Moral Bullies and the Laws That Enable Them
A bakery in Georgia was legally
compelled to bake a cake for a KKK birthday party, which it had refused to do because it violated the owner’s
religious beliefs. This week a TV station in Indiana drummed up a hate fest
against a pizza restaurant in Indiana which serves everyone equally but for
religious reasons said if asked -- no one but an ambitious reporter had -- to
cater a gay wedding, they’d probably refuse on religious grounds.
If you like that both gays and
straights, unhappy with the threats of arson and mayhem heaped upon the pizza
restaurant based on a thought “crime” over a theoretical ,raised over $842,000
in two days time to get them back in operation, you probably don’t like the
notion of the state deciding what religious precepts you may follow in
conducting your business. I think it’s time to consider whether, in an effort
to undo state mandated discrimination against blacks, we have gone too far
afield and should scale back the push to regulate discrimination against a
variety of protected groups in the private sphere.
How Did We Get Here?
Our public accommodation laws have
been too broadly expanded and need to be scaled back, argues Scott Shackford at the libertarian Reason in an article I find
compelling: The outpouring of support for Memories Pizza certainly
reflects what Schackford notes:
Maybe instead of arguing who should
or shouldn’t be exempt from certain public accommodation laws, perhaps we
should be looking more closely at what’s included in public accommodation laws.
That’s really where the wiggle room is. Do gay couples have a right to make a
photographer shoot their wedding? Maybe we should ask if anybody has a right to
make a photographer shoot a wedding? Even though a majority of Americans now
support gay marriage recognition, a Rasmussen Poll from last summer found that 85 percent
of Americans believe that wedding photographers have the right to decline to
shoot a gay wedding.
What we should take from that is
that perhaps our public accommodation laws are too broad. There is a place in
the American consciousness that allows for respect for property rights and
freedom of association even if it leads to behavior many agree is bigoted. Title II of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
(which doesn’t include sexual orientation) classifies hotels, restaurants (or
any place food is served), gas stations, and entertainment venues as places of
public accommodation. That’s actually it. Ideas of what is classified as a
public accommodation have been expanded further by additional federal
legislation (like the Americans with Disabilities Act)
and state laws. Arizona’s public accommodation laws include banks, medical offices, and health clubs, for
example. The state does not include sexual orientation as a protected class in
its public accommodation laws, though some cities within the state do. Oregon’s
definition of public accommodation is much vaguer than the
federal government’s, encompassing nearly all businesses that serve the public
and including sexual orientation among the forbidden categories of
discrimination. Oregon is where a bakery ran afoul of these laws by refusing to bake a wedding cake for a gay
couple and ended up shutting its doors.
If we were to say that goods and
services like wedding cakes or wedding photography are not public
accommodations then the reasons for refusal wouldn’t matter and there would be
no reason to have to develop special carve-outs for who could or could not
discriminate. Nobody would have a right to demand a baker make them a wedding
cake for any reason. It wouldn’t matter if the customers were a gay couple,
interracial couple, white supremacists, or the baker’s ex-wife who dumped him
for some loser.
Even the lefty Atlantic seems to be offended by the attack on small businesses like Memories
Pizza. Conor Friedersdorf argues::
The owners of Memories Pizza are, I
think, mistaken in what their Christian faith demands of them. And I believe
their position on gay marriage to be wrongheaded. But I also believe that the
position I'll gladly serve any gay customers but I feel my faith compels me
to refrain from catering a gay wedding is less hateful or intolerant than
let's go burn that family's business to the ground.
And I believe that the subset of the
gay-rights movement intent on destroying their business and livelihood has done
more harm than good here -- that they've shifted their focus from championing
historic advances for justice to perpetrating small injustices against marginal
folks on the other side of the culture war. "The pizzeria discriminated
against nobody," Welch wrote, "merely said that it would choose not
to serve a gay wedding if asked. Which it never, ever would be, because who
asks a small-town pizzeria to cater a heterosexual wedding, let alone a gay
one?" They were punished for "expressing a disfavored opinion to a
reporter."
