Kentucky Supreme Court tosses suit against Christian who refused to make LGBT pride shirts

Nov 2, 2019 by

by Calvin Freiburger, LifeSite:

The Kentucky Supreme Court sided with a Christian print shop owner Thursday in his fight for his right not to create “gay pride” T-shirts.

Blaine Adamson is the owner of Hands On Originals Christian Outfitters, a Lexington company that advertises “high quality, customized Christian apparel.” For the past several years, he has been fighting the Lexington Human Rights Commission over his polite refusal of the Gay and Lesbian Services Organization’s (now called the Pride Community Services Organization) request to print shirts for the Lexington Pride Festival.

The Kentucky Court of Appeals sided with Adamson in 2017, and the Kentucky Supreme Court heard oral arguments in August. The state’s highest court ruled Thursday that the plaintiffs “lacked statutory standing to assert a claim against Hands On Originals under the Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government ordinance,” Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) reported.

While that does not speak to the merits of the case, Justice David Buckingham wrote a concurring opinion – with which none of the justices took issue – declaring that “Hands On was in good faith objecting to the message it was being asked to disseminate” and quoting the U.S. Supreme Court’s determination that “forcing free and independent individuals to endorse ideas they find objectionable is always demeaning.”

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