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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhy It’s Time to Repeal the Religious Freedom Restoration Act
The law, passed in 1993 with near-unanimous support, has become an excuse for bigotry, superstition and sectarianism.In the not-too-distant future, its entirely possible that religious freedom will be the only freedom we have lefta condition for which we can blame the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993. Passed practically unanimously, with support from Ted Kennedy to Orrin Hatch, the ACLU to Concerned Women for America, the bill was a response to the Supreme Courts decision in Employment Division v. Smith. This case involved two Oregon members of the Native American Church who were denied unemployment compensation after being fired for using peyote, an illegal drug, in a religious ceremony. Justice Antonin Scalias majority opinion, which held that a law that applied to everyone and was not directed at religion specifically was not a violation of religious freedom, made a lot of sense to me, then and now. Why should I have to obey a law and my religious neighbor not?
RFRA, which required laws infringing on religious convictions to meet the strict scrutiny test, was overkill. There were other ways to protect Native Americans right to use peyote in religious ceremonies. The church could have asked the State Legislature for an exemption; after all, during Prohibition, the Catholic Church was allowed to use wine in the Mass. Orbut now Im really dreamingworkers could have been given legal protection from losing their jobs for minor lawbreaking outside the workplace. I mean, peyote! Come on. But no, for some reason, there had to be a sweeping, feel-good, come-to-Jesus moment uniting left and right. The power of God is such, said President Clinton, that even in the legislative process, miracles can happen. Gag me with a spoon.
What were progressives thinking? Maybe in 1993, religion looked like a stronger progressive force than it turned out to be, or maybe freedom of religion looked like a politically neutral good thing. Two decades later, its clear that the main beneficiaries of RFRA are the Christian right and other religious conservatives. RFRA has given us the Hobby Lobby decision permitting religious employers to decide what kind of birth control, if any, their insurance plans will provide. Its given us conscience clauses, in which medical personnel can refuse to provide women with legal medical servicesculminating in the truly absurd case of Sara Hellwege, an anti-choice nurse-midwife who is suing a federally funded family planning clinic in Tampa for religious discrimination because it declined to hire her after she said she would refuse to prescribe abortifacient contraceptives, i.e., birth control pills. (That the pill does not cause abortion is irrelevantthis is religion were talking about; facts dont matter.)
http://www.thenation.com/article/180832/why-its-time-repeal-religious-freedom-restoration-act
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Why It’s Time to Repeal the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (Original Post)
madokie
Aug 2014
OP
cbayer
(146,218 posts)1. Excellent. I am going to cross-post in religion group.
I'm non religious so I stay out of there
cbayer
(146,218 posts)3. I don't blame you, lol.
I'm not sure how interested the regulars will be, but it's a really good article on a topic that is not widely understood.
Thanks!
littlemissmartypants
(22,797 posts)4. Kicking. Thank you. nt
reACTIONary
(5,771 posts)5. K&R (nt)