Guy LeDouche
Banned
so I assume the good gay people of Indiana are going to troll for shitty homophobe businesses to deny service so they can establish standing for a challenge?
"Whatever, Gen-con. We got cosplayers."
First firing squads are reinstated, and now this. Seriously something needs to change drastically. It's like going back in time.
As a Canadian, I just don't know what's going on with our neighbor.
You think it's strange to still have monks but it isn't strange to still have nuns?
so I assume the good gay people of Indiana are going to troll for shitty homophobe businesses to deny service so they can establish standing for a challenge?
F*cking shameful we need to do this at all, but yea...
What's to stop these businesses to see a pair of minorities go into their place and pull the "gay card" and refuse service?.
From his twitter.
https://twitter.com/GovPenceIN/status/581099613123379200
Appently this is how he signed the bill.
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"We even got a black one! See equality!"
The Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) Explained
First off, what is it?
The Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) is a bill just passed by the Indiana legislature that guarantees that the government may not place any"substantial burden on a person's exercise of religion" UNLESS the government can prove two things:
1. It is pursuing a "compelling government interest"
2. It is the "least restrictive means of furthering that compelling government interest."
That seems like loose wording .Couldn’t someone use this bill to refuse service to gays? Or even blacks or Jews?
No.
But what if ---
NO.
Bear with me as I give a little history. In 1990, a Supreme Court decision (Employment Division v. Smith) restricted the use of a religious exemption in conflict with a valid law. Essentially, two Native Americans claimed exemption from current drug laws after being fired for using peyote. So in response, Congress passed in 1993 the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. Sound familiar? It’s pretty much identical to the bill just passed in Indiana.
But if Congress passed that on a federal level, why did Indiana bother passing an identical bill? In 1997, the Supreme Court ruled that the federal law could not be applied to the states, as Congress had exceeded it constitutional powers by enacting the law and could not determine how the states would enforce the restrictions.
And so, states set out creating their OWN identical RFRA laws they could actually enforce in their own states. Since 1997, the following states have passed their own lawsin no particular order) Arizona, Idaho, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas,Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, Florida, South Carolina,Louisiana, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, and Rhode Island.
In addition to those states, the following states have RFRA-like regulations in place via a state court decision: Washington, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin,Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Mississippi, North Carolina, Massachusetts, and Maine.
That brings us to about 31 states that have RFRA in some way, shape, or form in effect. And that brings me back to the original question: can’t this law be used to refuse service to gays, or blacks, or anyone who I claim violates my “religion”?
Again, no. In the 22 years since this law has been put into effect anywhere, there has not been a single case where it has allowed someone to discriminate against someone based off of their sexual orientation. NOT.ONE. And that goes for race, too.
As a side note, that RFRA bill that was passed in Illinois? Supported by then-state senator Barack Obama. The federal RFRA bill passed in 1993? It was almost unanimous in support, sponsored by Sen. Chuck Schumer, supported by Rep. Nancy Pelosi, and signed into law by President Bill Clinton.
Well,okay, then what’s this law for then? What was that about a “substantial burden”?
From the Washington Post:
"These state RFRAs were enacted in response to Supreme Court decisions that had nothing to do with gay rights or same-sex marriage," explained University of Virginia law professor Douglas Laycock in an e-mail. "And the state court decisions interpreting their state constitutions arose in all sorts of contexts, mostly far removed from gay rights or same-sex marriage. There were cases about Amish buggies, hunting moose for native Alaskan funeral rituals, an attempt to take a church building by eminent domain, landmark laws that prohibited churches from modifying their buildings – all sorts of diverse conflicts between religious practice and pervasive regulation."
Sources:
The actual text of the bill: http://iga.in.gov/legislative/2015/bills/senate/101
The original federal law: https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/103/hr1308
http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Societ...-protect-faithful-or-legalize-prejudice-video
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs...-heightened-protections-for-religious-freedom
http://blog.constitutioncenter.org/2014/06/what-is-rfra-and-why-do-we-care/
I just caught wind of this this evening. As an Indiana resident, I am completely embarrassed for my state.
E: However, upon further research...Someone on the GenCon page posted this:
So maybe it's not as terrible as it sounds?
"Today we are canceling all programs that require our customers/employees to travel to Indiana to face discrimination," Benioff wrote on his personal Twitter account. He then emphasized his "employees' and customers' outrage" over the bill and said that he would "dramatically reduce" the company's investment in Indiana as a result.
