Indiana Gov. Mike Pence has passed a religious freedom law
in response to the Supreme Courts decision granting same-sex couples the right
to marry. Photo: Steve Baker | FlickrCC.
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An
argument put to the Supreme Court by Ken Mehlman states that its
signatories “concluded that there is no legitimate, fact-based reason
for denying same-sex couples the same recognition in law that is available to
opposite-sex couples,” and that under no circumstances should gay and lesbian
individuals be subject to any law that discriminates against them.
Increasingly, such laws that do victimize LGBTQ people are refusing
to be heard by courts or denied altogether, though
the 22 states that had previously banned same-sex marriage are now attempting
to pass more regulations aimed at protecting religious freedom
Currently, forty-three
percent of Americans live in a state with religious
exemption laws. The original Religious Freedom Restoration act “may have been
passed with good intentions,” says the Movement Advancement Project’s 2015
recent report, but “states’
ever-increasing roster of religious exemptions, both broad and targeted, raise
serious concerns about how these vague exemptions are being used to harm
others, interfere with law enforcement, and undermine the rule of law.” Despite
some states’ efforts, however, sentiment regarding same-sex marriage is
changing throughout the country, with 55% of Americans now in favor of it.
Changing
attitudes likely mean changing laws to reflect that progressively positive outlook.
Younger people tend to be more in favor of same-sex marriage, and as these
young people grow up and begin to hold positions of power and raise like-minded
children, the rate of approval for same-sex marriage is likely to grow. Religious
freedom laws may have a more difficult time being passed and enacted. Because
most people do not believe that businesses should have the right to discriminate
against LGBTQ people, and if that sentiment fully possesses voters and
lawmakers, discriminatory laws may soon be stopped before they even reach the
floor for debate.
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