It is easier to
respect religious freedom in law and policy when everyone agrees or when
governments do not do very much. With disagreement and regulation, however,
inevitably comes conflict between religious commitments and legal requirements
and, when it comes, the majority tends to take care of itself. What about the
rest? In a constitutional democracy like ours, we are generally willing to
absorb some costs and suffer some inconveniences in order to accommodate the
invocation of rights by dissenting or idiosyncratic minorities, especially when
the majority thinks that it has a stake in those rights. For example, America
still takes a robustly libertarian approach to the freedom of speech, and
protects offensive and worthless expression to an anomalous extent, because
most Americans still think that protecting misuses and abuses of the right is
“worth it.”
However, as
religious liberty increasingly comes to be seen as something clung to by a few
rather than cherished and exercised by many, as religious traditions and
teachings start to strike many as the expensive and even dangerous concerns of
quirky, alien margin-dwellers, and as the “benefits” of allowing religious
believers’ objections or religious institutions’ independence to stand in the
way of the majority’s preferred policies begin to look more like extractions by
small special-interest groups than broadly shared public goods, we should
expect increasing doubts about whether religious liberty is really “worth it.”
We should be concerned that the characterization by the majority in Windsor of
DOMA’s purpose and of the motives of the overwhelming and bipartisan majority
of legislators that supported it reflects a view that those states—and
religious communities—that reject the redefinition of marriage are best
regarded as backward and bigoted, unworthy of respect. Such a view is not
likely to generate compromise or accommodation and so it poses a serious
challenge to religious freedom.
It
is easier to respect religious freedom in law and policy when everyone
agrees or when governments do not do very much. With disagreement and
regulation, however, inevitably comes conflict between religious
commitments and legal requirements and, when it comes, the majority
tends to take care of itself. What about the rest? In a constitutional
democracy like ours, we are generally willing to absorb some costs and
suffer some inconveniences in order to accommodate the invocation of
rights by dissenting or idiosyncratic minorities, especially when the
majority thinks that it has a stake in those rights. For example,
America still takes a robustly libertarian approach to the freedom of
speech, and protects offensive and worthless expression to an anomalous
extent, because most Americans still think that protecting misuses and
abuses of the right is “worth it.”
However, as religious liberty increasingly comes to be seen as something clung to by a few rather than cherished and exercised by many, as religious traditions and teachings start to strike many as the expensive and even dangerous concerns of quirky, alien margin-dwellers, and as the “benefits” of allowing religious believers’ objections or religious institutions’ independence to stand in the way of the majority’s preferred policies begin to look more like extractions by small special-interest groups than broadly shared public goods, we should expect increasing doubts about whether religious liberty is really “worth it.” We should be concerned that the characterization by the majority in Windsor of DOMA’s purpose and of the motives of the overwhelming and bipartisan majority of legislators that supported it reflects a view that those states—and religious communities—that reject the redefinition of marriage are best regarded as backward and bigoted, unworthy of respect. Such a view is not likely to generate compromise or accommodation and so it poses a serious challenge to religious freedom.
- See more at: http://www.commonwealmagazine.org/worth-worrying-about#sthash.LdzdCsgs.dpuf
However, as religious liberty increasingly comes to be seen as something clung to by a few rather than cherished and exercised by many, as religious traditions and teachings start to strike many as the expensive and even dangerous concerns of quirky, alien margin-dwellers, and as the “benefits” of allowing religious believers’ objections or religious institutions’ independence to stand in the way of the majority’s preferred policies begin to look more like extractions by small special-interest groups than broadly shared public goods, we should expect increasing doubts about whether religious liberty is really “worth it.” We should be concerned that the characterization by the majority in Windsor of DOMA’s purpose and of the motives of the overwhelming and bipartisan majority of legislators that supported it reflects a view that those states—and religious communities—that reject the redefinition of marriage are best regarded as backward and bigoted, unworthy of respect. Such a view is not likely to generate compromise or accommodation and so it poses a serious challenge to religious freedom.
- See more at: http://www.commonwealmagazine.org/worth-worrying-about#sthash.LdzdCsgs.dpuf
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