You can bake cakes and build whatever websites you want. Literally nobody is stopping you.So long as I don't want to bake cakes or build websites, or interact with society in any meaningful way, sure. I can practice my understanding, until I own a business and then I have to follow other people's definitions or you sue me.
The issue comes when you attempt to deny access to those services to others, based on personal characteristics. Yeah, when you get a business licence, you should have to agree to abide by certain practices of basic decency, and avoiding arbitrary discrimination is one of them.
Ah, but that's a message related to the practice, so not analogous.No, I'm not. If you want to withhold services you don't want to provide, go ahead. If you're a printer who doesn't like circumcision, you don't have to print invitations for a briss. That's fine by me.
Analogous would be refusing a wedding website for a couple who're circumcised.
Those consequential differences only have meaning in your specific conception of marriage. They are inconsequential to mine.Because there isn't consequential difference between couples of different races. There are consequential physical differences between heterosexual and homosexual relationships.
Not long ago, bigots would be arguing that interracial marriages were "consequentially different"-- in their narrow, bigoted understanding of what constitutes a marriage. So what, then? Why should we respect their supposed right to deny service based on their understanding, if we don't share it? Should they be able to just carry on operating a business while refusing service on those clearly discriminatory grounds? And, when the answer is no-- why is your narrow conception of marriage, and your prejudices, worthy of greater and overriding consideration?