The gist of today's Hobby Lobby decision is that only 'closely held' corporations get to decide if women can or cannot have contraception on their employer-provided health plans.
The definition of 'closely held' employed by the Roberts Court is that a company where 50.1% or more of stock is held by five or fewer individuals.
For those worried/hoping that the Hobby Lobby case would herald a broader ruling on RFRA (religious grounds to deny offensive services or services to offensive people, to put it neutrally), the Alito-written majority opinion goes out of its way to say, no, and no because that would invite chaos if every political entity from the citizen on up got to decide who deserves rights and who does not, perhaps on whim.
The buried headline of this whole ruling is that only really rich people get to decide such things going forward. Little people will still have to bake cakes for weddings they'd rather not exist. Like or lump the decision, the only winners where the very rich, who gained yet a bit more in superior rights to the non-very rich, at the expense of everyone else, even people who agree with them.
That is the real outrage in the background. Even if you cheered the decision, you were sold out, too.