Colorado's Anti-Discrimination Law Forces Artists To Echo the State's Message
A website designer asks SCOTUS to let her eschew work that contradicts her opposition to gay marriage.

Lorie Smith is a conservative Christian and a website designer who thinks she should be able to engage in her chosen occupation without compromising her moral beliefs. But that is illegal in Colorado, where Smith is forbidden to create websites for heterosexual weddings unless she is also willing to create websites for gay weddings.
The Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act (CADA) simultaneously censors Smith by stopping her from announcing the principles that guide her work and requires her to express a message that contradicts those principles. The question for the Supreme Court, which heard Smith's case on Monday, is whether those commands are consistent with her First Amendment right to freedom of speech.
Colorado and Smith agree that she is happy to serve any customer, regardless of sexual orientation, provided the work is consistent with biblical values as she understands them. In practice, both parties say, that means Smith "will decline any request to design, create, or promote content" that "contradicts biblical truth," "demeans or disparages others," "promotes sexual immorality," "supports the destruction of unborn children," "incites violence," or "promotes any conception of marriage other than marriage between one man and one woman."
Last year, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit agreed with Smith that her custom website designs "are pure speech." It said Colorado's rules therefore amount to compelled speech as well as viewpoint-based speech restrictions, making them subject to "strict scrutiny."
That standard is very hard to satisfy. It requires that a challenged law be "narrowly tailored" to advance a "compelling" government interest, meaning that goal cannot be served through less restrictive means.
The 10th Circuit nevertheless concluded that CADA's application to Smith and her business, 303 Creative, passes constitutional muster because it is necessary to protect the "material interests" of "marginalized groups" in "accessing the commercial marketplace." That conclusion is puzzling.
As Smith's lawyers at the Alliance Defending Freedom note in their Supreme Court brief, "hundreds of other website-design companies operate in Denver alone." So even if Colorado allowed Smith to specialize in opposite-sex weddings, gay couples would have plenty of alternatives.
According to the 10th Circuit, that's not good enough. "For the same reason" that Smith's bespoke website designs qualify as speech, it said, they are "inherently not fungible."
While same-sex couples would have lots of other options if Smith were permitted to run her business the way she wants, the appeals court reasoned, they would not have access to her unique work. In that respect, it said, Creative 303 is "similar to a monopoly."
That "monopoly of one" theory, which dissenting Judge Timothy Tymkovich called "unprecedented," "threatens every artist's control over her own speech, replacing speaker autonomy with the government's message," Smith's lawyers argue. By "declaring that a unique and customized product is irreplaceable and that therefore a requirement to provide it in the commercial marketplace is narrowly tailored," First Amendment specialists Eugene Volokh and Dale Carpenter likewise warn in a Supreme Court brief filed by the Cato Institute, the 10th Circuit's analysis effectively eliminates "free-speech protection for providers of expressive products."
The implications are potentially sweeping. Under CADA, Tymkovich suggested, Colorado could force "an unwilling Muslim movie director to make a film with a Zionist message" or require "an atheist muralist to accept a commission celebrating Evangelical zeal." The state could "force Muslim filmmakers to promote Scientology or force lesbian artists to design church websites criticizing same-sex marriage," Smith's brief says.
Since some state and local laws prohibit commercial discrimination based on political activities or ideology, such legally mandated speech could go even further. "Under Colorado's theory," Smith's lawyer observed during oral argument on Monday, "jurisdictions could force a Democrat publicist to write a Republican's press release."
While such hypotheticals might seem fanciful, the underlying principle is the same. If the courts allow compelled speech in the name of protecting equal access to "places of public accommodation," supporters of those laws won't necessarily like the results.
© Copyright 2022 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Freedom of association would make all these problems go away. No doubt that is why politicians and judges hate it so much.
I've made $1250 so far this week working online and I'm a full time student. I'm using an online business opportunity I heard about and I'AM made such great money. It's really user friendly and I'm just so happy that I found out about it. Here's what I do, .for more information simply.
Open this link thank you......>>> http://Www.Salaryapp1.com
Everyone in politics wants to be a dictator today. From this president, to the judiciary, to the governor, to the mayors. It is a disgusting development in politics, certainly led by liberals.
Google pay 200$ per hour my last pay check was $8500 working 1o hours a week online. My younger brother friend has been averaging 12000 for months now and he works about 22 hours a week. I cant believe how easy it was once I tried it outit.. ? AND GOOD LUCK.:)
HERE====)> www.richsalary.com
Wouldn't this be better titled "Polis Administration Wants to Force Artists to Endorse States Message"?
