Category Archives: politics

Cases and Precedents


A friend posted an unusual (for her) Facebook post about Kim Davis, the Rowan County, Kentucky, Clerk. Apparently her feed was filled with ugliness, and she was concerned that people were judging her for her beliefs and asked if only certain people were allowed to have religious beliefs, i.e., the pretty and the rich.

I’m a big fan of debate. Debate allows me to articulate my beliefs, find holes in them, re-evaluate and, if need be, change my beliefs.

But I can’t stand incivility.  I’m guilty of it at times, mistaking position for people, and lowering myself into an insult match that attacks the person and not the position.

I’m working on it.

For me, to debate a position–without degrading oneself by mudslinging–is one of the finer things in life.

I’m pretty sure I got my love of arguing from my father, and the fact that we differ so much politically, can make it both invigorating and flat-out frustrating.

This is a post from a friend of mine whom I absolutely adore. Her concern, she said, is “how quickly we as a country are to judge this lady for her belief.”

I cannot deny that there are people who are doing that. I think it’s atrocious that people have attacked her appearance, put words in her mouth, and basically called her just about every epithet in the book.

But there are many people, of whom I consider myself, who respect her belief but condemn her action.

I think anyone has the right to believe anything he wishes. Religion-wise, anyone can believe anything that they want to. It’s one of the great things about the United States.

Everyone has the right to hold any opinion they wish as well. I don’t think, however, that all opinions are equal. No matter how often one says, for example, “1 + 1 = 3,” doesn’t make it so. No matter how often they say it, no matter how many people believe it, 1 + 1 does not equal 3. They still have the right to believe it, but it does not make it right.

A more real-word example is people who do not believe in evolution despite copious amounts of evidence (of which I always cite the partial use of anti-biotics and sickle-cell red blood cells). They have the right to not believe in evolution. They’re wrong, of course, but they have the right to believe anything they wish.

Same thing with religion. The United States of America was formed, in part, to avoid religious persecution and to ensure not only freedom of religion but also freedom from religion. To clarify: I do not think Kim Davis’s religion is wrong, whatever brand of Christianity she follows. For me, it’s not even particularly about religion. Or, rather, her religion.

For me, Kim Davis’s religion isn’t the issue.

It’s the fact that she’s a sworn agent of the state, of the court, elected and paid to do a very specific job, which she is required to do, a job which she is refusing to do.

Now, I understand that she doesn’t wish her name to appear on marriage licenses for same-sex couples. I respect that.

But, since signing marriage licenses is her job, she has two choices: either do her job or resign, perhaps even find another position with the state that doesn’t come in conflict with her beliefs. To keep taking a salary for a job you’re unwilling to do is, in my opinion, highly unethical and tantamount to stealing.

I get that she doesn’t see it that way, too.

A Grenada county clerk, Linda Barnette, after the Supreme Court’s ruling, resigned, citing the ruling and her beliefs. (Source)

I disagree with her beliefs, but I have mad respect for this woman. She didn’t grandstand. She didn’t stay closed in her office refusing to do her job and forcing those under her supervision to refuse to do their jobs, either. She didn’t keep taking a tax-payer funded salary.

When someone is in office, they are an agent of the government, whether it’s state-level or national-level. And, government cannot–absolutely cannot–respect an establishment of religion. Because of the “state action” requirement of the establishment clause, private individuals cannot be guilty of establishing a religion–but an agent of the state can. (Source.)

This is exactly what she was doing by refusing marriage licenses. She was using her office to “establish” a religion for the government of Rowan county, Kentucky, and that is clearly unconstitutional, completely irrespective of the Supreme Court’s ruling.

Her beliefs matter. Her faith matters. She matters.  Unless her employment contract forbids her, she is more than able to protest anything she wishes–while she is “off the clock.”  She is free to exercise her religion in any way she chooses–while she is “off the clock.”

Just not while doing government duties–or, in her case–refusing to do her sworn government duties.

