Big Ruling on Farmer Banned From Selling Food Due to Faith
A federal judge has ordered a Michigan city to allow a nearby farmer to participate in its farmers market after concluding officials there likely illegally discriminated against him because of his faith.
The case centers on the issue of same-sex “marriage,” and it isn’t the first time since the U.S. Supreme Court created that status several years ago that courts have ruled the rights of homosexuals supersede the right to exercise religion.
Previous cases were decided in favor of a T-shirt maker in Kentucky and bakers in Mississippi.
The issue remains before the high court in the case of a Colorado baker, Jack Phillips, who was ordered by an enraged state Civil Rights Commission to provide same-sex “wedding” cakes and to undergo a state-mandated indoctrination program.
The latest decision favored farmer Steve Tennes of Country Mill Farms in his case against East Lansing Michigan. (Read more from “Big Ruling on Farmer Banned From Selling Food Due to Faith” HERE)
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