So, when you said "you," you meant something other than "you"?
No, I meant what I posted. There is no ad hom in what I posted.
The law didn't change, here, only the way in which it was carried out.
The law did change. Previously civil partnerships didn't exist, now they do. Therefore there is a need for registrars to carry out these ceremonies. The employer is perfectly entitled to ask its employees to do their job under the new rules, which means there will be changes to their jobs as a result.
There was nothing in the law that said I had to carry out the money laundering checks, but my employer had an obligation to make sure they were carried out. Therefore my job changed - whether they did this on day one of the new law or a year later is irrelevant. Provided the request is reasonable (and it is in both cases) then the employer is entitled to make the changes.
Was she attempting to prevent any ceremonies from being carried out?
Yes. The ones she was scheduled to perform but refused to perform.
Was anyone trying to prevent Rosa Parks riding the bus?
Yes. As I quoted from the news story: "Until December 2007 registrars in Islington effectively worked on a freelance basis and could swap with each other to avoid same-sex ceremonies14"
This contains no evidence at all that other registrars were ALWAYS available to allow a couple to have a ceremony on the day they desired. Why should they be treated as second class citizens?
Do you have any evidence that they were? Do you have any evidence that there were complaints about the way the office was run before the rule change?
No. However this is a likely outcome of her action. After all I think it is pretty unlikely that there is an oversupply of registrars allowing everyone to get married on the day they choose. By restricting that supply for a part of the community you are discriminating against them.
If this is your claim, the onus of providing the evidence is on you, not me. For myself, the fact that she was allowed to keep her job indicates that her performance was no less than satisfactory.
No, your claim was that she was not trying to prevent ceremonies from taking place. Therefore the onus is on YOU to prove this by demonstrating that her actions NEVER caused disruption to such a ceremony.
If she is allowed to choose not to marry gays, can every registrar in her office take the same stance? If not, why not?
Her employer told her that she either agreed to perform civil partnerships or she couldn't keep her job - that indicates her perfomrmance was clearly unsatisfactory. She might be the best registrar in the world at performing hetero weddings, but she should still be fired if she will not do what her job requires and her job requires her to do same sex ceremonies.
Yes, the employer sets the rules. However, heretofore, her employer was complicit in allowing her to find a substitute. Now her employer has arbitrarilly decided to change the rules.
Evidence that this was an arbitary decision? Was my employers decision that I had to do the money laundering checks arbitary? Could I have demanded that someone else did them?
In most places, that is considered an unfair labor practice, and the fact that a religious issue appears to be involved should have indicated more caution on the part of the employer.
Fundamentally disagree. Religion is not entitled to special treatment.
Yet she chooses to endanger a $61,000-a-year job, knowing full-well she could lose. I sense something more than simple bigotry, here.
Are you implying that bigots don't take their views seriously? If not, I am not sure I understand your point.