Sunday, April 5, 2015

RFRA



HAC feels that the current Religious Freedom and Restoration Acts are unnecessary and fundamentally flawed as they specifically and intentionally allow discrimination against members of the LGBT community. 

The argument is often put forward that these laws are similar to the original RFRA.  They are similar, but not equivalent.  The original RFRA allowed people to worship as they pleased without fear of government censure.  So, for example, if your religion allows you to wear eagle feathers, the government could not prosecute you for wearing the feathers of an endangered species. 

The original RFRA dealt specifically with protecting aspects of private worship. The act did not address expanding those religious rights to dealings with other people.  The current RFRAs, however, do attempt to add that expansion.  They significantly change both the meaning and spirit of the original law by saying that someone is (or should be) allowed to offer their goods or services to whomever they choose.  This is by definition discriminatory.  

The government cannot force a kosher butcher to sell non-kosher meats because someone feels they should be able to purchase pork wherever they wish.  A kosher butcher is not discriminating against pork eaters.  He is simply limiting the items he carries in his shop.   If he is willing to let anyone buy his kosher meats, he is not discriminating.   Discrimination would only comes into play if he offered to sell his meats to one one group but not another.   Allowing this discrimination is the expressed purpose of the new RFRA bills.  

Printers cannot be forced to print flyers stating "no same-sex marriages"  since doing so would be  participating in an act of discrimination.  On the other hand, these same printers cannot refuse to make a sign that says  "God does not exist" simply because they might not agree with the sentiment.  Such a sign is not derogatory to any group and refusing to print it would be discriminatory.

The ALEC-inspired RFRA laws exist and are being proposed for one reason and one reason only …to allow businesses to discriminate against gays.   The attempts to cast them as anything else is disingenuous at best.  When  Governor Pence signed the Indiana RFRA law, he was surrounded by anti-LGBT activists.  When he was asked later whether the law would allow discrimination against gays, he dissembled and simply refused to answer the question.   The “clarification” that was later signed did indeed remove the ability to discriminate out of the law.  Doing so made the law more in keeping with the goals of the original RFRA.

Such a clarification is needed because the Supreme Court declared the original RFRA unconstitutional with regards to the states.  This prompted many states to pass their own version of the RFRA so that the religious protections afforded by the original law could be lawfully applied to them.  HAC endorses any RFRA that restore a state's religious rights established by the original RFRA.  But it does not condone or support a RFRA that expands those rights to allow any sort of discrimination.

Stupid Politicians

Those who are confused that politicians seemingly getting stupider and stupider should consider this: When shopping for politicians to buy, by sure to get the stupidest ones you can find.  Stupid politicians don't ask questions and do what the hell they're told.  The down side to this is that the stupider your purchases are, the more likely they are to say truly moronic things, even though you keep telling them to just keep their damn mouths shut and stop talking about this stuff.