I mean, isn't it being defended by members of the Polis Admin? You know, the most libertarian governor ever?
Counter point. Polis is dreamy.
The Respect the Woke-Religion Act. The [WE] fascists-mob RULES! /s
Leftard Projection 101; If [WE] can’t make religion(rules) then you’re all fascists..
Blaming everyone else for EXACTLY what they're doing.
Last month i managed to pull my first five figure paycheck ever!!! I’ve been working for this company online for 2 years now and i never been happier… They are paying me $95/per hour and the best thing is cause i am not that tech-savy, they only asked for basic understanding of internet and basic typing skill… It’s been an amazing experience working with them and i wanted to share this with you, because they are looking for new people to join their team now and i highly recommend to everyone to apply…
Visit following page for more information…………..>>> onlinecareer1
The defendant should be free to refuse customers and jobs as she sees fit.
But to stand behind religion is disingenuous; none of the world’s major religions has a prohibition on performing work for unpleasant or sinful people.
The defendant is either a moron on a liar. And for that reason, she should lose her lawsuit.
She should have raised her first amendment “freedom of assembly” right. It’s not a religious issue.
lmao... Apparently there isn't any religion that teaches one's actions are judged.. I guess it's just all beliefs and worshiping idols. UR pretty funny 🙂
Ostensible adults demanding respect for silly fucking fairy tales. Hilarious.
I know right?
Sometimes said fairy tales are state sanctioned, like the thought that we can control the weather, or that religious talismans prevent viral transmission.
Yes, truly a strange time.
Start getting paid each month more than $17,000+ just by w0rking 0nline from home. Last month i have earned andreceived $18539 from this easy 0nline j0b. This 0nline j0b is just amazing and regular earni ng from this are just awesome. Start making extra dollars 0nline just by follow instructions on this website..,
OPEN►►►►► GOOGLE WORK
Fairy tales such as "_____ is a social construct," and that utopian marxism is possible.
She doesn't refuse to do work for anyone, she refuses to do specific sorts of work for anyone.
And are you kidding, you don't think a Muslim would refuse to do a picture of Mohammed?
For some Muslims today, there is a tradition not to depict Muhammad in art, but others disagree.
Even for those who prohibit it, it is a fairly modern twist, not ancient tradition.
And the Koran is silent on the matter.
https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-30814555.amp
It is, however, a currently accepted tenet of faith by large portions of Muslims with some who believe it so strongly that they have become murderous over violations. It cannot be dismissed as the belief of some incongruous subsect of Muslims.
Fundamentalism in most religions today tends to be relatively modern. Dating from when communication became very widespread so that one group of ninnies had the ability to complain about and stick their noses into the habits of other people far away.
That said in most parts of the Islamic world, religious art has been nonrepresentational since forever. It really is the tradition. Looking for examples of pedagogical storytelling art or pre-Islamic influences (Persian, Turkic, Indian, etc) doesn't undermine the reality that Islamic art is notably based on calligraphy or geometry or arabesque - not pictures of people
"Islamic art is notably based on calligraphy "
It's interesting that the first Islamic texts to be printed using movable type were made in Italy not too long after the Gutenberg bible. But unlike Roman or Hebrew letters, Arabic is a connected script, and the first attempts in Arabic were unconnected. To Islamic scholars of the day, the results were perhaps even unrecognizable as Arabic, and certainly not aesthetically pleasing. It took several hundred years before a connected script could be reliably produced and become widely used in the Islamic world.
Is this how the Arab/Islamic areas slipped from being centuries ahead of the European/Christian world to lagging centuries behind? But what kept them from catching up once they could print works in their language with movable type?
The objection by the designer is not that the potential client is unpleasant or sinful, it is what they are asking her to provide support for is unpleasant or sinful. That is the distinction the social Left cannot seem to accept.
I really have made $30,100 while not an uncertainty in about a month and a half decisively working part-time from my loft. Straightforwardly, at the same time as my (hvr-05) last business, I became depleted and luckily I pursued a choice on this high web-based task and with this I’m in a situation to get thousands promptly through my home.
HERE====)>OPEN>> ONLINEUSAJOBES
I do love when atheists proclaim what the religious believe. Marriage in Christian doctrine is a sacred sacrament. Just like they withhold sacrament from non believers or the excommunicated, the corruption of marriage is an affront to their their religion. The religious give up a lot of even their own choices in pursuit of religion, yet you seemingly demand they stop following it for reasons.
