601 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
601 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
The following message, retrieved from PeaceNet, discuss the
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recent Supreme Court ruling permitting states to prohibit
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sacramental use of peyote.
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Supreme Court Continues Chipping Away At Citizen's 1st Amendment
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Rights, Part 1.
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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Exerpts from the following article detailing the April 17th
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ruling by the US Supreme Court which decided that Native
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Americans could no longer use peyote in their religious
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practices:
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"For all practical purposes, a majority of the Supreme Court
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has eliminated the Free Exercise clause of the First Amendment
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from our Bill of Rights," said American Jewish Congress
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Executive Director Henry Siegman.
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"The court's decision in the peyote case can have the most
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farreaching consequences for all religions, but primarily for
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religious minorities," continued Siegman. "It is precisely such
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minorities the Bill of Rights sought to protect, for it is they
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who are particularly vulnerable to the depredations of momentary
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and localized majorities."
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... Dr. Robert L. Maddox, executive director of Americans
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United for Separation of Church and State, said the "Smith"
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ruling is cause for concern...
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"We are concerned," he continued, "that this ruling will
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have a negative effect on minority religions. Mainstream faiths
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will probably have little difficulty getting the exemptions they
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need; smaller groups with less political influence will have a
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tougher time of it. That is unfortunate. Religious freedom
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should not be left to the whim of state and federal lawmakers.
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"No one wants anarchy in the name of religion," he added,
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"but do we really want more and more government regulation of
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religion? What bothers us most is the movement away from
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individual liberty and toward statism--whatever the government
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wants, goes."
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The following article appeared in the June 1990 issue of
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"Church and State", a publication of Americans United for
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Separation of Church and State, 8120 Fenton St., Silver Spring,
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MD, 20910, and is reprinted here w/permission.
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The Day 'Sherbert' Melted
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by Rob Boston
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Discarding A 27-Year-Old Test For Religious Liberty Cases, The
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Supreme Court Says Government May Restrict Religiously Motivated
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Conduct
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Alfred Smith considers himself apolitical; he's not even
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registered to vote. But, in light of what the Supreme Court did
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April 17, the 70-year-old Oregonian is ready to jump into
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politics in a big way.
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The high court ruled 6-3 that day that Native Americans do
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not have a constitutional right to use the drug peyote during
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their religious ceremonies. Smith, one of the plaintiffs who
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helped bring the case before the nation's highest court, is
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angry--angry enough to take his fight to the polls.
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"I'm encouraging all people to register and vote this year,"
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Smith said. "This is the time for it. I have never voted
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before because I don't care to condone the system, but I have
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made a stand here with this case."
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The political route Smith proposes may be one many members
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of minority religions are forced to take in the future, thanks
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to the Supreme Court's decision in the "Employment Division v.
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Smith" case. The justices' ruling marks an abrupt shift in free
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exercise jurisprudence, granting government broad new powers
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over religious practices.
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What makes the "Smith" decision so significant is that in
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reaching it five justices voted to abandon the court's doctrine
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of "compelling state interest," a move with far-reaching
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implications for religious liberty.
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In a nutshell, the 27-year-old doctrine says that the
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government can restrict religious freedom only when it proves
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there is a compelling interest to do so and that there is no
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less intrusive alternative available to achieve the state's
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goals. The judicial rule grew out of the 1963 "Sherbert v.
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Verner" decision and is usually called the "Sherbert" Test.
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In the recent peyote case the court rejected the "Sherbert"
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standard in favor of a much narrower test, holding that
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government may offer religiously based exemptions from generally
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applicable laws if it chooses, but it is under no constitutional
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obligation to do so.
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Wrote Justice Antonin Scalia for the majority, "We have
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never held that an individual's religious beliefs excuse him
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from compliance with an otherwise valid law prohibiting conduct
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that the State is free to regulate."
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Scalia went on to say that applying the doctrine of
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compelling state interest in the peyote dispute and similar
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cases would create "a private right to ignore generally
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applicable laws [which would be] a constitutional anomaly."
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Rigorous application of the "Sherbert" approach, he said, would
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be "courting anarchy."
