“Even legal experts on the Left agreed that McKinley didn't have a case since Warren, as the owner of a private company, has a right to keep lawful limits on his clients,” noted FRC’s Perkins.
“What's worse, there were plenty of ways for the site to resolve the issue and keep its policy intact,” he added.
LaBarbera of Americans For Truth meanwhile said it was a “shame” that eHarmony did not choose to follow the lead of the Boy Scouts of America, who won their case when the state of New Jersey was overruled by the U.S. Supreme Court.
“You could have set an example to Christians and freedom-loving Americans everywhere by fighting on principle for your company’s First Amendment right not to be bullied into submission by a politically correct state bureaucracy,” he wrote in his letter to Warren. “Instead, you capitulated.”
LaBarbera said that he would join other pro-family organizations in encouraging singles to use “other dating services that have not sold out their God and their moral beliefs for the almighty dollar.”
He has also asked Warren for a written response giving his justification for his promotion of relationships that he “at least once believed were against God’s will.”
“But please do not try to argue that eHarmony was forced into this sellout, because you could have chosen a brave and noble course of resistance rather than submit to state tyranny,” he wrote.
Pasadena, Calif.-based eHarmony said it plans to launch its new service, called Compatible Partners, on March 31, the date when most of settlement’s terms were agreed to be implemented on or by.
The site will be free for the first 10,000 users who register within a year of its launch. After that, pricing for the new site will be equal to that of eHarmony.








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