Mirror of Justice

A blog dedicated to the development of Catholic legal theory.
Affiliated with the Program on Church, State & Society at Notre Dame Law School.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Steve Smith on "The End of Endorsement"

Steve Smith asks, over at the new Law, Religion, Ethics blog, whether we are seeing, in the Ninth Circuit's decisions rejecting First Amendment challenges to the Pledge and to the National Motto, the "end" of the Court's (well, really, Justice O'Connor's) "endorsement test."  (I note, by the way, that among the virtues of Law, Religion, Ethics is that it has resulted in more things to read by Prof. Smith.)  He writes:

I wonder whether this decision is a manifestation of the end of the “no endorsement” doctrine– a doctrine that originated in the mid-80s and that, while attractive on one level, is just so manifestly incongruent with so much in the American political tradition (including much that is revered, such as Jefferson’s Virginia Bill for Religious Freedom, the Declaration of Independence, Lincoln’s magnificent Second Inaugural Address, and expressions of probably every President from Washington to Obama) that it just couldn’t be consistently adhered to.  Pretending to adhere to it often has led merely to rationalizations that are palpably implausible (such as Justice O’Connor’s explanation at an earlier point in this case of how “under God” really doesn’t send a message endorsing religion).  Maybe it’s time for courts to acknowledge that the “no endorsement” experiment, though well intentioned, just hasn’t worked out, and it should be abandoned.  We can hope– I can, anyway– that yesterday’s decision is a step in that direction.

My own view, for what it's worth -- borrowing here language that Michael Perry has used -- is that the reason why it is (or, at least, should be) constitutionally permissible to include the words "under God" in the Pledge is not because the Pledge (with these words included) does not involve any "religious" affirmations or claims, and is not because the government may be deemed to stand at a sufficiently ironic or neutral distance from such affirmations or claims, but is because whatever religious affirmations or claims the Pledge (with these words included) involves are ones that our Constitution permits the government -- that is, the political community -- to "endorse."

School-choice and abortion subsidies: A response to Bob Hockett

As Bob Hockett carefully explains, it is -- in the Court's view, anyway -- relevant to the question whether school-choice programs "establish" religion whether or not "public" funds disbursed through such programs reach religious schools directly, or through the mechanism of an "intervening cause."  He then asks:

Can we not also view health insurance as a basic resource, like education, which we think ought to be more or less equally spread (as it is in literally every one of our peer nations)?  And can we not view health insurance reform legislation as fostering or 'endorsing' no more and no less than that, even if it happens that some beneficiaries procure abortions more readily than they could before now that they're comparatively less impoverished?  (And do please remember here that being less impoverished could also result in one's being *less* likely to seek an abortion.)  For vouchers, after all, could have been opposed by anti-Establishmentarians on the same ground -- as rendering parochial educations more widely available, and indeed chosen, via financial measures taken by the state. 

Ought we, then, view the decisions of health insurance beneficiaries as any less decisively intervening -- and hence severing of any 'endorsement' link -- between state support and individual decision-making as we view the decisions of voucher-wielding seekers of parochial education?  I for my part cannot at present see a difference.  But it could be that I've not yet sharpened my gaze adequately, and so I solicit assistance.

Let's put aside the important question whether "health insurance" is the best, or even a defensible, way to deliver quality health care efficiently to all in an efficient way.  (If you have not read David Goldhill's Atlantic essay, "How American Health Care Killed My Father," you should.)  Here are a few quick thoughts in response to Bob's question:

Now, at one level, I'd say that Bob is right, and that there is a similarity between the operations of the intervening causes in the two contexts.  That said, there are two (to me) relevant differences:  First, that which the government is funding indirectly in the school-choice context -- i.e., "quality education in a parochial-school context" -- is clearly a good and worthy thing.  (That the Court has concluded that the Constitution limits the ability of governments to fund this good and worthy thing directly does not mean -- except to the most partisan opponents of Catholic schools -- that the "thing" being funding is not, from the government's perspective, a good and worthy thing.)  That is, both the general purpose of a school-choice program (education) and the indirectly subsidized item under consideration (education in a parochial school) are good things.  Health-care services are a good thing, but abortion -- on the merits -- is not.

Second, and relatedly, there is no reason we (that is, assuming we are not anti-parochial-school partisans) should mind if a not-intended-but-possibly-forseen result of a general-school-funding program is that more children are educated in (qualifying) parochial schools.  The "good thing" that we are paying for (better education for more kids), we are still getting, and the "side effect" (that it happens in parochial schools) is not a bad thing.  But, we should mind if it turns out that a proposed health-insurance program results in more abortions.  That anti-abortion taxpayers or legislators who support the program in spite of this possibility are not (I assume) morally culpable for the increase in abortions does not change the fact (does it?) that the increase is a bad thing. (Now, it might be objected, "but, from the Establishment Clause perspective, public funding of education in religious schools is also a 'bad thing.'"  I'd say, "no, it was the government's support that was objectionable, not the thing, in itself, being supported.") 