Much of the week’s punditry
concentrated on Indiana’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) and how it
followed or departed from the federal law signed by President Clinton or the
laws in many other states that have them, but they miss the point I think. Our
concept of what constitutes a public accommodation has, like so many other
policies, laws, and regulations, seriously diminished our constitutional
freedoms in the wake of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. They need to be pared
back if we are to continue as a free people with the right to free speech, free
association, and the freedom to practice our religion. If we don’t, we open the
doors to totalitarians that decide what we can do and mobs like the Chinese Red
Guards enforcing this week’s cultural fashion.
Two years ago, the brilliant Eugene Volokh described the path to this perdition in a three-part
series. I’ll try to summarize the key points and hope I can do his
arguments justice, but if this is an issue you care about I hope you will take
time to read them all. After struggling back and forth on what range
religious exemptions should be considered -- for example, we cannot tolerate a
religion that compels murder -- the Supreme Court decided Employment
Division v. Smith. The case was widely condemned and Congress passed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
When a subsequent Court held that
the federal law exceeded its authority “about a dozen states enacted similar
state-level RFRAs as to state law, and about a dozen more interpreted their
state constitutions to follow the [earlier] Sherbert model rather than
the Smith model.
Therefore, the rule now is that
there is a religious exemption regime as to federal statutes (under the federal
RFRA), and as to state statutes in the about half the states that have state
RFRAs or state constitutional exemption regimes. Religious objectors in those
jurisdictions may demand exemptions from generally applicable laws that
substantially burden the objectors’ practice, which the government must grant
unless it can show that applying the laws is the least restrictive means of
serving a compelling government interest.
The problem of accommodating
religious freedom with the freedoms of free association, property rights,
freedom of speech, and religion have been made far more complicated by the
expansion of public accommodation concepts far beyond their intention as David Bernstein explains:
[P]ublic accommodations laws,
especially at the state and local level, have expanded way, way, beyond their
original purpose that previously excluded minorities are served in restaurants,
hotels, and the like. This has happened more via aggressive judicial
interpretation of the language of these laws than from the laws themselves, which
were phrased to not infringe unduly on private behavior.
For example, the Boy Scouts of
America v. Dale case involved the courts of New Jersey declaring that the
membership policies of the Boy Scouts violated the state’s ban on
discrimination in places of public accommodation. This even though the
membership policies of the Boy Scouts are clearly not a “place,” the Boy Scouts
of America is not an “accommodation” in the usual sense of the word, and the
membership policies of private organizations are not “public.” [snip] Besides
that, the decline of the principle that a business owner has at least some
right to exclude what he deems undesirables has led to some very bizarre cases,
none more so than the one described below, which a VC commenter alerted me to.
Here’s the story, from a VC post
from 2006:
There is a German restaurant called
the Alpine Village Inn, in Torrance California. A group of four neo-Nazis went
there to eat, each wearing a lapel pin with a swastika on it. The management
asked them to take off the lapel pins. They refused. The management asked them
to leave. They refused. The management called the police, who arrested them.
Then, remarkably, the Southern
California ACLU gets involved, and sues the restaurant for calling the police
on the Nazis! This much I’ve confirmed from media accounts. According to the
commenter who first alerted me to this story, “the defendants’ insurer
eventually settled following unsuccessful pretrial challenges to the complaint,
believing they could not prevail under California law! “I’m informed that the
restaurant actually lost at trial, and the insurer refused to foot the bill for
an appeal.
Hostility to Private Property Owners
Underlies Much of these Matters
Bernstein says the principle in the
Alpine Village Case seems to be hostility to private property owners and not
“civil rights”. And frankly, it seems to have been at least one underlying
theme of the attacks on Memories Pizza (and Chik-Fil-A some time ago.) In both
instances no gays were denied service and gay rights were in my opinion a red
herring, covering anti-property rights and moral sneering at white Christians
under a veneer of protecting gay rights.
Are the gotcha media and state
anti-discrimination cops checking out Moslem bakeries? (Crowder did in
Dearborn, Michigan) and found many would not bake
wedding cakes for a gay couple.
