Perspective of who the author is. Every author and every website has an agenda. Personally, I cannot support an author who has these types of views, as it is against the inalienable rights of my friends and myself.
There's lots of injustices. I'm by necessity disregarding almost all of them. I'm not a court.
When choosing how to allocate my capacity for moral outrage, it's perfectly valid to give preference to people who are not actively pursuing the cause of taking away my rights.
In other words, it's ridiculous if the court is actually getting away with not returning the bond, but as a matter of not shooting myself in the foot, the author of the article shouldn't expect me to go to the barricades with him to push through his interpretation of the constitutional invalidity of traffic tickets only so he can turn around and fuck me over next, if he doesn't run me over first, when I could be on way more important barricades to help people suffering way worse.
You're comparing fighting a traffic ticket to the rights of same-sex marriages?
If an author has a stance on removing the rights of someone just because of their sexual preferences - you're right, I'm calling them out on it. I am in no way blocking their right to their own opinion, but adding my own.
For this author, the two subjects are very much entwined and related.
I def. take a critical eye to authors that have themselves taken a racist and/or homophobic stance (to name just two issues), and will defend that without question or apology. Make up your own opinions, but first get an idea on who you're trying to defend. This person's writing doesn't exist in a vacuum, and it's no a secret what his agenda is. I agree he has the right to express it, and I have the right to counter his writing, by showing what else they're writing about.