I've said several times here at MOJ that, for me, the concern is not whether taxpayers, legislators, or the government are somehow culpable for any abortions that are indirectly subsidized through a health-insurance program.  My concern is that we, as a political community, (i) consciously take steps that result in fewer, not more abortions; (ii) do nothing that entrenches or endorses the idea that (elective) abortion -- i.e., the destruction of an unborn child -- is "health care"; and (iii) do nothing that further entrenches a legal / constitutional regime that requires (and not merely permits) the exclusion of one class of vulnerable persons from the law's otherwise generally available protections from lethal violence. 

Thoughts?  Bob?  (Comments are open.  Be charitable and constructive.)

Thomas Farr and the complexities of religious freedom

Thanks to Michael P. for the link to the (always interesting) "Immanent Frame."  While it is always possible -- indeed, it is usually likely -- that "issues are even more complicated and contested than [I] realize," I am confident that Thomas Farr (to whose commentary I linked this morning) appreciates fully all the relevant ins-and-outs.  Here is Mr. Farr's biography: 

Thomas F. Farr, a former American diplomat, is Visiting Associate Professor of Religion and World Affairs, and Senior Fellow at the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs. During his career in the Foreign Service, Dr. Farr specialized in strategic military policy, political affairs and religious freedom. During the Cold War he helped develop U.S. strategic nuclear policy, and was part of the U.S. negotiating team in the U.S.-Soviet arms control talks in Geneva. In the 1990s he served in Bonn, negotiated the value of U.S. military bases being returned to Germany, and focused on Greek-Turkish-Cyprus relations. During the last four years of his career Farr served as the first director of the State Department's office of international religious freedom. In that capacity he traveled worldwide to engage governments and religious communities on the subject of religious freedom. Dr. Farr has taught history at the U.S. Military Academy and international relations at the U.S. Air Force Academy. He has written widely on America's international religious freedom policy and U.S. national security, as well as on the development of the Catholic doctrine of religious liberty.
 
Here is a link to the Amazon page where one can purchase Mr. Farr's Oxford University Press book, "World of Faith and Freedom:  Why International Religious Liberty Is Vital to American National Security."

Catholic bishops speaking out: An answer to Michael's question

Michael P. asks "which Catholic bishops have spoken out" -- as Bishop Tutu did in his March 12 Washington Post op-ed -- against proposed legislation in Uganda "that would make homosexuality punishable by life imprisonment."  I have not been following the issue closely, but I did a quick Google-search and came up with this item, dated two months ago:  "Ugandan Catholic Bishops Object to Punitive Emphasis in Controversial Anti-homosexuality Bill."  And, our own Robby George -- along with several other prominent "conservative" Christians -- denounced the proposed legislation three months ago, at about the same time the Holy See's representative at the United Nations did so.

Bishop Tutu Speaks Out

Can anyone tell me what Roman Catholic bishops have spoken out?

Washington Post, 3/12/10

In Africa, a step backward on human rights

By Desmond Tutu

Hate has no place in the house of God. No one should be excluded from our love, our compassion or our concern because of race or gender, faith or ethnicity -- or because of their sexual orientation. Nor should anyone be excluded from health care on any of these grounds. In my country of South Africa, we struggled for years against the evil system of apartheid that divided human beings, children of the same God, by racial classification and then denied many of them fundamental human rights. We knew this was wrong. Thankfully, the world supported us in our struggle for freedom and dignity.

It is time to stand up against another wrong.

Gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered people are part of so many families. They are part of the human family. They are part of God's family. And of course they are part of the African family. But a wave of hate is spreading across my beloved continent. People are again being denied their fundamental rights and freedoms. Men have been falsely charged and imprisoned in Senegal, and health services for these men and their community have suffered. In Malawi, men have been jailed and humiliated for expressing their partnerships with other men. Just this month, mobs in Mtwapa Township, Kenya, attacked men they suspected of being gay. Kenyan religious leaders, I am ashamed to say, threatened an HIV clinic there for providing counseling services to all members of that community, because the clerics wanted gay men excluded.

Uganda's parliament is debating legislation that would make homosexuality punishable by life imprisonment, and more discriminatory legislation has been debated in Rwanda and Burundi.

These are terrible backward steps for human rights in Africa.

Our lesbian and gay brothers and sisters across Africa are living in fear.