They aren’t, and this highlights
another problem with expanding public accommodation beyond limited boundaries:
Discriminatory enforcement.
The Crowder experience confirms with
what Friedersdorf (supra) describes of the attitudes of those who run these pop
and pop businesses:
What do white evangelicals, Muslims,
Mormons, blacks, conservative Republicans, and immigrants from Africa, South
America, and Central America all have in common? They're less likely to support
gay marriage than the average Californian. Over the years, I've patronized
restaurants owned by members of all those groups. Today, if I went out into
Greater Los Angeles and chatted up owners of mom-and-pop restaurants, I'd
sooner or later find one who would decline to cater a gay wedding. The owners
might be members of Rick Warren's church in Orange County. Or a family of
immigrants in Little Ethiopia or on Olvera Street. Or a single black man or
woman in Carson or Inglewood or El Segundo.
Businesses like Apple and States
like Connecticut and Cities like Seattle and San Francisco Should Be Ashamed of
their Pandering to Mob Think
Unhappy with the Indiana RFRA, in
which the state struggled as have others with balancing religious freedom and
competing state interests in non-discrimination, mayors in cities like Seattle
and San Francisco, the governor of Connecticut, and Apple (which promotes
its business in such gay paradises as Saudi Arabia ) hypocritically condemned
Indiana and some called for boycotts of the state’s businesses.
Professor Ann Althouse notes, the absurdity of picking on Indiana, when it’s the RFRAs
(and I’d say the expansion of public accommodation concepts) to blame:
Indiana has focused attention on
RFRA laws, but it's stupid to focus on Indiana. These laws are all over the
place. Understand them. Understand how they apply in many different scenarios
and how they are limited by courts in their application. Understand that if
we're going to relieve religious believers of the burdens of generally
applicable laws, courts are going to have to avoid preferring one religion over
another. You can't accommodate the religions you agree with or think are sweet
and fuzzy and say no to the ones who seem mean or ugly. We need to figure that
out. If, in the end, you think the Indiana RFRA is a bad idea, check that map
and see if your state has RFRA (or a RFRA-like state constitutional provision)
and push for repeal in your state. And get after Congress. Congress started it.
Unless you're Hoosier, leave Indiana alone. Stop otherizing Indiana.
AND: I had to wonder What does
Garrett Epps think about this? Because Garrett Epps wrote a whole book
about how terrible it was for the U.S. Supreme Court to deny special exceptions
to religious believers, especially in that case where Native Americans wanted
the freedom to use peyote. As I predicted, Epps is otherizing Indiana.
Odder still, many of those who
criticized Scalia’s views that the legislatures, not the Courts, should decide
these issues have now done a back flip.
The RFRAs “largely implement the
religious exemption rules that Justice Brennan and the ACLU had long argued for
-- and that Justice Brennan and the ACLU had sharply criticized Scalia and
others for overruling. “
Scalia’s view was that it was unwise
to leave such balancing decisions to courts, that the legislatures should do
that. Now many on the left embrace that view because in the RFRAs they can
remove religious exemptions from anti-discrimination.
Wouldn’t it be saner and more
constitutionally consistent to simply pare back the concept of what constitutes
a “public accommodation” needing state intervention?
Congress and state legislatures
should determine that except for a limited number of businesses -- hospitals,
hotels, and restaurants, public transport, educational institutions and
such -- private businesses are not public accommodations. Anti-discrimination
laws should be applied only in those few cases where everyone needs reasonable
access. Why should the government be involved at all in the business of
florists, bakers, photographers, and catering services, including those
by pizza parlors? Is the right to be free from offense not trumped by more
significant constitutional rights, which would not be subject to shifting tides
of either judicial or legislative fashions? In two days, thousands of
Americans kicked in almost a million dollars to protest such intrusions on
freedom. It’s time to listen to them. It’s certainly easier to pander to
special interests and cover them with protective legislation, but it does seem
that with good reason the public is not happy with that direction.
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