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Later in the opinion, Scalia admitted that the ruling will
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force minority religious groups to seek relief from oppressive
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laws by lobbying elected officials, and some may fail in their
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efforts. But he excused this as unavoidable. "It may fairly be
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said," observed Scalia, "that leaving accommodation to the
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political process will place at a relative disadvantage those
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religious practices that are not widely engaged in; but that
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unavoidable consequence of democratic government must be
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preferred to a system in which each conscience is a law unto
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itself or in which judges weigh the social importance of all
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laws against the centrality of all religious beliefs."
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The court majority acknowledged that judicial exemptions
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from neutral laws have sometimes been granted for religious
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reasons. But, Scalia argued, such exemptions have generally
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been granted in conjunction with another constitutional
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right--such as free speech. He called these examples "hybrids"
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and implied they are special cases. Other than that, said
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Scalia, the only legal disputes where the "Sherbert" analysis
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has been applied consistently and usefully are unemployment
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compensation rulings, such as the line of decisions approving
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jobless benefits for workers who are fired for refusing to work
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on their sabbath.
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Ironically the "Smith" case involved just such an
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unemployment controversy. It started in 1984 when Smith, a
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Klamath Indian, and another man, Galen W. Black, a non-Indian,
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were fired from their jobs as drug counselors after the agency
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they worked for learned the pair had used the drug peyote during
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ceremonies in the Native American Church.
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The Council on Alcohol and Drug Abuse Prevention Treatment
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(ADAPT) had a policy stating that all employees must be drug
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free. Smith and Black thought an exemption would be made for
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their religious use of peyote, a mild hallucinogen derived from
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some cactus plants, but ADAPT officials saw things differently:
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Both men were dismissed.
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When Smith and Black subsequently applied for unemployment
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benefits, they were turned down. Officials with the state
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Employment Division said the two had been fired for misconduct
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and therefore did not qualify. The duo took the case to the
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courts.
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Four years later the Oregon Supreme Court ruled that the
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ceremonial use of peyote is permissible under state law and is
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even protected by the First Amendment. The Supreme Court's
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recent action overturns that decision.
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The "Smith" majority drew upon a somewhat unusual alignment
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of justices. Scalia, Chief Justice William Rehnquist and
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Justices Anthony Kennedy and Byron R. White were predictable
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allies. All four have argued for a narrower reading of the
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First Amendment's religious liberty clauses.
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Justice John Paul Stevens, however, provided the key fifth
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vote. Stevens, often thought of as a member of the court's
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liberal wing, favors a strict separationist reading of the
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Establishment Clause, but has argued in past cases for a less
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expansive reading of the Free Exercise Clause.
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Justice Sandra Day O'Connor concurred in the "Smith"
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outcome, but wrote a separate dissent that accused the majority
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of going too far. "Although I agree with the result the Court
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reaches in this case, I cannot join its opinion," asserted
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O'Connor. "In my view, today's holding dramatically departs
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from well-settled First Amendment jurisprudence, appears
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unnecessary to resolve the question presented, and is
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incompatible with our Nation's fundamental commitment to
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individual religious liberty."
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The free exercise of religion, O'Connor added, is a
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"preferred constitutional activity," entitled to "heightened
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judicial scrutiny." The "Sherbert" Test, she continued, has
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worked well to "strike sensible balances between religious
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liberty and competing state interests."
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Justices Harry A. Blackmun, William J. Brennan Jr. and
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Thurgood Marshall indicated agreement with O'Connor's opinion,
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although they said they would have gone further and upheld the
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Native American Church members' claim. The court's liberal wing
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criticized the majority for "mischaracterizing this Court's
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precedents" and engaging in a "wholesale overtuning of settled
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law concerning the Religion Clauses of our Constitution."
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Wrote Blackmun, "One hopes that the Court is aware of the
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consequences, and that its result is not a product of over-
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reaction to the serious problems the country's drug crisis has
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generated."
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The justice insisted that ritual peyote use by Native
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Americans could be tolerated without jeopardizing the nation's
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campaign to curb drug abuse. He noted that the federal
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government allowed the Roman Catholic Church to employ
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sacramental wine at masses during Prohibition.
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Said Blackmun, "I do not believe the Founders thought their
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dearly bought freedom from religious persecution a 'luxury,' but
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an essential element of liberty--and they could not have thought
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religious intolerance 'unavoidable,' for they drafted the
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Religion Clauses precisely in order to avoid that intolerance."