Would a pastor help with a black sabbath from the church of Satan? No. Requesting one to do so would be silly. Marriage is also a sacrament, so why would you force the religious to participate?
I do love when atheists proclaim what the religious believe.
Citing others' religious doctrine and calling the adherents disingenuous, morons, and liars is just icing on the cake.
I do not know of any that does not forbid celebrating sin or sinful behavior.
You apparently didn't read either the case or the article above. Both she and the state stipulate that she has no objection to "performing work for ... sinful people". She objects to performing work that requires her to advocate for the sin. And pretty much every major religion has a prohibition against that.
And while I agree that "freedom of association" would be the stronger theoretical basis for her claim, that right has been so diluted and ignored for so long that it's not a practical legal strategy right now.
"[n]one of the world’s major religions has a prohibition on performing work for unpleasant or sinful people." They sure do if the unpleasant or sinful person is unpleasant or sinful in the wrong way (e.g. heretics).
I guess Islam isn’t a major religion.
That's what I find so fascinating. So many political commentators are experts on the detailed points of a doctrine that they do not subscribe to and have never studied. Especially on gender issues, the condemnation comes continuous and strict.
But to stand behind religion is disingenuous; none of the world’s major religions has a prohibition on performing work for unpleasant or sinful people.
So you're saying that she should be forced to design websites celebrating pedophilia? That would be in keeping with your side's overt Weimar-style degeneracy these days.
good
This self-evidently constitutes compelled speech.
While I support "LG ... whatever" rights, I do not support trimming the 1st Amendment to fit a new cultural milieu in which tribalists and identitarians both do daily battle to insert a new Right to Safe Spaces in the Constitution.
You clearly don't support “LG … whatever” rights if the initials in the acronym offend you so deeply you can't even be bothered to type them.
It's not so much being offended by acronym as recognizing that the required initials are constantly changing and that failing to stay current on the latest precise form is taken as evidence of wrong-think by a class of professional victims who seem to take delight in finding something to be offended about. People like, oh I don't know, maybe you.
It's not evidence of 'wrongthink.' A statement of blanket support for groups of people who are changing and undefined is disingenuous and dismissive. LGBT has been around for decades. The notion that Sequel is 'failing to stay current' is laughable.
It's been a long time since I've seen "LGBT" by itself, without appending a constantly changing set of more letters.
At any rate, "LG" covers what the current controversy is about - compelling creative workers to provide works celebrating Lesbians and Gays even though their Bible quite clearly condemns homosexuality in many places.
Maybe compelled depictions of transexuals are in the future, but it isn't an issue yet. Will it ever be? I don't recall anything about cross-dressing anywhere in the Bible. How would designing a wedding cake with a woman and a man dressed as a woman be a problem for a Christian designer whose Bible contains a picture of Jesus with long hair and a gown? (The gown is actually historical, unlike His pale skin.)
Your side wants to practice repressive tolerance, so you're hardly one to criticize, shitlib.
" I do not support trimming the 1st Amendment to fit a new cultural milieu"
It's happening in any case, whether you support it or not. The law in Colorado should make it clear. Adapt or die, the cruelest law of the universe.
Colorado's anti-discrimination law is in effect an establishment of a of an odd secular religion which tolerates no infidels or heretics and requires the celebration of "queerness".
And for another example of a reporter simply lying about what actually happened in oral arguments:
"Lithwick tortures her evidence to try to advance her claim. In response to a hypothetical that Justice Jackson presented about a mall photographer who would take Christmas photos only of white kids, Justice Alito asked whether a black Santa at the other end of the mall would have to pose with a kid in a Ku Klux Klan outfit. Justice Kagan, trying to undermine Alito’s hypothetical, intervened to suggest that it did not involve racial discrimination because “that would be the same Ku Klux Klan outfit regardless whether the child was black or white.” In reply, Alito rejected the notion that black kids would be in Ku Klux Klan outfits. (Transcript 75:1-18.)
