As you say, some on the left will be applying social (and economic) pressure, just as everyone else does when they’re able to. And there’s a fairly well-established rhetorical convention in my culture whereby any consistently applied social pressure is labelled “force,” “bullying,” “discrimination,” “lynching,” “intolerance,” and whatever other words can get the desired rhetorical effect.
We can get into a whole thing about what those words actually mean, but in my experience basically nobody cares. They are phatic expressions, not technical ones.
Leaving the terminology aside… I expect the refusal to perform gay weddings to become socially acceptable to fewer and fewer people, and social condemnable to more and more people. And I agree with skeptical_lurker that this process, whatever we call it, will cause some resentment among the people who are aligned with such refusal. (Far more significantly, I expect it to catalyze existing resentment.)
Those of us who endorse that social change would probably do best to accept that this is one of the consequences of that change, and plan accordingly.
As you say, some on the left will be applying social (and economic) pressure, just as everyone else does when they’re able to. And there’s a fairly well-established rhetorical convention in my culture whereby any consistently applied social pressure is labelled “force,” “bullying,” “discrimination,” “lynching,” “intolerance,” and whatever other words can get the desired rhetorical effect.
We can get into a whole thing about what those words actually mean, but in my experience basically nobody cares. They are phatic expressions, not technical ones.
Leaving the terminology aside… I expect the refusal to perform gay weddings to become socially acceptable to fewer and fewer people, and social condemnable to more and more people. And I agree with skeptical_lurker that this process, whatever we call it, will cause some resentment among the people who are aligned with such refusal. (Far more significantly, I expect it to catalyze existing resentment.)
Those of us who endorse that social change would probably do best to accept that this is one of the consequences of that change, and plan accordingly.