It’s odd how a
bill that prevents the state from taking punitive actions against
individuals and non-public corporations in the conduct of business who
refuse to engage in commerce where that action would violate their sincere religious
beliefs on the subject of marriage could strike such terror that it does
not even get a full hearing and up-or-down vote. State Rep. Mike Johnson’s
bill got some discussion and proponents and opponents got a chance to
testify, but before he even could ask to have some amendments put on it,
the House’s Civil
Law and Procedure Committee voted to return it to the calendar. Only
Johnson and fellow Republican state Rep. Ray Garafalo
objected to short-circuiting the debate (another, state Rep. Cameron Henry,
did not show up for the vote).
But it’s
common in human history when an oppressive majority, finding compelling
argumentation lacking against an idea, suppresses that idea as it cannot
defeat it in debate, and the committee’s action only echoes that sad
history. No doubt the motivating force for this almost unheard-of maneuver
stemmed from the nature of the amendments, which placated any remote chance
that the law
could be twisted to allow discrimination for constitutionally-unjustifiable
reasons.
That reaction
is as a result of the nature of the objections to it. For some, typified by
the Democrats on the panel, a bill like this questions their faith. Like
many on the left, they believe in their ideology because they must believe,
because not to believe destroys a delicately-laced lattice of personality
traits that in their minds defines them as “good” people on the basis that they
believe in the “right” things. To admit that opposing views have merit –
and excruciatingly so as in objective analysis of data and history, much
less through victories in the marketplace of ideas, those opposing views
are typically demonstrated as more valid – cannot be tolerated, and so the
left creates convenient, if inaccurate, containers into which these views
are forced to fit and any rational argument or facts that contradict these
finely honed defense mechanisms are distorted or denied by its acolytes.
The heterodoxy supported by the bill simply cannot be tolerated, so its
legitimacy must be denied or ignored, and shunting it out of the way takes
care of that. They are scared to think for themselves because if they tried
it they might not like what they find.
By contrast,
the Republicans on the committee who supported cutting off debate before
its logical conclusion probably did so because they also are scared to
think for themselves, not because of the demands of their worldview, but because
of the inconvenience it causes. Like those on the left, these milquetoasts
are concerned about what kind of personage they project, but in this
instance determined not in how they see themselves, but in how they think
others see them. If they had the courage and intellectual capacity, they
could lay out the principled
position outlined in the bill that reflects the Constitution’s
protection of religious belief from government sanction when that belief
clashes with the behavioral preferences of a few, actions which do not
enjoy Constitutional protection.
But fearing
that the anti-intellectuals, bullies, and haters would call them names, they
lack the courage of their convictions to stand up to that, as they place
importance on their own self-worth defined by what a few loud others
articulate concerning them. Thus, expect these wet noodles to answer to constituents
about their vote on stopping the bill reciting some gibberish like the bill
would be bad for economic development – an absurd argument if ever there
was one, as it is entirely unserious to believe, for example, that if a law
chased away two out of every 100 job applicants (the best estimates are
that only two percent of the public prefers consistently acting
homosexually) that the remaining impoverished hiring pool would bring
Louisiana’s economy crashing down. Recognize such argumentation for what it
is – flimsy and cowardly.
And they will
have to answer for it, courtesy of Jindal. By issuing
the order, it becomes policy that state and local governments will not
take retaliatory actions in those instances (up until 60 days past the next
legislative regular session). It’s a principled position that a large
majority of Louisianans support, and also one that aids Jindal in his increasingly-likely
attempt to win the presidency next year in a Republican nomination
process where those agreeing with his preference probably enjoy as large if
not larger of a majority on this issue. And, unlike Pres. Barack Obama's pattern of using executive orders to change the nature of the law such as with the misnamed Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Jindal's use clarifies application of existing state government discretion in its activities, and by extension for local governments where their ordinances remain silent on granting protection to activities related to homosexual behavior, where potential action conflicts with the Louisiana Constitution is entirely appropriate and legitimate.
If those
Republicans had hoped that they could melt away from the controversy, the
executive order assures they can’t. Thinking they could suffer minimal
political damage from a largely-obscured minor vote that they figured would
disappear as an issue afterwards, it now has new life and they will be
asked repeatedly about it during campaign season. Their bases, a
significant portion of which will favor the order, will perceive them
either as spineless or in disagreement, and both observations by the electorate
will erode votes from them if a principled conservative candidate and one
on this issue signs up to run against them.
Looking beyond
the politics of the matter, Jindal’s decision simply was the right thing to
do. It sends a message that state government will not endorse intolerance
against sincerely-held religious views on marriage nor that those views
will be sacrificed in favor of lifestyle choices. That reassures that
liberty still is cherished, at least among those not willing to act as
tinpot totalitarians only too eager to impose their idea of marriage onto
to others despite constitutional protections of religious belief. Such
folks endorse a bigotry and disregard for the Constitution that has no
place in American political culture, and Jindal’s action put them at bay,
at least for now. For if we know one thing about this kind of people, it is
that they are relentless in their quest for control, held in check only by
continual vigilance and the occasional act of courage at present witnessed
from Jindal and lacking in a number of state legislators.
1 comment:
Jindal's executive order was nothing more than the sour grapes actions of a governor who had his pet proposal killed in committee. If he can't have his way, he's taking his toys and going home.
This order is unconstitutional on its face solely for promoting one religion over all others (fundamentalist Christianity); it's also a shameless political ploy geared to score early points for Jindal when he's running for President later this year.
The bill quite simply sends the wrong message. We already have protection of religious practice in the First Amendment, and the fundamental rights included in it do not need the assistance or tweaking of Bobby Jindal.
The insistence that a baker who bakes a cake for a same-sex marriage celebration is somehow being forced to participate in the wedding is laughably dishonest. If someone buys a musical instrument from a dealer, the seller has no say over what type of music will be played with that instrument or where it will be played. If a gay person buys a cake, the seller doesn't have any right to tell the buyer where it can be eaten, once the customer has paid for it.
And of course, you've cited a poll conducted by a Christian organization to make the false claim that a majority of Louisianians support a religious freedom bill and/or executive order - take special note of the the polling questions, which are anything but neutrally posed. (It's always funny to me around election times when I get polling calls from conservative strategists asking such skewed questions like "Would you be inclined to support Bill Cassidy, who believes in freedom and individuality, or Mary Landrieu, who supports President Obama's radical liberal agenda?")
Your man-crush, Bobby Jindal, has suffered a pretty embarrassing defeat here, and he reacted with the ersatz efficiency of spoiled, petulant brat who can't handle it when he doesn't get his way, by issuing a useless executive order that will have no effect and never make law, and it's pretty entertaining to see you flailing away wildly with your usual dishonest defense of him. Reminder, Mr. Sadow: you're on Blogspot, where you belong, and where you will likely stay. There's a reason for that, and it's your transparently dishonest reasoning.
PS: Fuck You
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