To refuse to do her job while accepting a salary is one thing, but to require that those under her immediate supervision also refused–based on HER religious beliefs–is a clear, and by clear, I mean abso-fucking-lutely crystal clear, establishment of religion by an agent acting on behalf of the government.

A marriage consists of two primary parts (not including the actual hard work that goes into making one successful!): legal and civil.

One may be married by any priest, minister, or shaman, or shipboard captain she wishes, and would be considered, respective to her beliefs, married in the eyes of God. This is the civil part. She can be married with or without religious clergy, with or without friends. But she is NOT married in the “eyes of the state” (i.e., legally married, or, plain married for all legal intents and purposes) until the government recognizes it, and that recognition requires a license and a witness.

By refusing to sign licenses, Kim Davis was refusing to allow couples to be recognized in the eyes of the law, and de facto, denying couples the privileges granted upon marriage. Not just same-sex couples, but all couples. Why did she stop issuing all licenses? Perhaps she knows, and rightly so, that to do one and not the other is, legally speaking, discrimination, no matter what her beliefs are. And so she refused all, therefore completely failing in a vital and mandatory part of her job.

I don’t know what a county clerk’s oath is she takes office, but I’m pretty sure it involves an oath that swears to carrying out the duties of her office, which includes issuing marriage licenses to those who qualify.

“God’s moral law conflicts with my job duties. You can’t be separated from something that’s in your heart and in your soul,” she testified before federal Judge David Bunning. ” (Source)

I do not question her right to believe as she does, or to pick and choose which verses (and versions, for that matter) of the Bible that she follows. She’s absolutely right. You can’t be separated from something that’s in your heart and in your soul. But you can be separated from your job if your job duties conflict with your religious belief.

I watched a video (God bless YouTube!) of Dr. Neil Degrasse Tyson and Stephen Colbert (fantastic by the way), and one of Dr. Tyson’s statements stood out to me: “We need a scientifically literate electorate.”  While I agree with him, I think a good step in the right direction is empowering a governmentally literate electorate.

People, judging by comments on various articles, don’t seem to understand how basic government works. I’m no expert, but an elementary school social studies class teaches the basics. I have seen many people complain that  these “activist judges” “wrote a whole new law.”  Others defend Ms. Davis for “Following the laws of the state of Kentucky, meaning the Kentucky Constitutional Amendment 1 which states: Only a marriage between one man and one woman shall be valid or recognized as a marriage in Kentucky. A legal status identical or substantially similar to that of marriage for unmarried individuals shall not be valid or recognized. (Source.)

The question put before the Court was, to wit, “Is denying same-sex couples the benefit of marriage constitutional?”

It was found to be unconstitutional, specifically under the 14th Amendment, or the “Equal Protection” clause.  When the majority of the Court found it so (and they did so by interpreting the existing Constitution and citing precedent, such as Loving v. Virginia, not by “making new laws”), all state-level laws that were in opposition to this ruling were automatically nullified.

So, by denying same-sex couples marriage licenses prior to the Supreme Court’s ruling, Ms. Davis, was in fact, adhering to state law. After the ruling, however, she was not.  Nullification of a law deemed to be unconstitutional does not require a repeal by the voters.  It is simply no longer a “lawful law” and is negated.

Case in point: the state of Mississippi did not officially repeal slavery until 2013, despite it being federal law since 1865. (Source) It wasn’t still legal for Mississippians to own slaves simply because they hadn’t repealed any slavery laws–it wasn’t legal because a US Constitutional amendment was passed–with–or, as the case may be–without Mississippi’s formal agreement.

The question I have for those who feel that Ms. Davis’s being jailed for contempt of court is proof positive that Christians are being persecuted, is this: If a member of a pacifist religion were to be elected to give licenses, and later, gun licenses were incorporated into his department, would his refusal to grant gun licenses be acceptable? What if he were Muslim?  What if it were drivers’ licenses that were incorporated, and he were of a religion that believed that women didn’t deserve the right to drive? Or voting licenses, and women should not vote?

