Hobby Lobby Grows


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Hobby Lobby’s Effects Are Being Felt Beyond Birth Control

It’s been almost three months since the Supreme Court ruled in the Hobby Lobby case that for-profit, secular businesses who have religious objections to birth control may defy federal rules requiring that they include contraceptive care in their employees’ health plans because it violates the employer’s religious liberty rights.

The ripple effect of the Hobby Lobby decision could lead to a cascade of poor outcomes for the nation. And now, the repercussions of that decision are starting to come out — including the potential for it to be broadened even farther and threaten the rights of even more people, including children.

First: A federal judge in Utah cited the Hobby Lobby decision to say that a member of a polygamous religious sect could refuse to testify in a federal investigation into alleged violations of child labor laws because he objects to testifying on religious grounds. The case involves the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (FLDS), which broke off from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — the domination commonly known as Mormons — due to a century-old dispute over polygamy. (The sect’s leader is currently in prison after he was convicted of sexually assaulting two underage girls — the youngest of whom was 12 years-old — that he claimed have taken as wives.) Before Hobby Lobby, it’s unlikely that the claim would prevail. Although federal law offers fairly robust protections for religious liberty, this law only applies when the federal government “substantially burden[s] a person’s exercise of religion.” Hobby Lobby, however, largely wrote the word “substantially” out of this law.

Second: Religious conservatives are admitting what they really want out of Hobby Lobby, which is to push the decision even further and restrict birth control access even more. Last month, the Obama administration announced an accommodation for employers with religious objections: they can exempt themselves completely from the federal rule requiring employer-provided health plans to cover birth control, so long as they inform the government that they seek a religious exemption and tells them which company administers their health plan. But now, the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty — the same Becket Fund that represented Hobby Lobby in its successful lawsuit in the Supreme Court — has filed a court document on behalf of Ave Maria University, saying that even that degree of accommodation is insufficient. Ava Maria doesn’t even think they should be required to let the government know that they are not providing their employees birth control at all. If the justices honor Ave Maria’s idiosyncratic objection, then it is unclear that the Obama administration could design any accommodation that will survive the Supreme Court.

Third: What if children with parents who have religious objections to vaccines could attend public schools, and those public schools could not compel them to get vaccines? That is a very real possibility with widening religious liberty exemptions. In all 50 states, schools require students to get vaccinated for preventable diseases like measles, mumps, whooping cough, polio, and chicken pox before they enroll. But parents are increasingly obtaining a non-medical exemption to the requirement through a “philosophical objection” loophole. For example, compared to just seven years ago, twice as many California parents are deciding against vaccinating their kindergartners, according to public health experts in the state. This past year, California has faced a record-breaking whooping cough epidemic.

BOTTOM LINE: The Hobby Lobby ruling is already having effects that go beyond the Supreme Court ruling. These decisions ignore a fundamental fact: religious liberty is the right to practice religion as you wish and the freedom to not have religion imposed on you by others, especially corporations.

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Google walks the talk …VICTORY: Google Dumps ALEC


GOOGLeYesterday, after months of pressure and the signatures of nearly 115,000 people, Google announced it was ending its support for the American Legislative Exchange Council.

This is not just a victory for us, but for the millions of Americans whose lives are made more difficult by ALEC’s anti-environment, anti-education and anti-worker agenda.

Our voices are being heard – Google’s exit followed quickly on the heels of Microsoft’s departure from the group less than a month ago.

Now it’s time for Facebook to join them. Please, help us turn up the pressure on Facebook by telling them to leave ALEC – today!

Across the country, people are pushing back against backroom deals and pay-to-play politics. They know that ALEC and the crooked politicians they work with have no place in our state legislatures.

With your help, we’ve shone a light on ALEC’s greed and power grabs. That’s why more than 90 corporations and 400 state legislators across the country have pulled their support from ALEC in just the past few years.

So, take a moment to savor this great victory and then help keep this momentum going by signing our petition telling Facebook to say goodbye to ALEC.

Thanks for your great work,

Marisol

Comptrolle​r Stringer & ABB Highlight Families & Flexibilit​y on September 29th


A Better Balance
You’re invited to a forum on Families & Flexibility
Families & Flexibility Monday, September 29, 2014
Join A Better Balance & NYC Comptroller Scott M. Stringer on September, 29 for a forum on Workplace Flexibility & Scheduling.
If we want to remain a global economic power, we must support policies that see family and work as complementary, rather than competing interests.
New America President & CEO Anne-Marie Slaughter will be giving the Keynote address and the panel will be moderated by The New York Times’ Steven Greenhouse & Rachel Swarns.
Monday, September 29, 2014 8:30 am-12:00pm
Baruch College/ CUNY Newman Conference Center, 151 E. 25th Street, 7th Floor, New York, NY 10016
RSVP here or by phone at 212-669-4466

UCS … Upcoming events news and information


{UCS

Could a Fukushima-scale nuclear disaster happen here?

Meet Dr. Edwin Lyman, nuclear power safety expert and co-author of our book Fukushima: The Story of a Nuclear Disaster,

and

learn about the future of nuclear power in the Northwest.

Monday, October 6, 7:00 p.m.,

at University Temple United Methodist Church in Seattle.

 

If we raise an additional $200,000 this September, a UCS donor will give a $1 million grant to fund our Center for Science and Democracy.

Fracking companies hide hundreds of chemicals from public scrutiny—blasting them into our own backyards. We all have a right to know what may be threatening our families’ health and safety.

Help change the policies that keep fracking secret. Donate now.

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Ebola could kill more than 20,000 people


UNICEF

U.S. Fund for UNICEF

Every day, UNICEF provides water, nutrition, health care, and education to children living in poverty or caught up in conflict or disaster.

UNICEF

You can save children and their families from the Ebola outbreak with emergency medical supplies.

Donate $25 today.