Update 11-16-2015: I have seen nothing since that would change any of these opinions or conclusions.
Original Posting:
Kim Davis, a county clerk in Kentucky, was recently sent to jail for contempt of court. This was for refusing to issue marriage licenses to gay couples, on account of her personal religious beliefs. This refusal is in violation of a recent US Supreme Court decision making such licenses legal, nationwide.
Original Posting:
Kim Davis, a county clerk in Kentucky, was recently sent to jail for contempt of court. This was for refusing to issue marriage licenses to gay couples, on account of her personal religious beliefs. This refusal is in violation of a recent US Supreme Court decision making such licenses legal, nationwide.
She has since been released.
But, she is unrepentant, and seems to have lots of supporters.
Videos posted on line do in fact show the nature of her
interaction with that fraction of the public which actually is gay (under
10%). She clearly refuses to issue the
marriage license on account of her personal religious beliefs, which in effect holds the requestor to the
same religious practices as Ms. Davis.
Yet issuing such licenses as this, is the very nature of the job she holds. It is county clerks who typically issue
marriage licenses. They are sworn to
uphold the law regarding this function,
and many others.
Nearly all of us have heard the old saw about how individual
rights are not absolute: your right to
swing your fist ends before
your fist reaches my nose. We can always
debate exactly where your right to swing your fist actually ends, but the basic principle is always somewhere before you strike my nose, no
exceptions.
Similarly, all of you
have a right to believe in any sort of religious traditions that you
choose, and to practice them in any way
that suits you. But, that right of yours is not absolute. Your
right to practice your religion ends somewhere before you impose your personal beliefs and practices upon
me. Or anybody else. Just like your right to swing your fist ends
before you strike anybody.
We do not all believe in exactly the same religious teachings. That is precisely why we established a
fundamental principle of separation of church and state, for one thing.
For another, our
common law must be the lowest common denominator we all can agree upon, else the union will inevitably dissolve in
some sort of insurrection. We’ve seen
this effect before – it led to the Civil War,
for one thing.
To do otherwise than lowest common denominator for common
law is thus demonstrably insane policy. That
common-denominator approach comes from the same limitations-on-rights principle
as exists for fist-swinging. In point of fact, it underlies most of the truly fundamental
American legal traditions.
Ms. Davis is faced with a personal moral dilemma: either she is true to her sworn oath to
uphold the law, or else she is true to
her personal religious beliefs. If she
cannot find it within herself to issue marriage licenses to gay couples, then she should not continue in her job as
county clerk. Simple as that.
I would suggest that her county look for another position
she could fill, outside of this moral
conflict, before they either fire her, or accept her resignation. That is because her job expectations changed after she assumed the
position, thanks to the Supreme Court
decision. Fair is only fair.
But, I see no other practical options
available to her, or to her county.
That being said, this
same limitations-on-rights principle has other applications in American
life. One obvious one has to do with the
politics of abortion.
Science says there is no distinct line between human life
and not-life. It is a gradual
spectrum, pure and simple. Any line we draw is both purely human and entirely
arbitrary. Saying otherwise does not
refute this truth.
If you base your decision on the potential ability of cells
to reproduce, then you should never even
contemplate clipping your fingernails.
That is patently ridiculous, even
to the most religiously-fundamentalist among us.
Equally insane would be to base it on actual birth. That’s because we have evidence of
self-awareness in fetuses nearing full-term.
So where do you draw the line?
Everybody has a different suggestion,
but all lie between the two endpoints of conception and birth.
But when you combine that inherent human uncertainty with
the fact that not all of us share the same religious beliefs and
practices, you inevitably conclude that
the “line” between human life and not-life is entirely an arbitrary
matter. There is no line, except what we together choose to draw.
Once you realize that any such line is arbitrary, then inevitably it follows that we need to draw
that line as the lowest common denominator that we all can agree upon. We collectively, who separately have such disparate beliefs, must be able to live within any such
law. In other words, the limitation-on-rights principle
applies, including any religious
teachings we may bring to bear on the decision.
Why is this limitations-on-rights principle so
important? Why is separation of church
and state so important? These traditions
are almost unique to America. But, these (and our other unique rule-of-law traditions)
are the sources of much of our individual freedom. That’s
what makes them so important.
Look at other countries that lack such traditions, and you can readily see how easily one group
dominates the others, misusing religion
to justify this, and to justify
virtually any atrocity to enforce it.
Africa and the Middle East are just eaten-up with that evil.
We surely don’t want that here! Open that door for one, you have opened it for all.
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