Up & Coming Weekly

June 25, 2019

Up and Coming Weekly is a weekly publication in Fayetteville, NC and Fort Bragg, NC area offering local news, views, arts, entertainment and community event and business information.

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6 UCW JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 WWW.UPANDCOMINGWEEKLY.COM OPINION The Equality Act: A time to speak up by KARL MERRITT ere are times when circumstances dictate that individuals and groups speak up, even at the risk of being made to suffer. e Equality Act presents one of those occasions for Americans. e House of Rep- resentatives has passed the legislation, and it is now with the Senate for action. e act begins with this stated purpose: "To pro- hibit discrimination on the basis of sex, gender iden- tity, and sexual orientation, and for other purposes." If enacted, the negative impacts of this legislation seem almost endless. An article from the Heritage Foundation titled "e Equality Act: How Could Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI) Laws Affect You?" presents several impacts: 1. e Equality Act would force employers and workers to conform to new sexual norms or else lose their businesses and jobs. 2. It could force hospitals and insurers to provide and pay for these therapies against any moral or medical objections. It would politicize medicine by forcing professionals to act against their best medical judgment and provide transition-affirming therapies. 3. is politicization of medicine would ultimately harm families by normalizing hormonal and surgi- cal interventions for gender dysphoric children as well as ideological "education" in schools and other public venues. 4. By silencing the scientific debate on transgender-affirming therapies through the politi- cization of medicine, the Equality Act would further normalize this radical protocol and create an expecta- tion that parents comply. 5. It could ultimately lead to the erasure of women by dismantling sex-specific facilities, sports and other female-only spaces. e Heritage article, in general, points to nega- tive religious impacts. However, an article by Kelsey Dallas and Matthew Brown titled "Would the Equality Act harm religious freedom? Here's what you need to know" is more specific. It reads, "'e Equality Act fails to provide essential religious liberty protections that would allow a diverse group of social service and civic institutions to continue to thrive,' said Shapri LoMaglio, senior vice president for government and external relations for the Council for Christian Col- leges and Universities, in an email. "In addition to creating new protections for gay and transgender Americans, the act would limit the scope of federal religious freedom protections, preventing religious people and organizations from using the Re- ligious Freedom Restoration Act as a defense against discrimination claims. "If it passes, religiously affiliated schools and other faith-based organizations could face lawsuits over poli- cies on gay, lesbian or transgender students, custom- ers or employees, said Tim Schultz, president of First Amendment Partnership, a Washington, D.C.-based or- ganization that promotes religious freedom protections. "'ere would be an effort to punitively sue them into oblivion and they would not be able to use (the Religious Freedom Restoration Act) in their defense,' he said." e danger in this legislation runs across the full landscape of American society. e final paragraph in the Heritage article succinctly summarizes what this legislation would do to citizens of this country. "e Equality Act actually furthers inequality, especially for women and girls, by punishing anyone who does not affirm a single viewpoint of marriage and biological sex. A federal sexual orientation and gender identity law would empower the government to inter- fere in how regular Americans think, speak, and act at home, at school, at work and at play. Any bill promot- ing such authoritarianism is a danger to our freedoms." e Equality Act is based on the argument that as the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was used to support provisions of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, it also, supposedly, supports providing the protections in this act. e 1964 Civil Rights Act outlawed discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. e 14th Amendment approach was used in 1964 because, as explained at www.law.cornell.edu/wex/ equal_protection, "Equal Protection refers to the idea that a governmental body may not deny people equal protection of its governing laws. e governing body state must treat an individual in the same manner as others in similar conditions and circumstances." Proponents of the Equality Act contend that, based on equal protection considerations, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer — referred to as ''LG- BTQ'' — persons must have the same protections as provided to other groups in the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Sen. Barry Goldwater was a Republican who represented Arizona for five terms in the U.S. Senate and lost to President Lyndon Johnson in his 1964 run for the presidency. Goldwater voted against the 1964 Civil Rights Act. All these years later, the argument be- ing made for the Equality Act confirms that his objec- tions had merit. at can be seen in an article by Lee Edwards titled "Goldwater's vote against Civil Rights Act of 1964 unfairly branded him a racist." Two paragraphs from different sections of that article follow: "Goldwater wanted to support the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as he had the civil rights acts of 1957 and 1960. But he reluctantly decided he could not, because he could see that the bill's Title II and Title VII were unconstitutional. He predicted that Title VII, which dealt with employment, would end in the government dictating hiring and firing policy for millions of Americans. So it has come to pass. "When confronted with the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and its questionable constitutionality, Goldwater's conscience led him in a different direction than his fellow Republicans. He did not flinch from the conse- quences, saying simply, 'If my vote is misconstrued, let it be.' His concern was not with himself or any single group but with the nation and 'the freedom of all who live in it and all who will be born in it.'" I contend that the Equality Act is exactly what Gold- water feared. e equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment is being misapplied. e foundation for that misapplication is the extent to which it was used in supporting the 1964 Civil Rights Act. at foun- dational argument is being employed to add other groups to the protection of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. A prime example of how the Equality Act would ad- versely impact the freedom of others, as it seeks to pro- tect one group, shows in its effect on religious freedom. In essence, the act would allow for, would produce, dis- crimination against people of faith. at discrimination would be prohibited under freedom of religion as pro- vided for in the First Amendment. A Heritage Founda- tion video at www.youtube.com/watch?v=JVKeOrxRnb0 explains "Religious Freedom" and how the Equality Act would allow for denial of this freedom. Start with this from the video: "What is religious freedom? Religious freedom is more than the free- dom to worship in a synagogue, church or mosque. It means people shouldn't have to go against their core values and beliefs in order to conform to culture or government. Religious freedom protects people's right to live, speak and act according to their beliefs, peacefully and publically. It protects their ability to be themselves at work, in class and at social activities. Okay, that sounds good, but does such freedom allow people to do whatever they want under the cover of religion? Well, that answer is no." e video goes on to say, "e Supreme Court has said the federal government may limit religious freedom, but only when it has a compelling interest to do so in order to protect the common good and limit people's ability to harm others." Cutting to the quick of what I conclude from the remainder of the video, the question is, does the federal government have a compelling interest that justifies adding to the 1964 Civil Rights Act the groups encompassed by the Equality Act? Consider the compelling interest question concerning race and the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Jim Crow laws were state and local laws that enforced racial segregation in the Southern United States. ose laws denied necessi- ties to black Americans and did so because of our black- ness. Every black American in the South was adversely affected. e federal government clearly had a compel- ling interest that supported rectifying that situation. On the other hand, LGBTQ individuals are, by no means, in a situation similar to that of blacks under Jim Crow Laws. For instance, if a minister refuses to perform a same-sex wedding because of his or her religious beliefs, and not because the couple is homo- sexual, the couple can easily identify a minister who will perform their ceremony. e same is the case with bakers, photographers and others who are now being discriminated against because they will not, due to religious convictions, provide their services to LGBTQ persons. Some individuals who take this faith- based position are being sued, even having to close businesses. Passage of the Equality Act will put in place, without the federal government having a com- pelling interest, legislation that will make religious freedom and other freedoms a thing of the past. All Americans better see this legislation for the dan- ger to freedom that it is and take a stand. e argument being made for the Equality Act validates the position taken by Barry Goldwater. Even though the cost might be high … like Goldwater, we better speak up. KARL MERRITT, Columnist. COM- MENTS? Editor@upandcomingweekly. com. 910-484-6200. President Lyndon Johnson signing the 1964 Civil Rights Act.

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