Mon Jul 10, 2023 – 1:05 pm EDT
This article was originally published by the WND News Center
(WND News Center) — The attorney general for the state of Arizona, Democrat Kris Mayes, says she’ll still enforce a so-called “non-discrimination” law in her state, even though the Supreme Court has struck down as unconstitutional a nearly identical demand in the state of Colorado.
A report from the Post Millennial called the announcement by Mayes “an act of defiance against the Supreme Court’s decision to protect religious liberty.”
READ: Supreme Court upholds Christian web designer’s right not to promote same-sex ‘weddings’
In the decision, the justices, 6–3, said the state of Colorado was not allowed under the Constitution to require a web designer to use a state-approved ideology when talking about marriage.
Lorie Smith wanted to, with her business 303 Creative, promote traditional marriage. But as a Christian she could not provide that same promotion to same-sex duos.
The high court slammed Colorado for its ideology, and it wasn’t the first time for that state to be brought low by a Supreme Court loss. Several years ago the justices scolded Colorado to its official “hostility” to Christianity in its attempt
The remainder of this article is available in its entirety at LifeSite News
The views expressed in this news alert by the author do not directly represent that of The Official Street Preachers or its editors