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  • Indiana is currently in the midst of a national uproar over it’s Religious Freedom Restoration

  • Act. Major state politicians, LGBT groups, and tech companies have all spoken out against

  • the bill, saying it will lead to discriminations against gays and lesbians in the name of religion.

  • So what’s going on? How much religious freedom do we have in the US? And does this bill protect

  • that or is it just discriminatory?

  • So, first amendment things, first. American citizens are guaranteed freedom of religion,

  • expression, assembly, and the right to petition. That’s at the CORE of this entire country’s

  • political system. But over the years, asterisks have been added to this principle. Like - you

  • don’t have the freedom to yellfirein a crowded theatre. And, in terms of religious

  • freedom - after a landmark 1878 Supreme Court case, the Chief Justice declared that you

  • can’t express your religion at the cost ofsocial dutiesandgood order”.

  • Okay, so human sacrifices are out, but what about refusing to work on Saturdays because

  • it’s against your religion? Or choosing to withdraw your children from school due

  • to religious conflicts? A number of supreme court cases in the last century focused on

  • narrowing the gray area of legally-acceptable religious freedoms. Many cases hinged on something

  • calledcompelling interest”. This means that if the government doesn’t have a strong

  • constitutional reason to protect the public’s interests, then any interference in an individual’s

  • religious practices could be deemed unconstitutional.

  • The 1993 FEDERAL Religious Freedom Restoration Act reflected this sentiment. It was passed

  • following two lawsuits publicly considered to unnecessarily violate the religious rights

  • of Native Americans. It said that even though a law is religiously neutral, it can still

  • have a negative effect orburdenon religious practices. So the RFRA clarified

  • that a law may only constitutionallyburdenone’s religious practices when doing so

  • both advances a compelling government interest, and there is noless restrictiveway

  • to do so.

  • However, the law did provide legal standing for unintended forms of discrimination.

  • Take for instance, the Hobby Lobby Supreme Court Case from 2014, wherein a company refused

  • to offer their employees birth control on religious grounds. Based on the argument that

  • corporations can be consideredpeopledue to an earlier Supreme Court ruling, the

  • government wasn’t allowed to significantly burden the company's religious practices,

  • and upheld their refusal.

  • Similarly, Indiana’s recent passage of their own Religious Freedom Restoration Act has

  • been especially incendiary for fear that it could allow businesses the right to discriminate

  • against gay people in the face of a looming landmark Supreme Court decision regarding

  • same sex marriage.

  • So, is Indiana’s new religious freedom act discriminatory? Experts say yes; in its current

  • form, the law could be used to discriminate on the basis of religious freedom.

  • There are quite a few other places across America that have no legal protection from

  • discrimination for the LGBT community. To learn about this issue in more detail, watch

  • our video here. Thank you for subscribing to TestTube, we appreciate your support!

Indiana is currently in the midst of a national uproar over it’s Religious Freedom Restoration

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