FASCISM Farmer Can Return To Farmer’s Market, Court Says City Discriminated Based On Marriage Views (OP Sep 2017)

Shacknasty Shagrat

Has No Life - Lives on TB
The hyperpious ACLU seems to have ran from this controversy.
If it weren't for double standards, the ACLU would have none at all.
Good job, Alliance Defending Freedom
And good witness, Farmer Tennes.


SS

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Farmer Can Return To Farmer’s Market, Court Says City Discriminated Based On Marriage Views

By: ADI News Services September 17, 2017

A federal court issued an order Friday that requires the city of East Lansing to allow a farmer to return to its 2017 farmer’s market after city officials developed a rule for the purpose of keeping him out because of his marriage views[/B]. The city ousted Steve Tennes and Country Mill Farms after reading a post on his Facebook page that expressed his religious belief in marriage as the union between one man and one woman.

“Just like all Americans, a farmer should be free to live and speak according to his deeply held religious beliefs without fear of government punishment,” said Alliance Defending Freedom Legal Counsel Kate Anderson, who argued in favor of the order on behalf of Tennes on Wednesday. “As the court found, East Lansing officials changed their market policy to shut out Steve because they don’t like his Catholic beliefs regarding marriage. The court was right to issue this order, which will allow Steve to return to the 2017 farmer’s market while his case moves forward.”

“The City of East Lansing must allow Plaintiffs to participate in the East Lansing Farmer’s Market for the remainder of the 2017 season,” the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Michigan, Southern Division, wrote in its order in Country Mill Farms v. City of East Lansing. “On the evidence before this Court, the City amended its Vendor Guidelines and then used the changes to deny Country Mill’s vendor application. There exists a substantial likelihood that Plaintiffs will be able to prevail on the merits of their claims for speech retaliation and for free exercise of religion.”

At issue is an unconstitutional, unlawful, and complex policy that city officials adopted specifically to shut out Tennes and Country Mills Farms, his family’s fruit orchard, purely because he posted on Facebook his belief in biblical marriage. The city did this even though Tennes, his family, and the orchard are in Charlotte, 22 miles from East Lansing, well outside the city’s boundaries and beyond its jurisdiction.

After seeing Tennes’ Facebook post from August 2016, city officials took several actions to drive him out of the market. First, they told him they did not want Country Mill Farms at the next scheduled market, and they warned him that protests could occur if his farm continued to participate. Tennes, a military veteran, decided to continue to serve his customers at the market. No one protested. That did not change city officials’ resolve that Tennes could no longer participate in the market due to his statement of his religious beliefs.

For the first time in six years, when applications opened for the 2017 farmer’s market, the city did not invite Tennes to participate in the market. City officials also changed the application process for Country Mill Farms only, removing Tennes’ vendor application from the normal committee review process and reviewing it directly instead. Since Tennes and Country Mill Farms did not violate any law while at the market or in Charlotte, the officials crafted a new vendor policy that extended the city’s Human Relations Ordinance, bypassing jurisdictional limits under Michigan law, to expel Tennes from the market.

Based on the new policy, an official then informed Steve by letter that he was not in compliance and that Country Mill Farms was prohibited from participating in the 2017 market, scheduled for June through October. The notice included an attachment of Steve’s December 2016 Facebook post speaking about his religious beliefs as evidence, despite the fact that the post is constitutionally protected free speech and Country Mill Farms has never turned away a customer based on sexual orientation.

Former Michigan Solicitor General John Bursch, one of nearly 3,200 attorneys allied with ADF, is serving as local counsel in the case for Tennes and Country Mill Farms. ADF-allied attorneys James Wierenga and Jeshua Lauka with the Grand Rapids law firm of David & Wierenga PC are also serving as local counsel.


https://arizonadailyindependent.com...s-city-discriminated-based-on-marriage-views/
 

bev

Has No Life - Lives on TB
He needs to go after the city for lost income - he's only got a bit more than a month until the market closes.

Why didn't the town just boycott the market? Let the jerks running it know the townspeople were not happy. I don't know the size of the town, though, and they all might be liberals.
 

Dobbin

Faithful Steed
Actually, "Friends" in high places will put him under a microscope - examine EVERY bit of food for taint, age, or unsoundness, or critique the fact that he didn't put chocks under his wagon wheels (City Ordinance xxyyzzz) or tether his animal to a post with a 200lb sidethrust capability (OSHA and City Ordinance aabbcc.d)

In fact, if he looks sideways at someone of the favored status, he will be accused of hate crime and hauled into court.
"Did you really think we want those laws observed?" said Dr. Ferris. "We want them to be broken. You'd better get it straight that it's not a bunch of boy scouts you're up against... We're after power and we mean it... There's no way to rule innocent men.

Dobbin
 

Wise Owl

Deceased
The town is East Lansing, MI. Home of MSU and they have always been a hoighty toighty type place. Lot's a rich homes and businesses and yeah, liberal types. I can see this happening. The town is not as big as Lansing (other side of city limits and state capital)

Liberal stupidness.
 

Macgyver

Has No Life - Lives on TB

City Coughing up $825,000 for Infringing Farmer's Religious Rights | The Gateway Pundit | by Guest Contributor
Guest Contributor
3 minutes


This article originally appeared on WND.com

Guest by post by Bob Unruh

A Michigan city is coughing up $825,000 because its officials infringed the religious rights of a local farmer by banning him from a market event.

Officials with East Lansing also have agreed, going forward, to protect the religious rights of the owners of Country Mill Farms.

The payment includes about $783,000 in lawyers’ fees and another $41,000 in damages.

It was a few months back that a federal district court decided Steve Tennes, the farm owner, was free to continue participating in the city’s farmer’s market, after city officials had banned him.

It was back in 2017 that city officials excluded Tennes – specifically because of his religious beliefs.

“Steve and his family-run farm happily serve all customers as a valued vendor at East Lansing’s farmer’s market. The court was right to agree that the First Amendment protects Steve, like every other small business owner, to operate his business according to his faith and convictions,” lawyer Kate Anderson said in a prepared statement.

“We’re pleased to favorably settle this lawsuit on behalf of Steve so he and his family can continue doing what Country Mill does best, as expressed in its mission statement: “glorifying God by facilitating family fun on the farm and feeding families.'”

The fight, like so many these days, erupted over the farmer’s dedication to biblical standards.

He posted on Facebook that he follows the Catholic Church’s teachings about marriage, including when he allows weddings at his family’s farm.

That statement of faith prompted city officials to create a new policy that refused him permission to be at the farmer’s market.

WND had reported when the ruling was handed down that the court found Tennes and his family had been forced by the city to “to choose between following their religious beliefs and a government benefit for which they were otherwise qualified.”

The case has been in the courts for some six years. The court decision had found, “Denying a person an equal share of the rights, benefits, and privileges enjoyed by other citizens because of her faith discourages religious activity.”

Country Mill Farms is a 120-acre, second-generation family farm in Charlotte, Michigan.

They had sold organic products at the East Lansing farmers market since 2010, but in 2017, city officials decided to target them with a “discretionary system of individual assessments” for participan
ts.

Copyright 2023 WND News Center
 

Squib

Veteran Member
Well, the lawyers made out ok…but if $41k is all the farmer got and he missed several seasons, that’s not so good.

Also, id expect someone or some people to lose their jobs over this…the people of the town picked up the tab on this and it wasn’t an honest mistake…some flaming homo, radical prog using their position to persecute people is to blame…

The loss of job is the minimum…and they should get worse if you ask me!
 
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