Poor Mott. He stil suffers under the illusion that at least some who govern us have good intentions.
Just noticed you sig, Rune.......excellent !
Poor Mott. He stil suffers under the illusion that at least some who govern us have good intentions.
Permitting corporations and business to enforce their religious views on their employees and establishing a precedent for Corporations and business to hide from regulation by claiming it violates their religious freedom.
These are not points that are being challenged and it has nothing really to do with the case.
I disagree. I don't think a corporation has any opinions at all. Its shareholders, directors and officers certainly do, and those contituencies may come to a consensus opinion about things and express that opinion through the corporate entity. But I don't view that as an opinion independent of the opinions of the consituencies represented by the corporation.
Hobby Lobby, an Oklahoma based company filed suit in federal court against the provision of the Affordable Care Act that requires large employers to provide insurance which includes contraception. The 10th circuit court ruled in favor of the Government but the appealate court for the 10th circuit court ruled that the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision in 2010 , which upheld a free-speech right for corporations, conferred a right to religious expression on businesses.
Now...not to get hung up on the contraception issue but this is another example of the unintended consequences of the Citizens United Decision.
I mean based on this decision by the appealate court and using Citizens United as precedent a corporation or business can disregard any federal law or regulation that violates their corporation or businesses religious beliefs.
Food for though, huh?
http://news.yahoo.com/democratic-se...hobby-lobby-birth-control-case-025129006.html
I disagree. I don't think a corporation has any opinions at all. Its shareholders, directors and officers certainly do, and those contituencies may come to a consensus opinion about things and express that opinion through the corporate entity. But I don't view that as an opinion independent of the opinions of the consituencies represented by the corporation.
These are not points that are being challenged and it has nothing really to do with the case.
No, it is not independent of the constituent members. That is true of any church or group whether incorporated or not.
The fact is that a corporation may engage in religious actions and those incorporated for expressly religious purposes should have greater protections. Hobby Lobby sells arts and crafts, though, and I don't see why their religious views should entitle to them to exemption from the law.
So you think the court deciding that the company does not have to provide a certain benefit has nothing to do with the corporation choosing what benefits to offer?
No, it is not independent of the constituent members. That is true of any church or group whether incorporated or not.
The fact is that a corporation may engage in religious actions and those incorporated for expressly religious purposes should have greater protections. Hobby Lobby sells arts and crafts, though, and I don't see why their religious views should entitle to them to exemption from the law.
Engaging in religious activities is different from having religious opinions/view/beliefs that are entitled to First Amendment protection.
Engaging in religious activities is different from having religious opinions/view/beliefs that are entitled to First Amendment protection.
The first amendment protects more than just opinions/views/beliefs.
Religious opinions/views and beliefs is EXACTLY what we are entitled to under First Amendment protection. The gov. shall no law, etc. etc.....
Its a privately held corporation.....just like the bakers that refused to bake a cake for a homo wedding.....yet one side wins the other doesn't.
and now Obama has MANDATED what business may or may not offer in their insurance to employees.....and this is constitutional ?....it gets more and more
convoluted every day....in the end, it just government over stepping their authority to force an agenda on the citizens and against our constitutional freedoms....
Hobby Lobby, an Oklahoma based company filed suit in federal court against the provision of the Affordable Care Act that requires large employers to provide insurance which includes contraception. The 10th circuit court ruled in favor of the Government but the appealate court for the 10th circuit court ruled that the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision in 2010 , which upheld a free-speech right for corporations, conferred a right to religious expression on businesses.
Now...not to get hung up on the contraception issue but this is another example of the unintended consequences of the Citizens United Decision.
I mean based on this decision by the appealate court and using Citizens United as precedent a corporation or business can disregard any federal law or regulation that violates their corporation or businesses religious beliefs.
Food for though, huh?
http://news.yahoo.com/democratic-se...hobby-lobby-birth-control-case-025129006.html
The court is not simply deciding that a company does not have to provide a certain benefit. The law says they do. One could possibly challenge whether Congress has such authority but it is pretty much settled law that they do under the interstate commerce clause and the law is not being challenged on those grounds. Your argument has nothing to with the particulars of this case.
I don't disagree. I'm simply of the opinion that corporations, as fictitious entities, cannot hold religious views/beliefs/opinions.
Fictitious? So corporations don't exist in your reality?
I understand that. My point is that corporations can engage in religious activities that are entitled to First Amendment protection, but they do not hold religious beliefs/views/opinions that are entitled to the same protection.
He has a job?Not a peep from Dung... I wonder why