[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

How Anish heat a barn

This is an Easy Case SCOTUS Takes On The UN and Mexico's Gun Control Alliance!

Would China Ever Invade Russia? Examining a Possible Scenario

Why Putin Can NEVER Use a Nuclear Weapon

Logical Consequence of Freedom4um point of view

Tucker Carlson: This current White House is being run by Satan, not human beings

U.S. Submarines Are Getting a Nuclear Cruise Missile Strike Capability: Destroyers Likely to Follow

Anti-Gun Cat Lady ATTACKS Congress Over Mexico & The UN!

Trump's new border czar will prioritize finding 300,000 missing migrant children who could be trafficking victims

Morgan Stanley: "If Musk Is Successful In Streamlining Government, It Would Broaden Earnings Growth And Stock Performance"

Bombshell Fauci Documentary Nails The Whole COVID Charade

TRUTH About John McCain's Service - Forgotten History

Bombshell Fauci Documentary Nails The Whole COVID Charade

Joe Rogan expressed deep concern that Joe Biden and Ukrainian President Zelensky will start World War III

Fury in Memphis after attempted murder suspect who ambushed FedEx employee walks free without bail

Tehran preparing for attack against Israel: Ayatollah Khamenei's aide

Huge shortage plagues Israeli army as losses mount in Lebanon, Gaza

Researchers Find Unknown Chemical In Drinking Water Posing "Potential Human Health Concern"

Putin visibly ‘shocked’ by US green-light for long-range missiles to strike inside Russia

The Problem of the Bitcoin Billionaires

Biden: “We’re leaving America in a better place today than when we came into office four years ago … "

Candace Owens: Gaetz out, Bondi in. There's more to this than you think.

OMG!!! Could Jill Biden Be Any MORE Embarrassing??? - Anyone NOTICE This???

Sudden death COVID vaccine paper published, then censored, by The Lancet now republished with peer review

Russian children returned from Syria

Donald Trump Indirectly Exposes the Jewish Neocons Behind Joe Biden's Nuclear War

Key European NATO Bases in Reach of Russia's Oreshnik Hypersonic Missile

Supervolcano Alert in Europe: Phlegraean Fields Activity Sparks Scientists Attention (Mass Starvation)

France reacted to the words of a US senator on sanctions against allies

Trump nominates former Soros executive for Treasury chief


Religion
See other Religion Articles

Title: DEMONIZE AS MANY 'SOUTHERNERS' AS THE QUEER LAW WILL ALLOW (INFINITE NUMBER) - Washington Post Compares County Clerk Kim Davis to George Wallace
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/nb/bry ... clerk-kim-davis-george-wallace
Published: Sep 4, 2015
Author: By Bryan Ballas
Post Date: 2015-09-04 22:26:19 by HAPPY2BME-4UM
Keywords: FIRST AMENDMENT, FREEDOM OF RELIGION
Views: 393
Comments: 18

Before Kentucky county clerk Kim Davis was jailed for sticking to her religious beliefs, Janell Ross of the Washington Post was quick to take sides against her. On September 2 the Post headlined the story as follows: “We Have Reached the George Wallace Stage of the Same-Sex Marriage Fight.”

Ross begins this accusation with the same amount of objectivity as her headline:

There's a long and not exactly auspicious history in this country of people resisting court orders aimed at defending the civil rights of minority groups. On Tuesday, a Kentucky county clerk named Kim Davis created the basis for the latest chapter. Davis is refusing to issue marriage licenses to anyone so that she might avoid the task of having to issue or refuse to issue one to a gay or lesbian couple. (Emphasis Added)

Ross is not ignorant of the religious element in this controversy: 

Davis is free to believe whatever she would like; this is America. However, multiple courts have said she is not at liberty to impose her beliefs at work in such a way that the legal rights, options and access of others are curtailed. Of course, from Davis's point of view — and that of many Americans who agree with her, especially white evangelicals, according to a June 2014 Public Religion Research Institute poll — forcing her to issue licenses to same-sex couples impinges on her religious liberty.

Ross then compares Davis to one of America’s most infamous racists:

The real issue -- if you know something about the history of American moments like the one that Davis has brought to pass, and even if you don't — is that legally, Davis has put herself in league with men like former Alabama governor George Wallace.

In addition to the fact that homosexuality and race are not equivalent, Ross’s comparison fails when one realizes that Davis refused to give marriage licenses to ALL couples. This was an equal opportunity shutdown of licenses, not an exclusion of gays in particular.

After reviewing a number of comments on the issue from Republican candidates, Ross compared the phrase “religious liberty” to the infamous “states’ rights” rhetoric that was used to justify America’s past evils:

That kind of logic is also precisely why some people understand "religious liberty" to be the new "states' rights" — a catchphrase that sounds principled and connected with American ideals but can also be used to resist established legal change. States' rights (and its local equivalent) have in the past formed the basis of legal and public arguments for reserving the nation's best-resourced schools, neighborhoods, parks, pools and hospitals for white people. Those arguments helped keep Catholics and Jews out of public offices and certain communities, led state officials in some places to shut down all public schools rather than integrate, made it possible to impose black codes and sundown laws that made it illegal for black people to even be present in certain places in this country. And, of course, those arguments undergirded legal slavery. (Emphasis Added)

It’s nice to know that the Post’s first reaction to cries for “religious liberty” is to sound the alarm of Jim Crow racism that no one is advocating. It assures its audience of quality objectivity.

To her credit, Ross does not think that the Wallace comparison is a perfect fit for this situation:

The parallels between Davis and Wallace, of course, have their limits. Wallace's stand at that University of Alabama door came after years of organized and sometimes loosely coordinated efforts to ignore, evade or resist the contents of court orders and laws directing the integration of public and most private facilities open to the public....[T]he showdown shaping up in Kentucky should not be understood as random or isolated. Kentucky and Alabama — states notably with large white evangelical populations — have their respective histories and must also contend with the present. Right now, Alabama is busy charting new territory in the effort to resist legal same-sex marriage. This month, a state legislative committee voted for a measure that, should it reach and pass the full state Senate, could eliminate state-issued marriage licenses. (Emphasis Added)

So, the Davis phenomenon, which is apparently fueled by white evangelical populations, is arguable worse than Wallace because it is not isolated? Do black and Hispanic clergy uniformly stand against Davis? Are they divided on the issue? What about the non-religious? For someone who makes a living writing about race and equality, Ross tellingly neglects to present any data on what the black and Hispanic populations think about Davis’ decision to stand by her convictions.

Ross concludes her smear against Davis with this epilogue:

Americans can and do disagree about same-sex marriage. But in public life, equal treatment under the law ranks among the hallmarks of the American experiment. The struggle to make equality real — meaning consistent, unabridged and unconditional — remains an ongoing project. (Emphasis Added)

Not surprisingly, Ross does not take note of the fact that legalizing homosexual marriage has not achieved equality, but merely privileged two forms of monogamy over polygamy, incest, and bestiality. Equally absent is the observance of the fact that religious freedom is spelled out as a constitutional protection while identity politics is not.

Regardless of who ultimately wins the culture war over religious liberty on remains certain: the Washington Post has chosen its side.   

Click for Full Text!

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 11.

#11. To: HAPPY2BME-4UM (#0)

Davis broke no law, she defied a court. Courts do not make law, they make rulings and rulings are not law.

Darkwing  posted on  2015-09-05   9:58:03 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 11.

        There are no replies to Comment # 11.


End Trace Mode for Comment # 11.

TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]