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Even though the case dealt with the sensitive issue of drug
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use, several religious organizations had sided with the Native
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American Church members, most notably the American Jewish
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Congress, which filed a friend-of-the-court brief in support of
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Smith and Black.
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"For all practical purposes, a majority of the Supreme Court
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has eliminated the Free Exercise clause of the First Amendment
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from our Bill of Rights," said AJC Executive Director Henry
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Siegman.
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"The court's decision in the peyote case can have the most
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far-reaching consequences for all religions, but primarily for
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religious minorities," continued Siegman. "It is precisely such
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minorities the Bill of Rights sought to protect, for it is they
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who are particularly vulnerable to the depredations of momentary
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and localized majorities."
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Three weeks after the decision the AJC and an
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extraordinarily diverse coalition of religious and civil
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liberties groups filed a petition for rehearing before the
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Supreme Court. The petition urged the justices to hear the case
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again so the organizations will have the opportunity to address
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their free exercise concerns in friend-of-the-court briefs.
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Groups joining the AJC include: the Baptist Joint Committee
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on Public Affairs, the National Council of Churches, the
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National Association of Evangelicals, People for the American
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Way, the Presbyterian Church U.S.A., the American Civil
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Liberties Union, the Christian Legal Society, the American
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Jewish Committee, the Unitarian-Universalist Association, the
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General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, the
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Worldwide Church of God and the Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod.
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Americans United for Separation of Church and State also signed
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the petition.
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Attorney Oliver S. Thomas of the Baptist Joint Committee
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said it is important that religious and civil liberties groups
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have the opportunity to express their views to the court. He
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said the court's abandonment of the "Sherbert" Test could have a
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wide impact.
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"Taxation of church assets, regulation of church schools and
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child- care centers, zoning and other land-use questions are all
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areas of the law where we've relied upon the compelling state
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interest test to provide churches with exemptions," Thomas told
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the Baptist Press. "With a stroke of his pen, Justice Scalia
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has overturned 27 years of legal precedent and made the 'first
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liberty' a constitutional stepchild."
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The Rutherford Institute, a conservative legal aid group
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that frequently litigates free exercises cases, was also
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dismayed by the ruling. Said Institute President John W.
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Whitehead in a press statement, "Justice Scalia's opinion
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rejects the notion that free exercise of religion is a preferred
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right. Rather, in most situations it is valid only when coupled
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with another constitutional right.
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"Armed with this opinion, a state may draft a law that
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violates religious liberty, claim it is `religiously neutral'
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and those affected by it may have no recourse under the
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Constitution."
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Constitutional scholars were particularly amazed that the
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majority in the peyote case relied heavily on "Minersville
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School District v. Gobitis," a 1940 Supreme Court decision that
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said Jehovah's Witness children in public schools could be
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forced to say the Pledge of Allegiance. "Gobitis" was
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overturned three years later in the "Barnette" decision and has
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been roundly criticized ever since as one of the court's biggest
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mistakes.
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Observed Douglas Laycock, law professor at the University of
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Texas, "The court repeatedly quotes "Gobitis" without noting
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that it was overruled in "Barnette," and without noting that it
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triggered a nationwide outburst of violence against Jehovah' s
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Witnesses. Until the opinion in this case, "Gobitis" was
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thoroughly discredited."
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But not all courtwatchers were chagrined by the ruling.
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Jules B. Gerard, a constitutional law professor at Washington
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University in St. Louis, told Religious News Service there has
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been a lot of overreaction. Gerard said the decision "overturns
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very little" and accused those who have protested it of
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"hysterical talk." [more]
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Bruce Fein, a conservative constitutional scholar, went even
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further, applauding the ruling in a column in "The Washington
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Times." Fein wrote, "It is both counter-intuitive and contrary
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to American political experience to suppose the "Smith" ruling
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portends an epitaph for religious tolerance and accommodation in
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generally applicable legislative enactments. And when religion
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must yield to secular law, the former continues to prosper."
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Fein went on to say that religions can drop fundamental
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tenets and still survive, pointing out that the Church of Jesus
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Christ of Latter-day Saints (the Mormons) in 1890 dumped its
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support for plural marriage after the Supreme Court refused to
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allow the practice for religious reasons.
