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Originally posted by Oneolddude
This is the bible belt.
I am sure these owners will see a increase in business because of their moral stance.
Seriously speaking, this author makes light of a incident which exists in the absurd. This is a tallied battle waged not for civil rights but for the sake of a war, and made by a group who never learned the lesson "Pick your Battles". Orders are refused all over the city every day. The individuals who are refused generally realize that the - somewhat - free economy provides them with other establishments which are hungry for their business. Just Cookies may have the capacity to make some cupcakes, but the difference between a specialty and add-on product exists in the inventory (Example: a pie company may make cakes, but only a few, not having the materials or the expertise needed to fill large cake orders, such as wedding cakes). In the end, it seems that the real problems in this case are the study habits of the "diversity group", and the possibility that they may need to take additional classes at IUPUI; namely a refresher course in Reading Comprehension, beginning with an exercise called, "Just Cookies", with the follow-up question, "What does that mean to you?"
will tell other to visit
Never been to this store but will when passing through Indianapolis.....In the social climate we are now living in NO ONE should be bullied to make things that may compromise our values...Honor for both sides should be given. I am happy that this group was able to be accommodated....why could they not bless Just Cookies and go somewhere else rather than make a stink....I will tell all my friends to visit this proprietor!
September 30, 2010 by carol m in Naperville, IL
quoting the blogger again.
Honor for both sides
Originally posted by sweetliberty
reply to post by Annee
They are parents first A parent still has the right to parent.
So Please - - - don't give me the Parent's Rights sermon.
I never said anything against the parents and how they choose to raise their kids.
BUT - - you tell me - - if they had sold Rainbow Cookies - - - how would their two daughters known they were anything but Rainbow Cookies? They wouldn't have. So Rainbow colors are an abomination now?
Originally posted by sweetliberty
reply to post by Annee
BUT - - you tell me - - if they had sold Rainbow Cookies - - - how would their two daughters known they were anything but Rainbow Cookies? They wouldn't have. So Rainbow colors are an abomination now?
Oh, so you're saying the parents should live by the "don't do as I do, do as I say"?
sl
Originally posted by sweetliberty
reply to post by Annee
I don't think it was about "rainbow colors" for the parents, although rainbow colors are used to signify gay pride, imo. Maybe the parents will be on the Today Show soon,
Hopefully they teach their girls to accept all people just as they are. I can only speculate, lol.
My concern is the media and how they manipulate the public without telling the whole story.
sl
edit on 30-9-2010 by sweetliberty because: to clarify
Originally posted by sweetliberty
reply to post by Annee
I don't think it was about "rainbow colors" for the parents, although rainbow colors are used to signify gay pride, imo. Maybe the parents will be on the Today Show soon,
Hopefully they teach their girls to accept all people just as they are. I can only speculate, lol.
My concern is the media and how they manipulate the public without telling the whole story.
Originally posted by Annee
Discrimination laws are kind of tricky. If a gay person orders a cookie and you refuse to sell them a cookie simply because they are gay - - that is clear discrimination. If you refuse an order that you know is to promote something against your own personal belief - - that is not discrimination. And everything else falls somewhere in-between.
Originally posted by stars15k
Here's something that no one has mentioned yet. I have worked at a grocery chain, and went through 4 different owner/management changes. Not one of them would allow the bakery to make anything of a sexual nature on a cake. For anyone at anytime. Not a boobie cake, not even a cake with bobbies. Not any genitalia, not any lewd comments, not anything even suggesting that. Most markets have that same policy, making the production of naughty cakes a novelty.
Originally posted by sweetliberty
I can only assume the girls are at the business with them. The parents might be worried about the sissified gay men who wear gaudy clothes and makeup, lol, or the girls might see two women kissing.
I guess the parents didn't want the girls to see any inappropriate behavior between the same sexes and probably opposite sexes too.
sl
Originally posted by Annee
Originally posted by sweetliberty
I can only assume the girls are at the business with them. The parents might be worried about the sissified gay men who wear gaudy clothes and makeup, lol, or the girls might see two women kissing.
I guess the parents didn't want the girls to see any inappropriate behavior between the same sexes and probably opposite sexes too.
sl
I don't want to pick on you - - but you are kind of stereotyping gays just a bit.
Naïveté - - really is not a healthy mindset for anyone in this world today. In my opinion - - hiding something creates a "curious cat".
Originally posted by sweetliberty
The girls are more worldly then the parents might realize, your right about the curious cat. Children know things before the parents are ready for them to know. These girls will be ok, esp. now that they are in the spotlight. They will have questions, the issues will have to be addressed.
Thanks
sl
Originally posted by Brood
Guess it's time to kill this thread with the truth.