By Bryan Fischer
David Stockton and his
business are about to get thrown out on the street by Indianapolis mayor Greg
Ballard because Stockton is a Christian who believes what the Bible teaches
about human sexuality.
Stockton, owner of Just
Cookies, was approached by a local homosexual activist group to make a
batch of cupcakes with rainbow frosting to help it celebrate “National Coming
Out Day,” in which people who engage in sexually deviant conduct announce it
proudly to the whole world. The “love that dare not speak its name” has now
become the “love that shoves it in everybody’s face.”
Mr. Stockton politely
declined, since supporting sexually aberrant behavior is not a part of his
business plan. He has two young daughters, and he is committed as a father to
teaching them the difference between right and wrong. Heterosexual marriage:
right. Two men using the anal cavity for sex: wrong. This is not rocket
surgery.
For taking a simple,
quiet, unobtrusive stand for “the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God,” to use
the quaint but timeless declaration of the Founders, Mr. Stockton’s livelihood
is now under assault by the Tolerance Nazis in Indianapolis.
The leader of the
Brownshirts in this case is mayor Greg Ballard, who apparently is bereft of
moral values himself and has forgotten that businesses, including those who
lease space from the city in its City Market as Just Cookies does, have
the right to refuse service to anyone. It’s right in the window at lots of
places.
Plus, Just Cookies
does not in fact deny service to homosexuals. One comes in, wants to buy a
cookie, no problem. Just Cookies does not screen customers based on
sexual preference. But when a homosexual group wants to use his product to publicly
promote self-destructive sexual behavior, Mr. Stockton has every right to ask
them to take their business elsewhere. Which, by the way, the homosexuals did,
getting their pastries from The Flying Cupcake. (I could say something
about “flying cupcakes” for “flaming cupcakes,” but I won’t.)
At any rate, Mayor
Ballard is threatening to kick Just Cookies to the curb and throw them
out of the property they lease. According to a piece in IndyStar.com, the city
is making these threatening noises because of “the obligation of the city to do
to all it can to...encourage tolerance.”
Hilariously, two
paragraphs later a representative of the city is quoted as saying, of Just
Cookies,
“We can’t tolerate any
kind of discrimination like that.” Ah, I get it, we’re going to show everybody
how tolerant we are be being flatly and viciously intolerant toward people of
moral conviction.
The mayor’s deputy chief
of staff, Robert Vane, compounded this egregious and Torquemada-like
intolerance by saying that the city just cannot abide “a business based on an
exclusionary business model.” That, he said, is “simply unacceptable.” Ah, I
see, we are going to punish those with an “exclusionary business model” by
adopting an “exclusionary business model” of our own. Character-driven business
owners need not apply. We’re going to exclude you right out in the name of
tolerance. There is a staggering level of self-contradiction and moral
hypocrisy here.
The good news is that
business has actually been up at Just Cookies since the outbreak of this
government-endorsed Christophobia, as pro-family supporters have developed a
sudden desire to satisfy their sweet tooth. And a top-drawer First Amendment
law firm is offering its services pro bono to the Stocktons if they stand firm.
I’d love to see them sue the pants off the city for its unpatriotic stand
against classic American ideals.
The city, in fact, is
violating its own precious anti-discrimination policy. First, by executive fiat
it is trying to apply it to private businesses when it applies only to the city
itself and its personnel policies.
And second, the city’s
policy flatly prohibits discrimination based on religion. But this is precisely
what the city is doing - discriminating, punishing, and intimidating the
Stocktons solely on the basis of their religious beliefs. In other words, the
city is in the process of committing a hate crime here.
It’s time to stand with
the Stocktons and say “No” to hate, “No” to hate crimes, “No” to heterophobia,
and “No” to Christophobia. If you’d like to encourage Mayor Greg Ballard to
stand for tolerance and religious liberty instead of repression and tyranny,
you may give him a piece of your mind you can afford to lose by calling him at
(317) 327-3601. Be prepared to be patient. A lot of your like-minded
compatriots are calling him too.
(Unless otherwise
noted, the opinions expressed are the author’s and do not necessarily reflect
the views of the American Family Association or American Family Radio.)