And for those that support the Hobby Lobby decision (another soap box for another day), what if it were a Scientologist corporation that refused to pay for psychiatric medications for its employees? Or one that refused to cover blood transfusions? Or mammograms and prostate checks? For whatever sincerely held religious belief.

Would those be acceptable, too?

It’s not just about the single case or the single refusal of duties or a single case about refusing to provide certain forms of birth control. It’s about the precedent it sets as well.

If we allow Ms. Davis to continue in her position while citing religious beliefs as reason not to do her job, all of these things I mentioned are possible. With the Hobby Lobby decision, so many “exclusions” are now made possible.

Because the government can’t allow one religion to trump another.

It’s not the door so much as it is the hallway of doors that are possible just beyond the immediate case. It’s about common sense and precedent.

And these are some very, very dangerous precedents we’re setting.  Especially for a country that purports itself to be “The Land of the Free.”

Happy Independence Day

Independence

 

I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it stands, one Nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.  (1) 

The word “traditional” is sticking in my craw lately, like a piece of stringy meat digging under the gum line, escaping traditional means of extrication, and requiring a DDS-licensed exorcist who comes armed with tiny, shiny traditional hooks, a traditional reclining chair and a traditional blinding light. Nevertheless, this pledge is our traditional pledge of allegiance, and often recited in honor of our traditional Fourth of July.

We’ve shortened “Independence Day” to “the Fourth,” as if it were just another day on the calendar, albeit one that creates a long weekend of fireworks, cooking out, and camaraderie, and we seem to have forgotten that this, “the Fourth,” is the day that the United States adopted the Declaration of Independence, standing apart from Great Britain and declaring itself no longer British property.

The thirteen colonies were young and brash, and so full of hope, and they created a nation that stood up and stood apart and stood firm.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.  (2)

Because of these self-evident truths, we formed our own government in order to have a government we could consent to.

A government instituted with the consent of the governed.

For better or worse, whatever our political affiliation may be, We The People have consented to our government.

Continue reading Happy Independence Day

Conversations and Moving Forward

I’m lazy.

Maybe not so much lazy as “having different priorities.”

Or maybe I’m just lazy.

I don’t wash my car unless I’m really, really bored.  Which is very rarely because there’s always something that will drag my attention away and keep me from washing my car.

I was attending a junior college in 1992-1993 when my off white and entirely unwashed car was vandalized. Two young boys drew, on my filthy car, the rebel flag and the words “I hate niggers.”

As a white girl growing up in the South, my relationship to the South, and Mississippi in particular, is complicated.  There are things that I love about the South: the sense of family and connectedness, fireflies in the summer.

But there are things I loathe about the South as well, and all of those things stem from stupid, stupid ignorance.

I am fortunate: as a white girl, I was simply pranked. I wasn’t the target of the hate. My car was just used as a means to spread it.

I was fortunate: a friend who happened to be black saw me as I pulled up into the parking lot and pointed out my new car decorations. He then help me erase them.

I’d like to think it never even crossed his mind that I may have put it there. I was certainly mortified, but I can’t remember the words we exchanged.

I live in a deeply conservative state that believes in free speech as long as you agree with the status quo.

Mississippi’s Republican Speaker of the House, Philip Gunn said,

We must always remember our past, but that does not mean we must let it define us. As a Christian, I believe our state’s flag has become a point of offense that needs to be removed. We need to begin having conversations about changing Mississippi’s flag.”

I think it takes courage to speak out for what you feel is right when it is not popular.

Conversations. That’s his official recommendation.

And the backlash isn’t even worth quoting, but you can certainly, if you’re so inclined, see it here.

Many people were unable to look beyond the word “offense” (e.g., “I’m offended that you’re offended!”) to see what he was actually saying.

I know from personal experience that by being chained to the past limits how far you can move forward.

“Love it or leave it!” so many people say. “If you don’t like the flag, move to a state that has a flag you like.”