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Conservative columnist George Will also was pleased with the
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"Smith" decision. "A central purpose of America's political
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arrangements is the subordination of religion to the political
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order, meaning the primacy of democracy," he observed. "The
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Founders, like Locke before them, wished to tame and domesticate
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religious passions of the sort that convulsed Europe....Hence,
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religion is to be perfectly free as long as it is perfectly
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private--mere belief--but it must bend to the political will
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(law) as regards conduct."
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However, Dr. Robert L. Maddox, executive director of
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Americans United for Separation of Church and State, said the
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"Smith" ruling is cause for concern.
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"If a majority of the justices did not believe the Native
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American Church members had a valid claim, they could have
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rejected them by relying on the doctrine of compelling state
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interest," said Maddox. "But a majority chose to go much
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further, effectively weakening the protection the court has
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extended to religious free exercise.
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"We are concerned," he continued, "that this ruling will
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have a negative effect on minority religions. Mainstream faiths
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will probably have little difficulty getting the exemptions they
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need; smaller groups with less political influence will have a
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tougher time of it. That is unfortunate. Religious freedom
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should not be left to the whim of state and federal lawmakers.
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"No one wants anarchy in the name of religion," he added,
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"but do we really want more and more government regulation of
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religion? What bothers us most is the movement away from
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individual liberty and toward statism--whatever the government
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wants, goes."
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The decision has already had a practical consequence for one
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minority faith. Just six days after the "Smith" ruling, the
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justices, by a 7-2 vote, ordered the Minnesota Supreme Court to
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reconsider a recent decision it made exempting an Amish group
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from complying with a highway safety law. [more]
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Members of the Old Order Amish had protested a state law
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requiring them to display orange safety triangles on their
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horse-drawn buggies. The Amish said the bright symbols violated
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their belief in a plain lifestyle. The Minnesota high court
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agreed in 1989, but now may be forced to reverse the "State v.
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Hershberger" decision in light of the "Smith" ruling.
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In Eugene, Ore., meanwhile, Al Smith has no more faith in
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the courts. After joining about 100 people in a protest of the
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decision that bears his name at a Eugene federal building April
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20, Smith told reporters he is backing proposed legislation
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suggested by state representative Jim
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Edmunson of Eugene that would allow Native Americans to use
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peyote in religious rituals in Oregon. If that fails, Smith
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said, the Oregon Supreme Court could decide Native American
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peyote use is permissible under the state constitution.
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Smith told "Church & State" he is also working with Native
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American groups in the United States that are considering filing
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a protest before the International Court of Justice (commonly
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called the World Court) in The Hague, Netherlands.
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"The United States is saying the original people of this
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land can't worship," Smith told Church & State. "We were
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worshipping a long time before the white man ever set foot on
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this turtle island.
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"The issue is not dead, by no means," continued Smith. "I'm
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not giving up; I have committed no crime. It's not a crime to
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pray in the old way."
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KOYAANISQATSI
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ko.yan.nis.qatsi (from the Hopi Language) n. 1. crazy life.
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2. life in turmoil. 3. life out of balance. 4. life
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disintegrating. 5. a state of life that calls for another way
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of living. [more]
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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|
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Exerpts from the following article analyzing the
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effects the US Supreme Court ruling on the Native
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American Church's use of peyote as being illegal:
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Native American church members stripped of their rights
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under the Constitution are now subject to the will of the
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legislative branch of our state and federal governments. Not an
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enviable place for Indian people; as a distinct racial and
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religious minority Indians have always had an uphill struggle in
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the halls of Congress and elsewhere to have their rights
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recognized and respected.
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The legislative branch of any government is an exceedingly
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unusual place for individuals to look to have their rights under
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the First Amendment vindicated. Courts are traditionally looked
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to as protectors of these rights, against majoritarian
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legislatures. Justice O'Connor, in a separate concurring
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opinion which joined the result of the majority but sharply
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criticized its method, reasoned that "the First Amendment was
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enacted precisely to protect those whose religious practices are
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not shared by the majority and may be viewed with hostility."
