Ruling in the bakery owner’s favor, the judge found that the Constitution creates a right to discriminate.

On Monday, a trial court in California’s Central Valley blamed a lesbian couple for the discrimination they experienced when they tried to buy a wedding cake. That’s twisted reasoning at best, but it also ignores the very real harms that follow when we deny people the freedom to participate in public life.

Eileen and Mireya Rodriguez-Del Rio tried to buy a cake from the bakery Tastries, but the owner Cathy Miller turned them away when they arrived for their scheduled cake tasting on August 26, 2017, based on her religious objections to same-sex marriage. Miller instead referred them to a different bakery, even though Tastries regularly sells wedding cakes to heterosexual couples.

The court found that the Constitution creates a right to discriminate, in part by grossly minimizing the harm that the Rodriguez-Del Rios experienced when they were rejected. In ruling for the bakery, Kern County Superior Court Judge David Lampe said:

If anything the harm to [the bakery owner] is the greater harm, because it carries significant economic consequences. When one feels injured, insulted or angered by the words or expressive conduct of others, the harm is many times self-inflicted.

Blaming Eileen and Mireya for the discrimination they experienced that day at the bakery is outrageous. It’s hard to fault people who experience injury when told they are not good enough to be served because of who they are.

But the court didn’t stop there.

According to the court, “the fact that Rodriguez-Del Rios feel they will suffer indignity from Miller’s choice is not sufficient to deny constitutional protection.” The judge went on to say that “[a]n interest in preventing dignitary harms . . . is not a compelling basis for infringing free speech.” Thankfully, that’s just not true. Putting aside the bakery’s contention that freedom of speech creates a right to refuse equal service, the Supreme Court has long recognized that preventing the harm to personal dignity that occurs with discrimination is one of the core purposes of our anti-discrimination laws.

In an immediate challenge to the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the court ruled in favor of federal public accommodations law to ensure human dignity. Justice Arthur Goldberg, in a concurring opinion, wrote: “Discrimination is not simply dollars and cents, hamburgers and movies; it is the humiliation, frustration, and embarrassment that a person must surely feel when he is told that he is unacceptable as a member of the public.”

And in Roberts v. Jaycees, the Supreme Court recognized that discrimination — in that case, turning women away from membership in an organization — “deprives persons of their individual dignity and denies society the benefits of wide participation in political, economic, and cultural life.”

All of us should have the freedom to walk into a business open to the public and know that we will be served. Fearing that you will be turned away just because of who you are changes the way you live your daily life, in real and damaging ways. It forces you to hide who you are. It takes away the liberty to live an authentic life. And it puts you at risk of being denied service at establishments that otherwise open their doors to the public.

If upheld on appeal, yesterday’s ruling would create a constitutional right to discriminate. It would mean that LGBTQ people, even those who live in states like California with laws against discrimination, must go back to being fearful of embarrassment and hostility when walking into a business. The U.S. Supreme Court is considering this same question in the Masterpiece Cakeshop case right now. Hopefully, they’ll see the bakery’s arguments for what they really are — an impermissible attempt to use cherished speech and religion rights to discriminate and harm LGBTQ people, and potentially others, across the country.