I disagree with the “Love it or Leave it” mentality.

I love this state. I love Mississippi. Sure, I’d barter away its humidity (and a few other things) for a year long-crawfish season (and a few other things), but I love this state.

I was born here.  I want to travel, see the world, and die here.

But Mississippi has so much opportunity to better herself–so many areas that can be–must be–improved.

So I choose to love it and live it and see what I can do to better it.

I grew up with “Heritage not Hate,”and, thirty years ago, I would have stood for the Confederate flag. It wasn’t until I started reading about the Civil War that I realized that what I had been taught wasn’t necessarily true–it certainly wasn’t the whole truth, at any rate.

It IS history. Yes. It IS heritage, yes.

But just a little bit of delving shows that Mississippi’s primary reason for seceding from the United States was–not states’ rights as I had been taught, but slavery.  Mississippi’s Declaration of Secession outright state it here.

A Declaration of the Immediate Causes which Induce and Justify the Secession of the State of Mississippi from the Federal Union

In the momentous step, which our State has taken of dissolving its connection with the government of which we so long formed a part, it is but just that we should declare the prominent reasons which have induced our course.

Our position is thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery – the greatest material interest of the world. Its labor supplies the product, which constitutes by far the largest and most important portions of commerce of the earth. These products are peculiar to the climate verging on the tropical regions, and by an imperious law of nature, none but the black race can bear exposure to the tropical sun. These products have become necessities of the world, and a blow at slavery is a blow at commerce and civilization. That blow has been long aimed at the institution, and was at the point of reaching its consummation. There was no choice left us but submission to the mandates of abolition, or a dissolution of the Union, whose principles had been subverted to work out our ruin.

I love Mississippi. I love the people here. Some of the people I love are staunch supporters of keeping the flag.

Neither my love for them nor their love for the flag changes the fact that the single reason for secession was because the South feared abolition.

I want to wring their necks and force them to read the entire Declaration of Secession.

Neither my love for them nor their love for the flag changes the fact that the flag–the symbol for “Southern pride” and “heritage not hate” was in fact appropriated by hate groups, most namely the Ku Klux Klan.  That flag was paraded while black people were lynched, burned, and otherwise terrorized.  It has been appropriated, much like the swastika, and, as a symbol, if it ever had a single meaning (which I doubt), it certainly doesn’t have just a single meaning now.

Neither my love for them nor their love for the flag changes the fact that, right or wrong, the South committed treason against the United States of America.  The South tore the Union apart when it left, and there is no way to absolve the South of that fact.  Treason. Mississippi committed treason, and it was in order to preserve the institution of slavery.

There is no getting around that fact. None.

I am somewhat amused that retailers are suddenly pulling the Confederate flag in an effort to be seen as “right.”  Everything is about profit.  And Walmart, of all the companies, with all its poor business practices, stands up and says “We won’t sell it anymore” is just short of irony.

I think the flag should be sold. I think it should be flown.  Anywhere people want to fly it–as long as it’s not on government property.  I do believe in freedom of expression, especially if that expression is something I whole-heartedly disagree with.  But it simply should not be flown on government property.

If for no other reason than it’s a flag representative of treason, it should not be flown anywhere that the government exists: state governments are subject to the umbrella of the federal government, the United States of America. To fly a flag that is representative of treason on property that is subject, by extension, to the federal government is, well, a bit inappropriate.

Neither my love for them nor their love for the flag changes the fact that Mississippi ranks dead or almost dead last in everything that matters.  We must move forward. We must have different priorities. What we’ve been doing hasn’t been working.

And for that we need conversations.

Conversations that are about something other than a flag.  Change it and move on.

Being chained to the past limits how far you can move forward.

It’s time to move forward.

(Sources:

Philip Gunn’s quotation from his Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/PhilipGunn?fref=nf

Mississippi’s Declaration of Secession: http://www.civil-war.net/pages/mississippi_declaration.asp )