Fire Chief Kelvin Cochran |
It's not hard to imagine a decade or
so ago an Atlanta fire chief getting himself fired for writing a book that
advocated for same-sex marriage, basing his argument on the LGBT-endorsing
position of his Episcopal Church. Protestors would have rightly defended the
chief's First Amendment freedom of speech and free exercise of religion.
If the state at the time had passed a
law mirroring the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act, a hugely
bipartisan measure signed into law by Bill Clinton, a court case could have
determined whether the government could demonstrate a compelling interest in
firing the chief, and whether it had taken the least restrictive means to
fulfill that interest.
Perhaps the courts would have ruled
that the government either lacked a compelling interest or had taken a harsher
path than necessary to enforce its interest, and the chief could have been
reinstated on the First Amendment grounds of religious freedom.
The key is to view First Amendment
speech and religious freedoms not through the lens of what particular belief is
being expressed or exercised, but as a cornerstone of our freedoms in this
democratic republic.
1 comment:
This is saddening. Also i recommend Bill Muehlenberg a Australian Christian blogger who comments on many of the issues itself, http://billmuehlenberg.com/
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