It doesn't matter what her beliefs are. This is the whole problem with giving government monopolies. So far you guys haven't argued against my point. It's going to be decided in court and someone is going to win and someone is going to be upset. You all basically just don't like what she's done. That's your right, but it's her right to challenge this if she feels her other rights are being violated. It's a no win situation that wouldn't exist if government hadn't stuck it's nose into this problem in the first place.
My opinion makes perfect sense. You don't like her so you feel like she should do something that she feels violates a religious belief, right or wrong it is irrelevant - the court isn't really there to judge religious beliefs, especially ones that do no harm. You can only really argue harm because the government has setup tax law to benefit the married (another overstep which caused this overstep in the first place).
By the way, it's more than economic.
The issue of marriage is in large part an economic one as well you know. The gains from being married. There is of course something more fundamental at stake here which is the right to freely practice ones beliefs without the threat of coercion or force. And the fact that government takes stuff by force makes this one that is fundamental in nature. A government who takes things by force cannot equally apply the law to everyone ever. If the government weren't in the business she could be doing a similar job at a legal desk and hold her beliefs just the same and another person could hold different beliefs and marry this couple no problem. As it stands both parties feel legitimately persecuted.
Not relevant or that simple.
No, it really IS that simple; she swore an oath to uphold the law. It is exactly her position as a government employee that obligates her to follow the law, not her own morality play.
Her rights are not being violated, nevermind those of ordinary citizens of all types, by expecting her to follow her oath on pain of dismissal.
She and her rights do not have superiority over anyone else's. This is the part the right wing nuts don't get; they do not have the right to force their morality on others! To allow otherwise is tyranny!
Either she does THE JOB, not her version of it, or she leaves. No constitutional violation anywhere in sight. If I hire a roofer, do I expect him to show up and decide to paint my house instead? ...and then tell me that I can't get my roof fixed in his county?
You're confusing a cynical play on your morals with civil rights. You're getting this one badly wrong and no amount of maneuvering is going to magically change the logical arguments presented.
Now stay the Fuck away from my civil rights, you moron - you're as dangerous as you are stupid because you'll happily throw them all away for a party trick.