And they are living in hiding -- away from care, away from the protection the state should offer to every citizen and away from health care in the AIDS era, when all of us, especially Africans, need access to essential HIV services. That this pandering to intolerance is being done by politicians looking for scapegoats for their failures is not surprising. But it is a great wrong. An even larger offense is that it is being done in the name of God. Show me where Christ said "Love thy fellow man, except for the gay ones." Gay people, too, are made in my God's image. I would never worship a homophobic God.

"But they are sinners," I can hear the preachers and politicians say. "They are choosing a life of sin for which they must be punished." My scientist and medical friends have shared with me a reality that so many gay people have confirmed, I now know it in my heart to be true. No one chooses to be gay. Sexual orientation, like skin color, is another feature of our diversity as a human family. Isn't it amazing that we are all made in God's image, and yet there is so much diversity among his people? Does God love his dark- or his light-skinned children less? The brave more than the timid? And does any of us know the mind of God so well that we can decide for him who is included, and who is excluded, from the circle of his love?

The wave of hate must stop. Politicians who profit from exploiting this hate, from fanning it, must not be tempted by this easy way to profit from fear and misunderstanding. And my fellow clerics, of all faiths, must stand up for the principles of universal dignity and fellowship. Exclusion is never the way forward on our shared paths to freedom and justice.

The writer is archbishop emeritus of Cape Town, South Africa. He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984.


For Rick Garnett, Thomas Farr, and anyone else interested

The underlying issues are even more complicated and contested than Rick and Farr may realize.  They are certainly more complicated and contested than *I* realized.  Take a look here (from The Immanent Frame).

For Rob Vischer, Steve Smith, and anyone else interested

From The Immanent Frame.

‘Religious nones’ and the politics of American spirituality

Historians, sociologists, and political scientists contribute to an ongoing debate over the degree and significance of the growth of America’s “no religion population.” Featuring posts from Michael Hout and Claude S. Fischer, Christopher McKnight Nichols, Laura R. Olson, Paul Lichterman, and Darren Sherkat.

Read ‘Religious nones’

Related:

Vouchers, Abortion-Affecting Legislation, and 'Intervening Causes'

Hello Again, All,

A quick legal-theoretic question for anyone here who might be willing to indulge me.  I pose it with no intent to be 'provocative' or anything like that.  I'm genuinely trying to get clear on the matter and wonder whether I've managed.

Here's the story:  I've been thinking again (with characteristic opacity) about how an abortion-opposing legislator ought to think about pending health insurance reform legislation that might or might not affect the number of abortions procured in the nation.  In particular, I am interested in how this legislator ought to regard the intervening choices of individual beneficiaries of health insurance reform.  In this connection, it seems to me that an analogous question arises in connection with 'school voucher' programs.  Hence I find myself wondering whether it's sound to resolve my question vis a vis health insurance reform in the same manner I used to do in earlier times vis a vis Establishment-implicating education finance. 

Here's a bit more context:  

I'll posit for present purposes a legislator who is inclined to vote for health insurance reform legislation, with the the following set of intentions: first, rendering insurance more widely available, at less expensive rates, to some tens of millions of fellow citizens; relatedly second, repealing the bizarre antitrust exemptions afforded to insurers by McCarran-Ferguson; and finally third, prohibiting certain unjust practices such as denials of coverage for preexisting conditions that insureds did not bring on themselves. 

Let us also assume for present purposes that this legislator opposes the practice of abortion, perhaps even the legality of abortion.  Finally, let us suppose that this legislator is wondering how to regard the possibility that the legislation she is inclining to vote for might bear some effect on the number of abortions that are procured after its passage.  The legislation might, on the one hand, lessen that number, perhaps by rendering (abortion-excluding) 'family planning' and child-rearing more affordable, or via some other set of mediating effects.  The legislation might, on the other hand, raise the number, perhaps by rendering all procedures provided by people with medical degrees, including abortions, more affordable. 

We'll assume for the moment that the question which of these families of unintended collateral effects -- those that might lessen the number of abortions, and those that might increase that number -- is apt to dominate remains fraught with uncertainty.  If that is the case, such that our legislator is effectively at step two of a doctrine of double effect sort of analysis and is accordingly now wondering about which way 'proportionality' cuts, might the concept of 'intervening cause' or 'intervening choice' be of legitimate assistance to her in deciding which way to vote?  That is my question.  My intuitive reaction is to think that the answer is yes, but I admit I'm unsure.

About 12 years ago, while I was in the spring term of my second year of law school, I sat a wonderful seminar course on the Religion Clauses of the First Amendment.  As in many seminars, so in this one the course grade rode upon class discussion and a substantial research paper.  I elected to write on the constitutionality of education and related social serice 'voucher' programs, largely because it seemed to me that the arguments I'd read against them were so silly.  (I distinguish these from policy arguments against many such programs, many though not all of which struck me as far more worthy of being taken seriously than the constitutional ones.)  The position I ultimately settled on at that point found expression in a cute little slogan that I coined and took foolish pleasure in:  Avoiding impermissible Establishment, I decided, was 'simply a matter of accounting.' 