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As a result of "Smith," minority religions, in Justice
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Scalia's opinion, may be at a disadvantage in the political
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arena. But that is, in his estimation, "an unavoidable
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consequence of democratic government," preferable to "a system
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in which each conscience is a law unto itself." Justice Scalia
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had to strain to defend his decision, citing the need to prevent
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"anarchy" in our democratic society. Indian
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people simply want to be left alone in our society to worship
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the god of their choice. Is that asking too much? The Court's
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decision in "Smith" strips Indians of their pride and integrity,
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and makes many of them criminals in the eyes of the law. Only
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history will judge the Court's decision in "Smith;" but for now
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the remote specter of anarchy may very well have been the
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preferred choice.
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The following article appeared in the Spring 1990 issue of
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"Native American Rights Fund Legal Review", a publication of the
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Native American Rights Fund, 1506 Broadway, Boulder, CO 80302,
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and is reprinted here w/permission.
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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Supreme Court Deals Devastating Blow to Native American Church
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by Steve Moore
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On Tuesday, April 17, 1990, the United States Supreme Court
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struck a gut wrenching blow to the religious lives of many of
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this country's Native Americans, in a decision which invites the
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return to an era of religious persecution one would hope a
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presumably enlightened and tolerant society such as ours had
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left behind. In the case of "Oregon Department of Employment v.
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Alfred Smith," Justice Antonin Scalia, writing for a five member
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majority, and describing the First Amendment's Free Exercise
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Clause as little more than a "negative protection accorded to
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religious belief," held that a member of a religious faith may
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not challenge under the free exercise clause of the First
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Amendment to the United States Constitution a legislature's
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criminal enactment of otherwise general application which
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produces infringement on a particular religious practice. In
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the "Smith" case this amounted to a challenge to the
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constitutionality of an Oregon drug law which the Court
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interpreted as a general criminal prohibition on all uses of the
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drug peyote, considered by Indian members of the Native American
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Church as an essential sacrament, the physical embodiment of the
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Great Spirit.
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The Native American Church, which claims over 250,000
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members nationwide, and additional Indian practitioners in
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Canada and Mexico, and which can be traced back archaeologically
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several thousand years in North America, was not absolutely
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destroyed or driven underground by the Court's action. The
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Court did not go so far as to rule that any state or federal law
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exempting the religious, sacramental use of peyote was an
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unconstitutional establishment of religion, at the other end of
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the religion clauses of the First Amendment. In the Court's
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terms, a peyote exemption, while constitutionally *permitted*,
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is neither constitutionally *required* or *prohibited*. A kind
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||
of constitutional limbo-land for the Native American Church and
|
||
its members. [more]
|
||
|
||
In real terms the decision leaves the fate of the peyote
|
||
religion to the whim of majoritarian legislatures and Congress.
|
||
Eleven states currently have exemptions on the statute books
|
||
protecting the religion; another twelve tie their exemption to a
|
||
federal Drug Enforcement Agency regulation which rests on
|
||
questionable foundation since the decision. A small handful of
|
||
states, notably California and Nebraska, in which are located
|
||
some of the largest Indian and Native American Church
|
||
populations, have based their protection on court decisions.
|
||
The others, and the federal government through Congress, have no
|
||
statutory or common law protection. Indian reservation lands
|
||
will provide some safe haven from possible prosecution, given
|
||
the particular Public Law 280 configuration in any given state,
|
||
but problems of transportation of the sacrament into Indian
|
||
country through "illegal" territory will reduce peyote
|
||
ceremonies to complex and dangerous liaisons.
|
||
|
||
Native American church members stripped of their rights
|
||
under the Constitution are now subject to the will of the
|
||
legislative branch of our state and federal governments. Not an
|
||
enviable place for Indian people; as a distinct racial and
|
||
religious minority Indians have always had an uphill struggle in
|
||
the halls of Congress and elsewhere to have their rights
|
||
recognized and respected.
|
||
|
||
The legislative branch of any government is an exceedingly
|
||
unusual place for individuals to look to have their rights under
|
||
the First Amendment vindicated. Courts are traditionally looked
|
||
to as protectors of these rights, against majoritarian
|
||
legislatures. Justice O'Connor, in a separate concurring
|
||
opinion which joined the result of the majority but sharply
|
||
criticized its method, reasoned that "the First Amendment was
|
||
enacted precisely to protect those whose religious practices are
|
||
not shared by the majority and may be viewed with hostility."