Here is Lithwick’s account:
Justice Samuel Alito responding to a Ketanji Brown Jackson hypothetical about an all-white Christmas photography package (asking whether it would be discriminatory, which it would be) with his own hypothetical, bizarrely about a Black Santa at the mall who is faced somehow with a child dressed up in a KKK outfit. Alito is trying to probe whether Black Santa should not have to be photographed with the KKK-kid: Haha. “If there is a Black Santa at the other end of the mall and he doesn’t want to have his picture taken with a child who is dressed up in a Ku Klux Klan outfit, Black Santa has to do that?” he asked. The spectators laughed uneasily as Alito joked: “You do see a lot of Black children in Ku Klux Klan outfits, right? All the time.” See, if everyone’s dignity and humiliation is hilarious, then nobody’s is serious. Except Lorie Smith’s, apparently.
Notice that what Lithwick entirely omits is that it was Kagan who introduced the idea of black kids in Ku Klux Klan outfits. Alito was rejecting the idea as implausible. But any gullible reader would think—from this passage, from the subhed, and from Lithwick’s later sarcastic complaint about “the riotously funny prospect of small Black kids dressed up as Klansmen”—that Alito was making a joke.
This is not a mistake that just happens. It’s an artful distortion."
What is even hilarious is the Colorado committee literally decided not to pursue a case where a client asked a gay baker to create a message of scripture against gay marriage. So the law is literally one way. Pro progressive.
Given the tenets of in vogue progressive philosophies like CRT and Intersectionality, the idea that these kinds of laws will be applied equally is a quaint and naive idea.
The quaint and naive idea, also idiotic, is that Colorado would make a law to both include and exclude homosexuality. Or that the law is somehow unfair to those who are intolerant of homosexuals.
"So the law is literally one way. Pro progressive."
Of course it's one way, designed to include homosexuality in society. Expecting a law to both include and exclude is absurd. And not progressive but pro homosexual. Progressive is a political stance, homosexuality is a sexual orientation. You'll get muddled if you continue to confuse them.
Yes, repressive tolerance. Which is why it should be denied.
"Which is why it should be denied."
Denied like those tens of thousands of splendid people in Iran hitting the streets ducking the blows of government goon squads denying the oppressive hijab laws?
Or denied like some goof on the Internet whining pseudonymously?
I guess conservatives have to start requesting "god hates queers" cakes, and "abortion is murder" websites from liberal designers and I would bet money they would very quickly be on the other side of the argument.
That these types of laws are intended to be enforced equally misses some of the central tenets of currently in vogue progressive philosophies like CRT.
Per JesseAz's comment immediately above, at least some conservatives have done almost exactly that - and the CO regulators refused to enforce the standard evenly.
JesseAz does not provide a source and I could not quickly find one. But if true, it's a damning accusation.
I'd be scared, since we're not dealing with Christians, you might get a razor blade in your cake.
Considering the left's coprophilia, you'd probably get a lot worse than that.
Not so blunt. But demanding a Muslim restaurant cater a roasted pig for an event, complete with apple in the mouth, then suing when they refuse would be a great way to show the hypocrisy.
The automobiles that I have access to are nowhere near as unique as a Bugatti. Therefore, I demand that the state of Colorado give me access to a Bugatti, or approved equal.
At some point, society became so enthralled with overcoming slavery that they forgot why it was wrong in the first place.
And, lest we forget, regardless of what SCOTUS rules, the RFMA and 'full faith and credit' quite readily, conceptually, backstops the issue in favor of the CADA/CHRC. That is, it's ambiguous as to whether 303 Creative gets protection or not, but it's clear that the CADA will be enforced outside Colorado, FFnC. This is intentional and by design.
mad.casual just dumped alphabet soup over the page. WTF does it mean?
The law indicates that society has accepted homosexuality into its fold. Many Christians don't seem to have a problem with this. The hold outs are the conservatives, Christian or not, repelled by the lifestyle, and their religious objections may be no more than a ex post facto rationalization of what amounts to an emotional gut feeling.
So, crush them, right?
Basically, yes. Look at the tremendous cost of including America's black population as fully fledged members. 600,000 dead in the civil war and it still wasn't done.
With homosexuality it probably won't come to civil war. Conservatives die out, just like everyone else, and their ideas and intolerance die out with them. Society's bellwethers, the young, the intelligent, and the urban are much more tolerant of ideas like gay marriage and the acceptance of homosexuality.
Urbans literally live in their own shit.
Historic determinism doesn't exist.
Wrong analogy. Conservatives and Christians mostly don't care about the alternate lifestyles as long as we are not forced to agree with it and compelled by government to promote it.
"we are not forced to agree with it and compelled by government to promote it."
I don't think you'll have anything to worry about on that account. But you will be forced to accept it. And fear not, you will, all the while, be able to claim victimhood.
