"I've been called many unpleasant things in my life, and I've deserved no small number of them. But I chafe at this latest label: A threat to your religious liberty.
"I don't mean me alone. I mean me and my evidently menacing kind: men who have romantic relationships with other men and maybe want to marry them, and women in analogous situations. According to many of the Americans who still cast judgment on us, our 'I do' somehow tramples you, not merely running counter to your creed but running roughshod over it.
"That's absurd. And the deference that many politicians show to such thinking is an example not of religion getting the protection it must but of religious people getting a pass that isn't warranted.
"As these lamentations about religious liberty get tossed around, it’s worth remembering that racists have used the same argument to try to perpetuate segregation. Esseks noted that even after the Civil Rights Act, the owner of the Piggie Park restaurant chain in South Carolina maintained that he could refuse to serve black people because his religion forbade the mixing of races. The courts were unimpressed.
"I respect people of faith. I salute the extraordinary works of compassion and social justice that many of them and many of their churches do... And I support the right of people to believe what they do and say what they wish -- in their pews, homes and hearts. But outside of those places? You must put up with me, just as I put up with you."
-- New York Times op-ed columnist Frank Bruni, writing on the false conservative argument of "marriage equality vs. religious freedom."
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