Justice Brett Kavanaugh reminded the press of his two L.G.B.T.Q.I.A.+ friends (both “L,” according to him), and stressed that the ruling was not anti-gay.
After sixty years of avowing that “nobody, no, nobody” is going to rain on her parade, Fanny Brice suffered a stinging defeat in a 6–3 Supreme Court decision affirming that state officials, Mother Nature, and generally anyone with a religious exemption have a First Amendment right to ruin her attempts to march down public streets belting torch songs.
The complaint against Ms. Brice was filed by a man named Brad Johnson, who—though not directly affected by her processions—sued to protect his Christian right to rain on Fanny’s parade in the future. “I was terrified of how I might be punished if I disrupted one of her insufferable celebrations,” Mr. Johnson said. “Finally, I can breathe a sigh of relief. If I ever open a parade shop full of custom-made parade items, no one can force me to sell them to Fanny and her gay friends.
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