I am a bigot. I am
sure I am. I must suffer from prejudice
when it comes to religious affiliation or lack thereof, or race, or gender, or
sexual preference, or handicapping condition, or ethnicity, or height, or
weight, etc. I cannot image any human
who is totally free of prejudice. That
is not what we do. As humans we look for
differences, and we look to find folks who look like us, think like us, believe
like us, and act like us. Multiple birds
with multiple feathers all seeking to nest with other birds who possess
feathers like our own. If I prefer a
certain feather over some other feather then I must have prejudicial feelings
about all those who do not share my favorite feather’s attributes. Simply said, but very difficult to amend.
I am aware of a few of my prejudicial feelings based on my
reaction to folks. When I see someone
with purple hair I do a double-take.
When I see someone covered in tattoos I do a double take. When I see someone with jewelry displayed
from a variety of holes punched in their skin I do a double take. When I see someone driving slowly in the left
lane I do a double take. When I see an
obese person I do a double take. All
those double takes result from my brain identifying differences between my sense
of standards for humans and the human I see before me. I discriminate. I recognize the differences. And I tend to judge people based on superficial
characteristics. I hate that I do, but I
do.
So, if I am a bigot with tendencies to discriminate should
my discriminatory behavior be protected by law under the guise that I should
have the right to prejudge people? For
me, the answer is not just “no,” it is hell no.
It is very clear that we do not want the government to tell us what to
think and not think, what to believe and not believe. Our inner belief system must absolutely be protected
by law. But acting on those beliefs is
an entirely different question. If I
believe young children should handle poisonous snakes I have the right to
believe that. I do not have the right to
ask young children to handle poisonous snakes.
If I believe the US government should be overthrown and a new government
be established be it fascist or communist, I have the absolute right to believe
such a thing, but the day I take up arms against our government I have crossed
over from belief to action on the belief.
Such action will be stopped.
Does that answer change if I claim that the deity I worship
discriminates and I am only following what my deity says? You have got to be kidding me. As if we need one more example of how religious
beliefs are tearing the world apart. If
you believe that Black people are inferior to white people, women are inferior
to men, homosexuals are inferior to heterosexuals, Muslims are inferior to
Christians, and people who watch either reality TV or the food network are inferior
to everyone else then you have the right to believe all of that nonsense. What you do not have, should not have, is the
right to practice such narrow mindedness that results in other humans belittled
or denied because of your limited mental capacity.
And so I sit in wonder as North Carolina, Tennessee,
Mississippi, Indiana, Michigan and Texas have passed or are attempting to pass “religious
freedom” bills that protect groups who discriminate based on their religious
beliefs. Yes, this is the United
States. Land of the free, home of the
brave, as long as you are a person like me.
Discrimination is discrimination. If your god tells you to discriminate then I
believe you should seriously consider finding another god. If you do not want to provide services to
people who are different from you then you are a bigot practicing bigotry. Practicing bigots should never be protected
by the law. Not in this nation. Clearly in other parts of the world lives are
actually lost if one does not believe as the majority believes, but that should
never happen here. An effort to make it
OK to discriminate based on your religious beliefs does not increase the freedom
of humans in our nation, it dramatically reduces such freedom.
If we decide to allow private enterprise to discriminate in
the name of religious belief does not make such a decision morally right. It is a source of damnation for such beliefs
and their practices. Religious freedom
bills that pervert the notion of freedom of religion are the saddest oxymorons
I know.
Judge not.
Discriminate not.
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