This sounds an awful lot like what Pence was saying in his press conference...I just caught wind of this this evening. As an Indiana resident, I am completely embarrassed for my state.
E: However, upon further research...Someone on the GenCon page posted this:
So maybe it's not as terrible as it sounds?
This sounds an awful lot like what Pence was saying in his press conference...
I just caught wind of this this evening. As an Indiana resident, I am completely embarrassed for my state.
E: However, upon further research...Someone on the GenCon page posted this:
So maybe it's not as terrible as it sounds?
I think we should wait until the law gets abused before we express outrage.
Here's the problem with that analysis: many of those states have public accommodation laws that explicitly protect LGBT persons in the public sphere. When doing business with a gay couple in Connecticut, for instance, you have to treat that couple the same way you would treat any other couple if you were, say, a wedding vendor, even though Connecticut already has a bill similar (though not identical) to Indiana's.
Where Indiana gets into trouble is twofold: it allows private parties to be covered under this act, even if the government isn't involved, and Indiana has no public accommodation law for LGBT persons.
The fear is not that gay persons won't be served at restaurants -- that's probably not going to happen. The fear is that gay couples looking to have their weddings will be burdened by private institutions that turn them away. And then when gay couples sue (if they choose to, many would not), these wedding vendors are protected under this bill because Indiana has no such laws that would protect LGBT persons.
That analysis also ignores the simple reality that there haven't really been any chances to turn away gay couples because the legality of gay marriage in many non-bleeding heart liberal states is extremely new. Massachusetts has had marriage equality for over a decade, yes, but marriage equality has been legal in Indiana for all of 5 months. This is similar to other red and purple states that already had RFRAs. Not really a great timeline to say that the bill will have no affect on gay couples trying to get married.
There are a lot of good things about having an RFRA. There are some potentially terrible things as well: see, what can and probably will happen in Indiana to gay couples. They way to balance this is to do something similar to what Utah did (though they didn't pass a public accommodations law): Pass a RFRA, but also pass broad LGBT rights laws from public accommodations to employment to housing. That's a fair balance that would cast no doubt on the application of the law to gay couples. That didn't happen, for a very real reason, in Indiana, and that's what's scary.
The fear is not that gay persons won't be served at restaurants -- that's probably not going to happen. The fear is that gay couples looking to have their weddings will be burdened by private institutions that turn them away. And then when gay couples sue (if they choose to, many would not), these wedding vendors are protected under this bill because Indiana has no such laws that would protect LGBT persons.
I spent like am hour earlier reading through these various laws and I still have no idea what the practical effect will be. It's just a weird law in general.I just caught wind of this this evening. As an Indiana resident, I am completely embarrassed for my state.
E: However, upon further research...Someone on the GenCon page posted this:
So maybe it's not as terrible as it sounds?
eagerly awaiting the moment this gets overturned in court
Gay person here. I don't mind the law. Freedom of association is a pretty important freedom. It's not unlimited, but it's pretty important. Preventing businesses from discriminating on the basis of color was really, really important, since it effectively segregated society; enough people were willing to discriminate on those lines that it really negatively impacted the lives of black people.
Meanwhile, basically all this means is that I have to go to a different florist for my wedding, which isn't any big deal for me. Meanwhile, forcing the florist to help my union might be a significant violation of her conscience.
Of course, it still remains legal in 30-some states for someone to fire someone else just because they're gay. That's a big issue, because finding another job isn't as simple as finding another florist. I think that's where we should be focusing our attention.
Lawmakers in the Georgia House Judiciary Committee just voted to "table," or drop, an anti-gay "religious freedom" bill. The legislation, one of an increasingly popular kind know as Religious Freedom Restoration Acts (RFRA), would have allowed anyone to discriminate against anyone else, merely by citing their sincerely held religious beliefs.
Meanwhile, basically all this means is that I have to go to a different florist for my wedding, which isn't any big deal for me. Meanwhile, forcing the florist to help my union might be a significant violation of her conscience.
Current wedding ceremonies and how marriage in general in modern society runs contrary to what's in the Bible, so it's all bullshit anyway.Wouldn't this only apply to bakeries who make wedding cakes (and people who perform wedding ceremonies)? Because saying "serving you a hamburger interferes with my religious freedoms" seems like a pretty tenuous argument.
And if there is only a single florist in your area? Being able to deny service to anyone you want is significantly more problematic when you live in smaller towns and have limited options. Especially if you're too poor or are unable to drive (various legal/health complications impact ability to travel) to actually go anywhere else.
