When the U.S. Supreme Court recently created a new protected class, people who identify themselves as homosexuals, it opened a whole can of worms regarding questions of freedom of religious exercise, and Louisiana appears to have become ground zero for sorting it all out.
Specifically, the issue right away
became whether individuals who are asked in behave in a way that would cause
them to deny their religious beliefs, by having them by way of cooperation to assist
in the commission of what they see as facilitating immoral acts, must provide
that service. The questions arose both in the performance of public sector
duties and in those non-government persons and entities participating in commerce.
Regarding government employees, the
issue arose when Gov. Bobby
Jindal’s office issued
a memorandum that stated that clerks of court and state employees who
process marriage license requests from people of the same sex wishing to marry
may refuse to do so. The legal brief essentially restated federal law (Title VII of
the Civil Rights Act), which requires an agency to accommodate employees'
exercise of their religion unless such accommodation would impose an undue
hardship on the conduct of the agency’s operations. Practically speaking, this
means that employees who object to handing out such licenses may defer if other
employees can be found to do the same; if not, then the objecting employee(s) likely
would be forced to do so because that would cause undue hardship on operations.
The severity of hardship is judged by whether it would cause an actual cost to
the agency or to other employees or be an actual disruption of work.
At the state level this is backed
by Art. X Sec. 8
of the Louisiana Constitution, which says that no classified employee (which
would include systems such as the clerk of court offices) shall be
discriminated against because of his religious beliefs, which actually leaves
out the elected clerks and high-ranking state employees with oversight of the
Office of Vital Records, which is the state agency empowered with distributing
marriage licenses in Orleans Parish. In other words, punishment could not be
levied against a classified employee that refused to perform a task contrary to
his religious beliefs, and if done so that employee could use civil service procedures
to obtain relief. Note that the recent decision, the 14th Amendment,
and incorporation of the 1st Amendment to states means that the federal
law applies in this instance of when clashes the belief about endorsing same
sex marriage through validating it with license issuance and the request to
produce one.
As a matter of course, this means
all classified employees in Louisiana should be able to opt out. For example,
if every employee at a clerk’s office refused, the clerk himself, even if he
objected on religious grounds, would have to perform the task regardless, not
only to avoid undue hardship in duty performance by the agency, but also
because as an unclassified employee he does not have the same protections in
employment. Of course, if at least one employee did not object while
the clerk did, issuance still would occur.
Whether this will satisfy the
increasingly intolerant advocates of extinguishing from the culture any kind of
moral approbation against those who practice homosexuality is another matter.
They certainly did not take kindly to Jindal’s issuance this spring of an executive
order that would prohibit the state from retaliating against people and
both for-profit and non-profit entities acting in accordance with their
religious beliefs on marriage, by such things as withholding state benefits or
commerce, causing differential tax treatment, or by denying forms of licensure.
That has culminated in a lawsuit
claiming that Jindal usurped legislative authority in doing this and it would
have the practical effect of, the plaintiffs argue, sanctioning discrimination
because they allege it would not apply to those who accept same sex marriage.
There’s disingenuousness in this
attempt, because as sure as the sun rises had the bill sponsored by state Rep. Mike Johnson on
which the order was based passed into law, there would have been a suit on
different grounds against it. And desperation is part of this as well, for as
Johnson notes it’s a weak case; just because the order does not mean that the
state will not retaliate against believers in traditional marriage, its
presence does not mean that the state automatically will retaliate against
believers in non-traditional marriages, such as same sex, polygamist,
incestuous, interspecies, or what have you. Alternatively, an identical order
including beliefs about other arrangements could be issued or appended to the
existing one.
Still, the offensive illustrates
the escalating bullying against culturally conservative beliefs about sexual
self-identification, where zealots show zero tolerance to those who equate
committing homosexual acts with immorality. According to their Sharia, it is not just that only those
who believe in this cannot use the policy-making process to have government prevent
the endorsement of the proscribed acts, but also that they be branded as
unworthy, lesser people who must be made to understand, if not accept, that
this view makes them bad people and cannot be tolerated to exist by forcing
them to behave in ways endorsing that do not assign homosexual behavior as
illegitimate. For to allow even one exception to this party line on the basis
of religion grants legitimacy to the idea that to commit homosexual acts is to
behave immorally, that it is a competing conceptualization equal in worth to
its opposite notion. Deep down, these intolerants cannot stand that they may be
judged by some others as committing offensive acts and feel driven to suppress
any hint that this view is as fair and reasonable as theirs that there’s
nothing wrong with how they act.
Which is why a massive fight brews,
for it’s all or nothing to these people and compromising with them is
impossible. And the early indications are that Louisiana may turn out to be from
where judicial conflicts emanate that could have major constitutional
repercussions regarding free exercise of religion.
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