Posted on 09/29/2020 6:49:34 AM PDT by Kaslin
America was founded on the principle that people should be able to worship free of government interference. As any elementary school student knows (or should), that freedom--more than any other--is what motivated people to come to this New World. It was at the very heart of our founding.
Yet too many of our elected leaders seem to have forgotten this basic principle. And now, some are imposing even more stringent limitations on churches in the name of fighting COVID.
Those limitations on our churches are simply unconstitutional, and one church is rightly fighting back. On Tuesday, one of the largest evangelical churches in Washington D.C., Capitol Hill Baptist Church (CHBC), filed suit in federal district court challenging the citys COVID-19 restrictions.
Until the coronavirus pandemic and the Districts restrictions on worship, CHBC had met for in-person worship every single Sunday since February 27, 1878. CHBC does not have an online ministry, and has not conducted online services, because of its religious conviction that the Bible commands worshippers to meet together for worship. During the pandemic, the church has met in an open field in Virginia.
Under the Districts Phase Two Order, outdoor church services are limited to 100 individuals, and on June 10th, CHBC filed a waiver application with the District of Columbia seeking permission to hold larger outdoor services. The request explained the churchs theological conviction[], that the ability to meet together was essential for a church. Thus, the churchs religious exercise had been substantially burdened because it had been unable to meet or to perform baptism or communion. CHBC pledged to socially distance each household and to require individuals over the age of ten to wear masks. The Mayors office denied the request on September 15th.
In its lawsuit, CHBC alleges that the Districts Phase Two Order discriminates against religious worship. The order exempts other, in-person outdoor gatherings from the 100-person limits. Restaurants, for instance, are exempt from the outdoor size limitations so long as they observe social distancing. So too for Farmers Markets. Likewise, the Order does not limit the number of children participating in outdoor activities at childcare facilities, but simply requires social distancing between classroom cohorts.
Even more shocking is the disparate treatment accorded religious worship and mass protests. While the District has restricted outdoor church attendance to no more than 100 people -- regardless of social distancing precautions -- the Mayor has personally appeared at and endorsed mass protests in the District.
On June 6, 2020, Mayor Bowser delivered a speech to a gathering of tens of thousands of people, describing the large protest as wonderful to see. In addition, the city has worked to facilitate large scale protests in the District. The D.C. Police Department has repeatedly closed city streets to accommodate protests and marches. And the Mayor coordinated with the Commitment March to plan a five-hour event on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. Thousands attended.
In its complaint, CHBC makes clear that it supports the right of all of these groups to exercise their First Amendment right to protest. In CHBCs view, however, the First Amendment protects both mass protests and religious worship. One would think that position uncontroversial, and yet, the Mayor has defended her differential treatment of protests and religious worship: First Amendment protests and large gatherings are not the same, she has argued, because in the United States of America, people can protest.
But they can also meet together to worship. CHBC has a compelling argument that the Districts endorsement of large protests while banning outdoor worship violates First Amendment rights to freedom of speech and assembly, not to mention the Free Exercise Clause.
The Districts coronavirus policies are twice unconstitutional. Under the Free Speech Clause, laws that restrict speech based on viewpoint are presumptively unconstitutional. The Districts policies plainly favor protest expression over religious expression.
Second, the Supreme Court has held that where, as here, government restrictions on religious exercise are not neutral, they must satisfy strict scrutiny. The Free Exercise Clause, the Supreme Court has explained, bars even subtle departures from neutrality on matters of religion. Under the Free Exercise Clause, the government may not single out religious worship for disfavored treatment. And of course even a public health emergency does not allow the government to ignore the Constitution.
Under our Constitution, the First Amendment applies regardless of content. Government simply cannot prefer one form of expression over another. In short, as Justice Alito recently explained, respecting some First Amendment rights is not a shield for violating others.
Mayor Bowser and the District would do well to remember that.
It’s a black, female, Soros-bought, lib mayor...the very worst of the worst. Why would anyone expect anything less?
Except for the 2nd Amendment; it is the vehicle to address our grievances and provide for our freedoms. The 2nd Amendment has been under constant assault for decades. If those rights are gone then complete control by the left can occur.
The abuse against our freedoms does not stop with the first and second amendments. There are arguments that the spirit of the 3rd Amendment has been violated. Replace "soldiers" being quartered in your home with a "government agent" and replace "quartered" with "intrusions" or "visitations". The point of the 3rd amendment is not the expense of housing a soldier, but the invasion of your private property and monitoring your activities, legal or otherwise. A government agent can take the form of a person or some other monitoring device. In today's technological world this includes the metering and reporting of utility and mass communications. There is a reason why the 3rd amendment comes prior to the 4th amendment. It is historically based on the British quartering their solders through the authority provided in the Intolerable Acts. What was so intolerable that it completely avoided the necessity for a warrant to search ones papers. Warrants were required by British common law.
We have also seen an erosion of our 4th Amendment rights. Warrants are easily obtained and evidence obtained by warrant is often misconstrued in courts to convict when no illegal action has taken place, although the letter of the law allows for conspiracy before the fact.
I can continue with the remainder of our individual rights being violated, but I will not bore you. I only hope that when people read an article about a single freedom, such as the freedom of religion, being violated that they recognize it is only one part of a much more vast erosion of our rights in the quest by the left to force their power upon citizens. This is what tyranny looks like.
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