It can't be too bad because Al Sharpton doesn't like it " In the opening segment of MSNBC’s “PoliticsNation,” host and notorious tax-evader Al Sharpton compared the newly-enacted Indiana Religious Freedom Restoration Act to Jim Crow and slavery. “This is a key moment for the country,” he said." . . .
"I’m Only Going to Do Business in States That Support the First Amendment From Now On"
"I’m Only Going to Do Business in States That Support the First Amendment From Now On"
"This protest movement against Indiana’s Religious-Freedom Restoration Act has gotten completely out of hand. The outrage is based on lies, misinformation, and propaganda about things that are not even in the law.
"Apple CEO Tim Cook wrote in a Washington Post editorial that the new law says “individuals can cite their personal religious beliefs to refuse service to a customer or resist a state nondiscrimination law.” That’s a complete fabrication and the Washington Post allowed him to get away with it.
"You will not find one word in the law that allows someone to refuse service to a customer. All it says is that the government must show a compelling interest if it’s going to force people to violate their religious beliefs and if people believe the government has done so, they are allowed to raise religious liberty as a defense in a court case. That’s all. Not one word about gay lunch counters and no separate drinking fountains, despite the hyperbole comparing the RFRA to Jim Crow laws." . . .
. . .
"All the Indiana law says is that the state can’t substantially
burden a person’s exercise of religion, unless there is a compelling
governmental interest at stake and it is pursued by the least
restrictive means. The law doesn’t mandate any particular outcome; it
simply provides a test for the courts in those rare instances when a
person’s exercise of religion clashes with a law." Rich Lowry
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