Arizona lawmakers pass bill to allow faith-based discrimination

SLM

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Mar 5, 2011
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Arizona lawmakers pass bill to allow faith-based discrimination



David Schwartz, Reuters

Feb 20, 2014 , Last Updated: 11:15 PM ET

PHOENIX - Arizona lawmakers gave final approval on Thursday to a bill that would allow businesses to refuse service to customers when such work would violate their religious beliefs, in a move critics describe as a license to discriminate against gays and others.
Under the bill, a business owner would have a defense against a discrimination lawsuit, provided a decision to deny service was motivated by a "sincerely held" religious belief and that giving such service would have substantially burdened the exercise of their religious beliefs.
"The Arizona legislature sent a clear message today: In our state everyone is free to live and work according to their faith," said Cathi Herrod, president of the conservative Center for Arizona Policy, which helped write the bill.
The bill passed the Republican-controlled state House of Representatives 33-27 on Thursday, a day after it won similar approval in the state Senate. It will go to Republican Governor Jan Brewer, who has not indicated whether she will sign it.
The American Civil Liberties Union branded the legislation as "unnecessary and discriminatory," saying it had nothing to do with God or faith.
"What today's bill does is allow private individuals and businesses to use religion to discriminate, sending a message that Arizona is intolerant and unwelcoming," said Alessandra Soler, executive director of the ACLU of Arizona.
The Arizona law is seen by critics as an attack on the rights of gays and lesbians to equality under the law at a time when same-sex marriage activists have notched several court victories in recent months.
Some 17 U.S. states and the District of Columbia now recognize gay marriage in a trend that has gained momentum since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June that legally married same-sex couples nationwide are eligible for federal benefits.
Since mid-December, federal judges have ruled curbs on same-sex marriage unconstitutional in Oklahoma, Utah and Virginia, although the decisions have been stayed pending appeal. The New Mexico Supreme Court has also legalized gay marriage.
But Arizona is among more than 30 states that still ban gay or lesbian couples from marrying, by constitutional amendment, statute or both.
House Minority Leader Chad Campbell, a Democrat who opposed the measure, called it "state-sanctioned discrimination" that clearly targets members of the gay community.
"We're telling them, 'We don't like you,'" Campbell said, during a heated floor debate. "'We don't want you here. We're not going to protect you, we don't want your business, we don't want your money and we don't want your kind around here.'"
State Representative Eddie Farnsworth said the bill was wrongly being portrayed as discriminatory and that it only made "minor tweaks" to current state law.
"This is simply protecting religious freedom that is recognized and defended and supported in the First Amendment that the founders wanted - nothing else," he said.

Arizona lawmakers pass bill to allow faith-based discrimination
 

taxslave

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Nov 25, 2008
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Aside from the fact that this will be struck down in court I can see where it could backfire royally. Taxi drivers will now be able to refuse to pick up christians to start with and gay doctors could withhold treatment. Should be interesting.
 

L Gilbert

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Arizona lawmakers pass bill to allow faith-based discriminationState Representative Eddie Farnsworth said the bill was wrongly being portrayed as discriminatory and that it only made "minor tweaks" to current state law.
"This is simply protecting religious freedom that is recognized and defended and supported in the First Amendment that the founders wanted - nothing else," he said.

Arizona lawmakers pass bill to allow faith-based discrimination
Did religious freedom need protecting in NM before? I'm sure Christians wouldn't need their faith protected. Not so sure if you were Hindu, Buddhist or the M****m. And why would a population of around 4% be any threat to the beliefs of the other 96% of NM?
Nah, this is thinly-disguised bigotry.
Oh, and BTW, legislators of NM, we won't be visiting your state any time soon. CA could use the bucks we'd spend. :)
 

Mowich

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Arizona lawmakers pass bill to allow faith-based discrimination



David Schwartz, Reuters

Feb 20, 2014 , Last Updated: 11:15 PM ET

PHOENIX - Arizona lawmakers gave final approval on Thursday to a bill that would allow businesses to refuse service to customers when such work would violate their religious beliefs, in a move critics describe as a license to discriminate against gays and others.
Under the bill, a business owner would have a defense against a discrimination lawsuit, provided a decision to deny service was motivated by a "sincerely held" religious belief and that giving such service would have substantially burdened the exercise of their religious beliefs.
"The Arizona legislature sent a clear message today: In our state everyone is free to live and work according to their faith," said Cathi Herrod, president of the conservative Center for Arizona Policy, which helped write the bill.
The bill passed the Republican-controlled state House of Representatives 33-27 on Thursday, a day after it won similar approval in the state Senate. It will go to Republican Governor Jan Brewer, who has not indicated whether she will sign it.
The American Civil Liberties Union branded the legislation as "unnecessary and discriminatory," saying it had nothing to do with God or faith.
"What today's bill does is allow private individuals and businesses to use religion to discriminate, sending a message that Arizona is intolerant and unwelcoming," said Alessandra Soler, executive director of the ACLU of Arizona.
The Arizona law is seen by critics as an attack on the rights of gays and lesbians to equality under the law at a time when same-sex marriage activists have notched several court victories in recent months.
Some 17 U.S. states and the District of Columbia now recognize gay marriage in a trend that has gained momentum since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June that legally married same-sex couples nationwide are eligible for federal benefits.
Since mid-December, federal judges have ruled curbs on same-sex marriage unconstitutional in Oklahoma, Utah and Virginia, although the decisions have been stayed pending appeal. The New Mexico Supreme Court has also legalized gay marriage.
But Arizona is among more than 30 states that still ban gay or lesbian couples from marrying, by constitutional amendment, statute or both.
House Minority Leader Chad Campbell, a Democrat who opposed the measure, called it "state-sanctioned discrimination" that clearly targets members of the gay community.
"We're telling them, 'We don't like you,'" Campbell said, during a heated floor debate. "'We don't want you here. We're not going to protect you, we don't want your business, we don't want your money and we don't want your kind around here.'"
State Representative Eddie Farnsworth said the bill was wrongly being portrayed as discriminatory and that it only made "minor tweaks" to current state law.
"This is simply protecting religious freedom that is recognized and defended and supported in the First Amendment that the founders wanted - nothing else," he said.

Arizona lawmakers pass bill to allow faith-based discrimination
How do you define ...... better yet how do you prove that someone's belief is 'sincerely held'? Really.
 

shadowshiv

Dark Overlord
May 29, 2007
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Arizona continually finds itself in the news, and not in a good way either.
 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
9,949
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The beginning of the end for America and even Russia is much closer.
In Russia they are listening to the Russian Orthodox Church the same
bunch that hoodwinked the people prior to the Revolution and in America
the Crazies like this bunch of legislators is slowly taking control and they
will kill personal freedom, for Jesus.
When governments single out segments of the society for persecution we
should all be concerned it has never ended well.
The French Revolution
Britain's Oliver Cromwell Experiential
the Russian Communist Revolution
Germany's experiment with the Nazis
Even the Joe McCarthy anti Communist hearings of the fifties.
Whether is be zealots from the right or left the people suffer in the long run
Today they persecute the Gays, who is next? As late as the fifties the
system society persecuted school kids who were left handed even and I
was one of them, never changed hands though.
Think about this they persecute these same people in Russia and governments
condemned the action yet a federal government sits by while these zealots do
the same thing makes one wonder eh?
 

Cannuck

Time Out
Feb 2, 2006
30,245
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If it is not vetoed, the NFL says they will yank next years Super Bowl out of Phoenix. It'll be interesting to see if the governor puts a price tag on freedom