People very easily get stuck in hostile environments they cannot leave. You can't just shrug you're shoulders at these kinds of policies because they don't hurt you specifically.
That's not how public accommodations laws work. They are not creatures of common law, but of statutory law. So, were the gay couple in your hypo to sue, they would lose not because of the RFRA, but because there's no statute making the discrimination they experienced illegal. In the absence of such a law, RFRA has no role to play in that dispute.
I was not aware of CT having a somewhat similar law. Do you have a link explaining it by chance? I am curious.
Mike Pence said:“This bill is not about discrimination, and if I thought it legalized discrimination in any way in Indiana, I would have vetoed it. In fact, it does not even apply to disputes between private parties unless government action is involved."
While the Indiana bill says that a “governmental entity may not substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion,” it also applies those rules to businesses and interactions between private parties “regardless of whether the state or any other government entity is party to the proceeding.” Under the Indiana law, a religious liberty defense would be available under all state laws and local ordinances, unless state law provides a specific exemption.
In Washington, Arlene's Flowers was successfully sued by both the state and couple for violating"RCW 49.60.030 Freedom from discrimination — Declaration of civil rights."
You're right that the judge did not use the public accommodations law in his ruling, so I amend my point to be any general non-discrimination statute that would protect LGBT persons. Indiana does not have such a statute.
Did Mike Pence not read his own bill?
http://www.buzzfeed.com/dominicholden/indiana-passes-religious-freedom-bill#.nnpRLAKKn
It doesn't matter whether it's a public accommodations law or any other sort of anti-discrimination law (and WLAD includes a public accommodations provision). Such laws are not created by courts, but enacted by legislatures. In the absence of such a law, the RFRA has no effect on one's right to discriminate, since the RFRA simply creates a case-specific exemption from some other legal requirement.
And it's interesting that you refer to that Washington case. Though Washington has not enacted an RFRA, their state Constitution has been interpreted as providing similar protections. The judge in the case you cite, quoting a Washington Supreme Court case, explained: "[The Washington Constitution] provides 'broader protection than the first amendment to the federal constitution.' A party challenging government action under [the Washington Constitution] must show both a sincere belief and a substantial burden upon free exercise as a result of the government action. Where a substantial burden exists, the government must show that its action is 'a narrow means for achieving a compelling goal.'" (Citations omitted.) If you're OK with that analysis, then your problem isn't with RFRAs, but with a lack of anti-discrimination provisions.
And if that's the case, then you and I have much more common ground than you've been letting on.
But, without such anti-discrimination laws, RFRAs have no effect on one's right to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation. RFRAs create an exception from other law, but if there is no other law on point, then there's no need for an exception. You're suggesting that RFRAs, standing alone, authorize discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. But that's false. In fact, your proposed solution--enacting anti-discrimination laws alongside RFRAs--would be the very source of the problem you pretend is inherent in RFRAs.
Just because a law "may" allow discrimination is no reason to gut it, if it otherwise serves an important function. This bill does serve an important function. If you want to be absolutely certain that it can't be used to get around public accommodations laws, then support a law that exempts such laws from this bill. But don't throw the baby out with the bathwater.
Is there really any defense for this type of law?I think we should wait until the law gets abused before we express outrage.
As a Hoosier Law Student, that's not what this bill does. That's not what it does at all. Slow your roll.
This law simply states that the Indiana government must have a compelling reason to block religious expression when it conflicts with another right or when the government creates a law limiting religious expression. Discrimination is a compelling reason.
It doesn't allow discrimination. It ensures review of religious objections. Not all objections will be upheld.
I don't understand something about this issue.
I'm a self employed webdeveloper (in Europe), and I sometimes get potential clients who I really don't want to work with for a variety of reasons: obnoxious people, shitty communicators, too small budget, don't trust them, etc. All valid reasons in my opinion. So I politely decline the job, and that's that.
If I was located in the USA, could these clients sue me for not wanting to work with them? That sounds rediculous.
I don't understand something about this issue.
I'm a self employed webdeveloper (in Europe), and I sometimes get potential clients who I really don't want to work with for a variety of reasons: obnoxious people, shitty communicators, too small budget, don't trust them, etc. All valid reasons in my opinion. So I politely decline the job, and that's that.
If I was located in the USA, could these clients sue me for not wanting to work with them? That sounds rediculous.
"We even got a black one! See equality!"