Posted on 02/27/2014 6:14:22 AM PST by shortstop
You can govern on principle, or on expediency.
Last night, Jan Brewer chose expediency.
You can do whats right, or you can do whats convenient. You can take the heat, or you can go along.
Arizona has decided to go along.
In vetoing legislation that protected the religious liberty of business owners, Gov. Jan Brewer spared her state the vengeance of the gay-rights movement. But she had to abandon principle to do it, basing her decision on intimidation instead of reason.
She was politically correct, but morally wrong.
And inconsistent with a variety of analogous practices across our society.
At issue was a bill passed by the Arizona legislature. It said that business owners could decline certain types of business and certain types of customers in order to follow their religious convictions.
The immediate illustration was a florist asked to provide the flowers for a gay wedding, but whose religion considered gay marriage wrong. Under the proposed Arizona law, that florist could refuse to sell flowers for the wedding and not be sued or fined.
In that scenario, the easy conclusion is that the gay person is being discriminated against denied accommodation by a business.
That conclusion was ballyhooed across the country, and Arizona was vilified and accused of being bigoted and discriminatory. Immediately, talk of boycotts began, and everyone from CEOs to reporters to politicians weighed in to condemn the proposed law.
There was a lot of heat, and Jan Brewer got out of the kitchen. Maybe you cant blame her. Persuasion in America has been reduced to extortion and intimidation, and Arizona stood to lose untold millions of dollars if it didnt toe the progressive line.
So she capitulated.
And violated principle to do so.
Because principle says that there is liberty on both sides of the counter, and that the business owner is no less a free American than is the customer. The First Amendments guarantee that we are entitled to the free exercise of our religion would seem to apply even in the commercial arena.
Even if you are a florist.
Even if you are a Christian.
Where a commercial exchange cant respect the values of both retailer and consumer, that commercial change should not be happening. Where mutual accommodation cannot be achieved, there is no sale, and the buyer and the seller go back into the marketplace to make a deal elsewhere.
Thats what the law was intended to protect.
Thats what is done across the country every day.
The notion of a business owner making a customer-affecting decision on the basis of religion is neither new nor rare.
For example, dont go to the halal store and ask for pork chops, or the kosher butcher and ask for ham.
In both of those situations, the religious beliefs of the store owners impact the consumer. They limit the stores' services available to that customer.
And inasmuch as a non-Muslim or a non-Jew are most likely to be wanting pork products, the religion of the customer is a factor in the stores failure to satisfy them.
Nobody has yet sued a halal store wanting to compel it to sell bacon to a Christian.
Neither has anyone gone to court to force stores owned by the Mormon church to sell articles of religious clothing to the non-Mormons they now refuse to serve.Neither has anyone told Muslim taxi drivers that their refusal to carry dogs and alcohol in their cabs is discriminatory. Those teachings of their religion that dogs and booze are morally unclean regularly end up in passengers being denied service.
In the performing of abortions and the dispensing of birth control medications, doctors and pharmacists are allowed to demur if their religious views would be offended.
And Chick-Fil-A denies countless customers chicken sandwiches on Sunday because of the religious beliefs of the owner.
Clearly, all across the country, our practice is to respect the religious views of the business owner, even if that means certain types of customers are denied service.
Weve always seen that as common sense and common courtesy, not discrimination.
And beyond the imperative of religion, we as a society believe that in most situations people can be denied service for any reason whatsoever. Its the owners business, and the owner makes the rules.
If a guy went to a black-owned barbecue place and tried to hire it to cater his Ku Klux Klan meeting, everybody would recognize the barbecue owners right to tell the guy to go pound salt.
We recognize the rights of business owners to follow their consciences, all across America.
Unless its Arizona and anybody says anything about gays.
Because homosexuals are the civil rights trump card of this generation. So bitter is the vilification of those who disagree with the gay movement that to do so is social suicide.
As Jan Brewer learned.
The right thing to do was to recognize the rights of both parties in a potential business transaction. Principle says that there are rights on both sides of the cash register.
But expediency capitulates.
In Arizona, gay people have rights. But religious people do not. They practice domination, not accommodation.
And principle stands for nothing.
Expediency over principle. Its the American Way.
And it gained her nothing:
Still a vicious anti-gay extremist: Hate thrown at Jan Brewer in spite of #SB1062 veto
http://twitchy.com/2014/02/26/still-a-vicious-anti-gay-extremist-hate-thrown-at-jan-brewer-in-spite-of-sb1062-veto/
Jan Brewer just said it’s OK to use the power of the state to force someone to provide a service in violation of their religious beliefs.
they all are surrendering to the news media
they believe that news is really news. Why can’t they tell that news is just rabid socialist propaganda put out there by rabid socialist political operatives (namely democrats)
Expedient? Doubtful. More like pragmatic. There is no doubt that the Arizona law would have been overturned the instant it was tested in the courts. Her decision was pragmatic in that it spared Arizona the loses it would have incurred in a losing battle. Quite simply, don’t waste your strength fighting hopeless causes.
While fighting for principle make make you feel good, you have to pick the fights you can win and that will mean something if you win them. If you want to protect religious freedom in cases like this, you must change the US Constitution.
ANYBODY???
Quite correct, Bob.
That certainly hit me in the face last night when the news came out about her veto. I'm very disappointed in her.
That would be an interesting tack to take.
unbelievable.
I watched MSNBC this morning and the meme is - " what made her take soooooo long to veto? - homophobia?" - the hate never pauses.
What she should do is ;
After this settles down a bit. Don’t hide behind the b/s or use it. Freely admit it was expediency. Play the “my state is the victim” role. Then go on the attack. , let the RINOS and the gutless business groups including the NFL cry fowl but won’t follow though on their threats. That would restore her creds
Read the actual tweets, if you dare.
Doesn’t a certain former Alaska governor own a home in Arizona?
The Gov. succumbed to blackmail. She was weak and will be treated as such by the homo crowd and their cheerleaders in government and business.
I don’t understand how the US Constitution must be changed:
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”
The Constitution doesn’t require changing. Activist judges/justices require impeachment and removal.
Did a certain Alaska Governor say anything about the issue?
So you expect her to voice her opinion on EVERY issue that comes up? Does she get to sleep at all?
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