Yeah, it would be wrong. Raising the price for certain people because they are a member of a group is discrimination.
The problems these Christians are having with baking wedding cakes for gay weddings is they are refusing to do so based on religious beliefs. There is nothing religious about baking a wedding cake. There is nothing about wedding cakes in religious dogma. Plus, the Supreme Court has consistently ruled against religious beliefs as an excuse to discriminate.
If someone wants a wedding cake, and your business is wedding cakes, then you have to make the cake for them. If they want the names of the people getting married in the cake, if you do that for anyone you have to do it for everyone.
What you don't have to do, however, is decorate the cake with a political message that you do not agree with.
A gay baker is required to make a cake in the shape of a bible if they make book-shaped cakes. They are not required to put a message they don't agree with on the cake.
If a baker can be compelled to put a message on a cake that he doesn't agree with, then by the same token he can be prevented from putting something on there. That strikes at the very heart of free speech.
The problems these Christians are having with baking wedding cakes for gay weddings is they are refusing to do so based on religious beliefs. There is nothing religious about baking a wedding cake. There is nothing about wedding cakes in religious dogma. Plus, the Supreme Court has consistently ruled against religious beliefs as an excuse to discriminate.
If someone wants a wedding cake, and your business is wedding cakes, then you have to make the cake for them. If they want the names of the people getting married in the cake, if you do that for anyone you have to do it for everyone.
What you don't have to do, however, is decorate the cake with a political message that you do not agree with.
A gay baker is required to make a cake in the shape of a bible if they make book-shaped cakes. They are not required to put a message they don't agree with on the cake.
If a baker can be compelled to put a message on a cake that he doesn't agree with, then by the same token he can be prevented from putting something on there. That strikes at the very heart of free speech.