|
||
|
||
A noted scholar of Indian law and philosopher, Felix Cohen,
|
||
was quoted several decades ago as saying: "Like the miner's
|
||
canary, the Indian marks the shifts from fresh air to poison gas
|
||
in our political atmosphere; and our treatment of Indians, even
|
||
more than our treatment of other minorities, reflects the rise
|
||
and fall in our democratic faith ...." Cohen's words become
|
||
even more prophetic after the Court's decision in "Smith." The
|
||
"Smith" decision may perhaps portend even greater persecution
|
||
for other forms of Indian religious expression. Examples which
|
||
come to mind include: the wearing of long hair by Indian
|
||
students in public schools, and by Indian prisoners in federal
|
||
and state prisons; missing school on a regular basis for
|
||
cultural/religious ceremonial purposes; the taking of game by
|
||
Indians out season, when not otherwise protected by treaty;
|
||
burning wood to heat rocks for sweat- lodge ceremonies, when
|
||
burning is otherwise outlawed by local ordinance during times of
|
||
high pollution; and body piercing as part of the Sun Dance
|
||
ceremony. If these forms of religious expression are otherwise
|
||
prohibited by general criminal laws, the First Amendment no
|
||
longer provides a basis from which to claim protection from
|
||
religious infringement. As with peyote use, reservation
|
||
boundaries will provide a buffer from the application of state
|
||
law, except where Public Law 280 legitimizes intrusion.
|
||
|
||
As a result of "Smith," minority religions, in Justice
|
||
Scalia's opinion, may be at a disadvantage in the political
|
||
arena. But that is, in his estimation, "an unavoidable
|
||
consequence of democratic government," preferable to "a system
|
||
in which each conscience is a law unto itself." Justice Scalia
|
||
had to strain to defend his decision, citing the need to prevent
|
||
"anarchy" in our democratic society. Indian people simply want
|
||
to be left alone in our society to worship the god of their
|
||
choice. Is that asking too much? The Court's decision in
|
||
"Smith" strips Indians of their pride and integrity, and makes
|
||
many of them criminals in the eyes of the law. Only history
|
||
will judge the Court's decision in "Smith;" but for now the
|
||
remote specter of anarchy may very well have been the preferred
|
||
choice. [end of article; more to come]
|
||
|
||
STATEMENT FROM PACIFIC NORTHWEST CHURCH LEADERS WHO SUPPORT
|
||
INDIAN RELIGIOUS RIGHTS Re: Employment Division, State of Oregon
|
||
v. Al Smith, Galen Black, 88-1213
|
||
|
||
The recent U.S. Supreme Court decision regarding the
|
||
sacramental use of peyote in Native American religious rites is
|
||
unfortunate and deeply disappointing. We support the right of
|
||
Native Americans to practice their religion as they have for
|
||
centuries. We concur with Justice Harry Blackmun, who writing
|
||
for the dissent, called the decision a "wholesale overturning of
|
||
settled law concerning the religious clauses of our
|
||
Constitution." The decision jeopardizes the fundamental right
|
||
of all citizens to exercise freedom of religion free from
|
||
government restraint. We will continue to work with Native
|
||
Americans to help them protect their religious rights.
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Most Rev. Raymond G. Huthausen Archbishop of Seattle Roman
|
||
Catholic Archdiocese of Seattle
|
||
|
||
The Right Rev. Vincent W. Warner, Bishop Episcopal Diocese of
|
||
Olympia
|
||
|
||
The Most Rev. Thomas Murphy, Coadjutor Archbishop Roman Catholic
|
||
Archdiocese of Seattle
|
||
|
||
The Rev. John Boonstra, Executive Minister Washington
|
||
Association of Churches
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Calvin D. McConnell, Bishop United Methodist Church
|
||
Pacific NW Conference
|
||
|
||
The Rev. W. James Halfaker, Conference Minister Washington-Idaho
|
||
Conference United Church of Christ
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Lowell Knutson, Bishop NW Washington Synod Evangelical
|
||
Lutheran Church In America
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Dr. William B. Cate, President Director Church Council
|
||
of Greater Seattle
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Gaylord Hasselblad, Executive Minister
|
||
|
||
American Baptist Churches of the Northwest
|
||
|
||
These church leaders issued an apology to Indians that was
|
||
carried in the Winter 1988 NARF Legal Review
|
||
|