Phoenix RISING
Banned
From The Hill:
Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced Monday that the Department of Justice is creating a "religious liberty task force."
The guidance was a byproduct of President Trump’s executive order directing agencies to respect and protect religious liberty and political speech.
Sessions said on Monday that the task force will “ensure all Justice Department components are upholding that guidance in the cases they bring and defend, the arguments they make in court, the policies and regulations they adopt, and how we conduct our operations.”
The announcement came during the department’s religious liberty summit.
Sessions said the cultural climate in this country — and in the West more generally — has become less hospitable to people of faith in recent years, and as a result many Americans have felt their freedom to practice their faith has been under attack.
“We’ve seen nuns ordered to buy contraceptives. We’ve seen U.S. senators ask judicial and executive branch nominees about dogma—even though the Constitution explicitly forbids a religious test for public office. We’ve all seen the ordeal faced so bravely by Jack Phillips,” he said, referring to the Colorado baker who took his case to the Supreme Court after he was found to have violated the state’s anti-discrimination laws for refusing to make a cake for a same-sex wedding.
Sessions said the guidance he issued in October lays out 20 fundamental principles for the executive branch to follow, including the principles that free exercise means a right to act — or to abstain from action — and that government shouldn’t impugn people’s motives or beliefs.
“In short, we have not only the freedom to worship—but the right to exercise our faith. The Constitution’s protections don’t end at the parish parking lot nor can our freedoms be confined to our basements,” he said, according to his prepared remarks.
Sessions said the federal government under the Trump administration is not just reacting but is actively seeking to accommodate people of faith.
“Religious Americans are no longer an afterthought,” he said.
I don't have a problem with the idea; I have a problem with how it will roll out.
For example, you'll probably never get a fixed number of denominations in Christianity alone, but there are at least 35. To extrapolate the case Sessions references, Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission, a Pentecostal business owner or employee could argue that female employees and/or patrons must wear dresses as part of the dress code, much like a grocery store requires a shirt and shoes. A Baptist or 7th Day Adventist business owner or employee could refuse to sell alcohol from certain hours from Friday evenings-Sunday afternoons.
A Muslim claim to not have to interact with women at all who are not properly garbed lest he defile himself. A Google search yields 73 sects of Islam.
Like, I know that a lot of evangelicals want to talk about freedom, but then secretly or outwardly through voting, seek to establish a theocracy. I mean, that's all fine and dandy if that's what you want, but then we might get into some Constitutional shenanigans with the first clause of the First Amendment,
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, in regards to enforcing whatever this "Religious Task Force" is to oversee.
Folks in the US about to learn how many practicing Pagans and Satanists and Bahá'í there are, too....