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Religion See other Religion Articles Title: Hobby Lobby vs. the Order of Justice Ross Douthat affectionately calls out me and Rod Dreher for applauding Patrick Deneens moral-economic brief against Hobby Lobby and other big-box retail chains. He laments that the paleo/crunchy-con mentality tends toward self- marginalization. Speaking only for myself, I actually agree with Ross. Im not Catholic. Im not a traditionalist (if I were, Id have a lot of explaining to do regarding that infatuation with Keith Richards). When asked to describe my politics, lately I call myself a good-government Bush 41 conservative. (I maintain that H.W. was inferior to Reagan as a communicator and politicianobviouslybut at least as great, and maybe even better, a president. I think his leadership during the meltdown of the Soviet empire was brilliant, and Id take Dick Darman over Grover Norquist every day of the week. Sue me!) All that said, I fear Ive muddied the waters on where I agree with Deneen, and where I part ways with him (as well as, Im going to presume, Dreher). I am taken with Deneens argument that there is an uninterrupted continuum between the Founding (progressive in a Baconian sense) and the present; that classical liberals and modern liberals are both liberals. If theres anything remotely distinctive about my blogging here and at U.S. News since 10, I hope its been a counterweight to the despair of both moral traditionalists like Deneen and Dreher and market purists-slash-declinists like Kevin Williamson. My gravamen, my conceit, my shtick is this: Government has grown alongside our continental economy. There is not a hydraulic relationship (one goes up, the other goes down) between markets and government. If our capitalists were smart, theyd favor effective social insurance alongside free enterprise. Etc. While I sympathize, somewhat, with Deneens aesthetic recoil from Hobby Lobby and strip malls and big boxes, I dont get nearly as exercised about such things as he does. In any case, I dont think theres much that can be done practically to change it at the level of policymaking. Im all for traditionalists and orthodox believers bringing their beliefs to bear in the marketplace. To the extent that I used the Hobby Lobby case as a springboard for my last post, it was only tangentially about contraception and religious liberty. My beef is not with religious conservatives participating in modern capitalism; it is with those who conflate modern capitalism and the Constitution with Judeo- Christianity. I have a beef with them because this conflation, I believe, is one of the main drivers of our current antigovernment ferocity, the rampant and irrational fears of inflation, and the counterproductive fear over short-term budget deficits. I could be wrong about that. In any case, I dont think I made this point clear in my post on Hobby Lobby (which, for the record, I had never heard of before it became news). While Im at it, I might as well spell out what I think about the particulars of said case. On that score, Ill associate myself with Yuval Levins recent post in NROs Corner. He writes that conservatives: take the arrangement of rights and liberties at the core of the liberal- democratic understanding of society to exist in the service of sustaining the space in which society thrives, rather than of taking society forward and away from its roots. There is room in that space for different parts of society to sustain quite different ways of living, and room for people to debate our broader societys social and political course which can take different directions at different times in response to different circumstances. Liberty is not the yearned-for endpoint of that story, when we will be free at last from the burdens of the past. Liberty is what exists in that space now, what allows for different people (and groups of people) to pursue different paths and debate different options, and what allows society to address its problems in various ways as they arise. Liberty is not what were progressing toward but what we are conserving. Here, Levin calls to mind Garry Willss distinction between the progressive- liberal order of justice and the order of convenience. To sum up a complex essay, Wills believed it should not be the aim of the state to dispense raw justice (Chestertons phrase), but rather to facilitate convenience (in the John Calhoun sense of the wordto convene or concur or bring about social peace). Sounding a lot like Burke and Nisbet, Wills wrote: For if the state arises out of mans social instinct, then the state destroys its own roots when it denies free scope to the other forms of social life. The state, when it is made the source of justice, must be equally and instantly available to all citizens; and, in achieving this, in sweeping away the confusion of claims raised by families, economic orders, educational conventions, codes of conduct, natural gradations of privilege, the Liberal leaves society atomized, each man isolated, with all the weight of political power coming unintercepted upon him. The higher forms of organization do not grow out of and strengthen the lower, but counter and erase them. This is what happened under the Order of Justice from the time when Plato pitted the state against the family to the modern breakdown of divided jurisdiction in the centralized state.
The state, as extending throughout all other levels of social solidarity, must have a certain neutrality towards them all, and as the order-enforcing agent, it must take upon itself a certain negative, punitive function. This neutral and negative aspect of the state will be perverted, and become a positive pushas life-giving, rather than life-preservingif the other forms of spontaneous activity wither; or if the state officials try to use their power to call up a positive vision of their own; or if politics is considered the all-inclusive area of mans achievement of excellence.
A proper order of convenience would be able to accommodate Hobby Lobbys religious objections. On this matter and others, the Obama administration seeks an order of justice. I hope, in this case, that it loses. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Ada (#0)
While I'm against abortion, Obozo-care, and all forms of govt intervention in the private lives of Americans, the case isn't about personal rights but about corporate benefits vs. corporate obligations. The people at Hobby Lobby subscribed to the corporate advantages/ benefits and having accepted them will be required to keep their corporate obligations. The corporate FICTION exists by permission of government. "Resolve to serve no more, he says, and you are at once freed. I do not ask that you place hands upon the tyrant to topple him over, but simply that you support him no longer; then you will behold him, like a great Colossus whose pedestal has been pulled away, fall of his own weight and break in pieces. Étienne de La Boétie
I don't get this. It reads drunkenly and like the last third of something else. The writer confesses to an infatuation with Keith Richards, thinks George C.I.A. Bush was a great president, and agrees with some kind of brief against Hobby Lobby? There's only one thing that needs be said about Hobby Lobby. It's another case of a communist junta (the Bush/Clinton/Obama mob) terrorizing Christians, making an example of one entity to further demoralize the many. So what if HL is a corporation? Anybody who expects to do any serious business is forced to get enfranchised with the state and agree to a whole lot of satanic mumbo-jumbo, significantly because if they don't they'll leave themselves open to predation by Jew lawyers and judges in tort suits etc.---with Jew-run government, a pincer movement on 300 million people.
wnd.com 3/25/14: Pin drop! Obama lawyer stuns Supreme justice Justice Kennedy asked the governments lawyer, So under your argument, corporations could be forced to pay for abortions, that there would be no religious claim against that on the part of the corporation. Is that right? And the governments attorney said yes, Ruse said. You could hear a pin drop, and I think that stunned Justice Kennedy. Since hes always the swing vote, you want to stun him in a way that pushes him over to your side of the column, she said. Surprisingly, the gov attorney's argument doesn't bode well for the concept of Corporate Personhood. Other than that, I think it's very clearly an Amendment I issue: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof ------- "They're on our left, they're on our right, they're in front of us, they're behind us...they can't get away this time." -- Col. Puller, USMC
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