Comparing Black civil rights to gay rights is like comparing apples to oranges.
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<additional blah blah blah deleted>
Once again, you have missed the point. Quite badly too.
I was not comparing "black civil rights" to "gay rights", except in the secondary sense that all "rights" are about equality. The similarity that I noted, and which is rather obvious, is in the
use of religion as a tool to justify unlawful discrimination. It appears that you did not notice that my comments were intended to be specific to some things that were said about inter-racial marriages and some things which are now being said about gay marriages.
Religion was for many years used to justify laws against inter-racial marriage, and when those laws were finally chucked out by the Supreme Court, the reaction was not very different from what we have today. And what do we have today? Our Pokot brother happily announcing in public that he is diddling what he refers to as a "white/latino". Smack in the middle of America, where thet sais both Law and God would never permit that! Surely, the 21st is a great place .... mostly. Back then they would have said a lot of nasty stuff and then lynched him. And they have would held bibles aloft while they did it---"conscience", "religious rights", and "this is what God demands", blah blah blah.
Just in case that wasn't clear, here it is again: an observation to the effect that something (religion here) is used in similar (or even the same) ways in both X and Y is not the same as equating X and Y. Logic 101. Or maybe you have some understanding of elementary mathematics, in which case I would put it thus:
f(X)= f(Y)
is not necessarily equivalent to
X = Y
(In fact, "off the top of my head", I'd say it generally doesn't hold for non-trivial functions.)
The other point I was trying to comment on was your opening statement that
She is exercising her first amendment law.
(I take it that you meant "right" rather than "law", but Nipate is Nipate.) I have read and heard endless comments to that end. The lady actually did file all sorts of paperwork, claiming all sorts of rights (not laws) to behave as she did. Judge Bunning carefully went through all that---"right by right", as it were---and explained why none of it would fly. I have yet to see or hear of any of her supporters go through that decision and point out why (and where) the judge was wrong.
The legal paperwork that has been filed in this case---by the plaintiffs, by the lady, and including the judge's decisions---are now public. (The exception would be for the Supreme Court, which simply tossed out the lady's request without even "a single word".) I encourage people to go through it before they get too excited about laws, or rights, or whatever it is they think it is.