A baker forced to design a customized cake for a gay wedding or a web designer forced to design a web site for it _are_ compelled by government to promote it. You are either a liar or have a mental blind spot so huge it swallows any chance of writing something that isn't a waste of my time to read.
Too bad we don't have some foundational legal document that prohibits government from interfering with speech. And other stuff.
You should have been reading the news over the past few weeks. There have been a few interesting developments in rolling back heavy handed government actions. In China against covid policies, and Iran against morality police. Neither relied on ancient documents or lawyers arguing with other lawyers to affect change. In both cases, change came from masses of people taking to the streets, for days or weeks on end.
Speech, not speech, who cares? You don’t have a right to someone's labor. You don’t have a right to force someone to work for you regardless of whether or not you pay them and regardless of why they don’t want to work for you.
Treasure your right to say no to someone simply because they are homosexual while you can. It’s not going to last.
if it is a right then it will still be a right even after authoritarian right-thinkers in govt punish people for exercising it.
Rights don't originate with the govt -- even if some govts choose to protect peoples rights
I don't think governments will choose to protect people's right to say no to people because of their sexuality. As I say, enjoy it while you can. I foresee a future where sexual intolerance is frowned upon and punished by governments and the public.
Yeah, I'm sure your side can't wait until it's okay to rape little kids.
Hey Moron! It's been OK for our side to rape and eat little kids since Nov. 2020. Try to keep up.
Except that’s not what is happening at all.
It’s not unusual for judges to perform amazing logical legal gymnastics when they don’t want to draw the obvious conclusion from the facts and the law, but the strain involved in concluding that creating unique works of art is the same as “public accommodations” is so severe that I’m surprised the judges didn’t hurt themselves in the process! Social engineering from biased Federal judges is not new, but it’s a bit surprising that they continue to try to violate their oaths of office to support and defend the Constitution of the United States when they know they will be overruled by the Supreme Court. Perhaps it has something to do with the fact that there are no adverse consequences any more for officials who violate their oaths of office?
"Perhaps it has something to do with the fact that there are no adverse consequences any more for officials who violate their oaths of office?"
Surely the oath of office is just a formality. There are consequences for witnesses in court lying under oath and committing perjury, but this is relatively rare. I've read that lying under oath is much more than commonly believed and usually all lying witnesses get away with it, oath notwithstanding.
Last month i managed to pull my first five figure paycheck ever!!! I’ve been working for this company online for 2 years now and i never been happier… They are paying me $95/per hour and the best thing is cause i am not that tech-savy, they only asked for basic understanding of internet and basic typing skill… It’s been an amazing experience working with them and i wanted to share this with you, because they are looking for new people to join their team now and i highly recommend to everyone to apply…
Visit following page for more information…………..>>> onlinecareer1
The complexity of this issue demands the superior application of logic to navigate and discern clear justice.
We expect that this is precisely the skill that Supreme Court justices possess.
I’ll give it a shot by trying to define the issue unambiguously to preclude conflicting conclusions.
The description of the issue is “does a commercial web designer have the responsibility to create something that advocates LGBT behaviour”.
Design differs from mere service as the creativity of the designer is how the service is judged.
Can someone honestly represent their business creatively advocating something that they cannot in good faith advocate?
This demand for creativity is in stark contrast to merely allowing people to trade.
I suggest that they cannot as compelling someone with force to act in someone else’s interest instead of their own, is coercion.
I get paid over 190$ per hour working from home with 2 kids at home. I never thought I’d be able to do it but my best friend earns over 10k a month doing this and she convinced me to try. The potential with this is endless. Heres what I’ve been doing..
HERE====)> http://WWW.RICHSALARIES.COM
You forgot to say coercion is immoral. Government does a lot of coercing.
Coercion is immoral. Though not explicitly illegal. It should be.
Abortion was illegal until the Supreme Court ruled in error, directly resulting in the murder of over 60 million Americans, unil being overturned.
I am making $92 an hour working from home. I never imagined that it was honest to goodness yet my closest companion is earning $16,000 a month by working on a laptop, that was truly astounding for me, she prescribed for me to attempt it simply.
Everybody must try this job now by just using this website. http://www.LiveJob247.com
Great article, Mike. I appreciate your work, I’m now creating over $35000 dollars each month simply by doing a simple job online! I do know You currently making a lot of greenbacks (igj-14) online from $28000 dollars, its simple online operating jobs.
.
.
Just open the link———————————————>>> http://Www.RichApp1.Com