
-
Article from CNN: India's top court decriminalizes gay sex in landmark ruling
22 votes -
-
Capilano, Australia's biggest honey producer, and supermarkets accused of selling 'fake' honey
8 votes -
Should Grindr users worry about what China will do with their data?
16 votes -
Victoria Woodhull: The first American woman to run for President — 150 years ago
10 votes -
Walt Disney World workers reach deal for $15 minimum wage by 2021
13 votes -
Saudi Arabia seeks its first death penalty against a female human rights activist
10 votes -
Prisoners striking in seventeen US states over prison conditions
18 votes -
In a precedent, the Saudi prosecution calls for the beheading of female human rights defender Israa Al-Ghomgham
19 votes -
California Senate passes bill to ban gay conversion therapy
23 votes -
This burrito includes an arbitration clause
8 votes -
Bethesda blocks resale of used game: Legal move could have far-reaching consequences for used game sales
16 votes -
UN says it has credible reports that China holds million Uighurs in secret camps
16 votes -
EA deletes Redditors account and claims there is nothing they can do about it
14 votes -
Ordinary person, wild radical
7 votes -
Saudi Arabia orders 16,000 students to leave Canada amid escalating clash
7 votes -
Concealed carry holder stops Florida shooter at back-to-school event
17 votes -
Insurers can send patients to religious hospitals that restrict reproductive care
9 votes -
Writing from Manus prison: a scathing critique of domination and oppression. Behrouz Boochani spent almost five years typing passages of his book into a mobile phone. The result resists classification
9 votes -
Catalog of Fania Records, the Motown of latin music, is sold
5 votes -
Defending land and environmental rights has become an increasingly deadly endeavor
7 votes -
No arrest in fatal shooting during argument over handicap parking space (Due to “stand your ground law”)
22 votes -
Israel passes controversial 'Jewish nation-state law', stripping Arabs of self-determination right
16 votes -
Speaking on behalf of … In the tapestry of diverse social groups, the loudest and most extreme get heard. To whom should we actually listen?
5 votes -
Walmart's newly patented technology for eavesdropping on workers presents privacy concerns
18 votes -
Little upside for Malcolm Turnbull in debate over religious freedom
2 votes -
The US Federal Communications Commission wants to charge you $225 to review your complaints
16 votes -
Alberta judge upholds law that prevents schools from outing students who join gay-straight alliances
9 votes -
Call for a general strike for Amazon workers across Europe during Amazon Prime Day
13 votes -
Supreme Court of Canada rules that limits on religious freedom 'reasonable' to protect LGBT rights
14 votes -
Tunisian presidential committee recommends decriminalizing homosexuality
5 votes -
It's a piece of cake to bake a pretty cake: LGBT+ discrimination
Well, there comes a time in every community's existence where someone gets an idea for discussion from another thread he wishes were better framed. So buckle in. This discussion is intended to sit...
Well, there comes a time in every community's existence where someone gets an idea for discussion from another thread he wishes were better framed. So buckle in. This discussion is intended to sit at an uncomfortable cultural crossroads.
In the EU, gay spouses are now able to have the same freedom of movement rights as straight spouses. The Supreme Court in the United States ruled that a baker was treated unfairly by a Colorado regulatory commission when they tried to suss out if he discriminated against a gay couple who wanted to purchase a wedding cake.
In Brazil (you thought I was going to let this one be), courts have explicitly allowed conversion therapy to continue.
In Chechnya (a part of Russia that I always seem to struggle to spell), you could be hunted down and tortured or killed if you were gay, with people turning their own family members over to the local government. The local government, in absurdity, claimed after the purge that there were "no gays" in Chechnya, so there could have been no purge.
The point I'm trying to make here is that LGBT+ discrimination is an issue that should touch just about everywhere.
Before we get too deep, a point on terms. Discrimination, strictly speaking, is separating one thing from another. It is not necessarily a hostile act. If I say "you can drive only if your vision is good enough to read signs while you drive," that is discrimination on the basis of your ability to see, but most people aren't likely to say it's unreasonable discrimination (there is a rather obvious safety implication, for starters). Similarly, if you tell women to go to the bathroom in one space, and men to go to the bathroom in another space, that is discrimination based on gender. Is it reasonable discrimination? That might depend on if you're trans, and what state you're in.
This topic has to be more limited than this set up implies it will be. We won't be able to narrow things well enough to have a meaningful discussion otherwise. Today, we're just going to touch on the simple (ha!) matter of whether baking a wedding cake is art, whether refusing a wedding cake to a gay couple is discrimination, and what a government should be expected to do about it. So, the questions:
- Is making a custom wedding cake for a wedding "art"?
- Is refusing a custom wedding cake to a couple because it would be for a cause you do not support discrimination on the basis of that couple's identity?
- How should a just government resolve a dispute between a couple who feel unreasonably discriminated against and an artist who feels compelled to use speech for a cause they do not support?
And a bonus question:
- What role should a judicial branch have in advancing various groups' rights? Does relying on this less democratic method for securing rights open a movement up to counter-reaction or is the counter-reaction simply an inevitable consequence of a movement's success?
22 votes -
America's 'gay wedding cake' court decision and what it means for Australia
4 votes -
America may soon face its biggest labor strike in decades
18 votes -
US Supreme Court hands narrow win to baker over gay couple dispute
18 votes -
US Supreme Court rules narrowly for Colorado baker who wouldn't make same-sex wedding cake
10 votes -
New law requires crosses in all public buildings in German state of Bavaria
9 votes -
Abortion: Sanctity of Human Life and the Rights of (wo)Man
Yesterday, Ireland passed a referendum that will repeal a constitutional amendment that banned abortions. The government of Ireland will now have the explicit authority (as soon as the results are...
Yesterday, Ireland passed a referendum that will repeal a constitutional amendment that banned abortions. The government of Ireland will now have the explicit authority (as soon as the results are certified) to legislate matters of abortion directly. This seems likely to lead to a substantially less restrictive stance toward abortion in one of the most restrictive member nations of the EU. It would still likely end up being slightly more restrictive law than in the United States.
Ireland's history regarding abortion's legality is explicitly tied as a counter-reaction to Roe V. Wade, the American supreme court case that found abortion legal until the third trimester under a rights-balancing test under the 9th and 14th amendments (which--implicitly--enshrines a right to privacy and--explicitly--expands that right to the state level, respectively). While this balancing test was later changed to a standard requiring "fetal viability," states and activists through the United States organized against the Supreme Court's decision to create new limitations on abortion.
So today, I'm seeking to sidestep some of that history to wrestle with the core underlying balancing test Roe v Wade and other similar legal frameworks have tried to answer: when is a pregnant woman's rights more or less important than the life of the living being growing inside of her? In what circumstances (if any) should a woman be allowed to choose to end her pregnancy?
19 votes -
Ireland ends abortion ban as 'quiet revolution' transforms country
13 votes -
Ireland’s abortion vote becomes a test for Facebook and Google
5 votes -
Microsoft extending EU's GDPR rights worldwide
9 votes -
US Supreme Court decides arbitration agreements overrule class-action rights
8 votes -
New Toronto Declaration calls on algorithms to respect human rights
8 votes -
Canada to add third gender option in government surveys
6 votes -
Ontario’s new scalping law may not protect consumers, critics warn
4 votes