More and more, we are faced with coercive pressure to accept certain views, especially on gender and sexuality. Decline to put preferred pronouns in your email signature? You’re demoted at work. A neighbor posts online that men and women are different biologically? He loses his job.

As these stories keep coming, the pressure keeps rising. Merely expressing certain views is considered “violence.” Refusing to promote certain views is branded “discrimination.” Holding certain views is considered “bigotry,” making one ineligible to voice one’s opinion or even earn a living for one’s family. Fear is increasingly used to shut down good-faith debate.

But there is hope.

The U.S. Supreme Court has now decided 303 Creative v. Elenis and ruled for Lorie Smith, a graphic designer who challenged a Colorado law that required her to create websites celebrating same-sex weddings. Because of her beliefs, Lorie didn’t want to promote a message through her art that she disagrees with, so she courageously challenged an unjust law to send a message we can all agree with: it’s okay to disagree with government orthodoxy.

Of course, Lorie has always served and created all sorts of websites for members of the LGBT community. Like many artists, she can only create websites promoting certain views about marriage and many other topics for anyone, whether gay, straight, or anything else. Lorie doesn’t consider who her clients are when evaluating a project. She happily serves everyone. She cares about what ideas she’s asked to communicate or promote.