What I meant by that is that public provision of education and other social services is designed to make certain basic resources available to all irrespective of luck in the birth lottery.  (Why should your birth to wealthy parents entitle you to much better education and life prospects than one of you sisters or brothers or fellow citizens born in different circumstances?)  In essence, all these public goods and the programs that supplied them were meant to effect redistribution in respect of certain resources -- including education -- that we have plausibly decided justice to require be made widely available to all.  But it would be absurd, I went on, to demand as the price of affording such justice an unjust requirement that people abandon such equally fundamental values (as fundamental as distributive justice) as their religious and related cultural identities.  And it would be just as absurd to pretend that such basic resources as education and other forms of 'social service' could be altogether disentangled from values so fundamental as those that find expression in the religious faiths of and services provided or received by providers and beneficiaries. 

In that light, I concluded, voucher programs constituted a brilliantly innovative and altogether legitimate means of having things both ways -- egalitarian distributions of certain basic resources without dilution of the faith element that often suffuses such resources themselves (e.g., education) and the provision thereof (e.g., 'social sevcices' provided by faith groups). 

But what about O'Connor style 'endorsement?,' some of my classmates objected.  If vouchers were used to pay tuition at parochial schools, didn't this amount to public endorsement of the religious missions of those schools?  'Not at all,' I would reply, at least so long as the denominational composition of voucher-use more or less tracked the denominational composition of the population of the users.  (This was where the 'accounting' quip came in.)  For there was no reason at all to view the provision of vouchers that are generally usable everywhere as reflective of state sanction of any particular religious tradition, or indeed even of 'religion' as distinguished from 'areligion' at all. 

The only 'endorsing' being done here, it seemed to me, was being done by the voucher users themselves via their unconstrained choices.  Choice of a parochial school by a voucher user was 'endorsement' of that school by the user.  (And of course might have been endorsement of the effective teaching or something else rather than the Catechism; but this indeterminacy of the meaning of the user's choice only strengthens the argument).  It was in no way reflective of any attitude at all on the part of 'the state' toward the tradition within which the school operated.  It reflected nothing more in the way of state endorsement than state endorsement of a more or less egalitarian distribution of that basic resource known as 'education.'

So to reiterate and further elaborate my prompting question:  Can we not also view health insurance as a basic resource, like education, which we think ought to be more or less equally spread (as it is in literally every one of our peer nations)?  And can we not view health insurance reform legislation as fostering or 'endorsing' no more and no less than that, even if it happens that some beneficiaries procure abortions more readily than they could before now that they're comparatively less impoverished?  (And do please remember here that being less impoverished could also result in one's being *less* likely to seek an abortion.)  For vouchers, after all, could have been opposed by anti-Establishmentarians on the same ground -- as rendering parochial educations more widely available, and indeed chosen, via financial measures taken by the state. 

Ought we, then, view the decisions of health insurance beneficiaries as any less decisively intervening -- and hence severing of any 'endorsement' link -- between state support and individual decision-making as we view the decisions of voucher-wielding seekers of parochial education?  I for my part cannot at present see a difference.  But it could be that I've not yet sharpened my gaze adequately, and so I solicit assistance.

What think you?

All best and thanks,

Bob

Patrick O'Donnell on 'Spirituality, Religion, and Philosophy'

Hello All,

Apropos Rick's and my posts yesterday touching on the 'spiritual, not religious,' disclaimer, as well as on  Catholic Marxism and what I called 'spiritual materialism,' I'd like to commend to MoJ readers the first two installments of a projected series of posts on 'Spirituality, Religion, and Philosophy' over at ReligiousLeftLaw.  (The most recent is here -- http://www.religiousleftlaw.com/2010/03/spirituality-religion-and-philosophy-part-ii.html -- and there you can link to the first one as well.)  These posts, like seemingly all that Patrick writes, are just wonderfully thoughtful, breathtakingly erudite, and downright inspiring. 

On a related point, some MoJ readers might find this latest installment on happenings at Focus on the Family to be of some interest: http://tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com/2010/03/dobson_and_focus_on_the_family_less_than_amicable.php?ref=fpa .  It looks as though the organization is making a serious attempt to 'soften' its tone a bit, and as a former listener to many of its programs (as discussed earlier this year in another post), I for my part find this heartening.

All best,

Bob 

Farr: Is Obama "sidelining" religious freedom?

My friend (and international-religious-freedom expert) Tom Farr has joined the "On Faith" blogging crowd at The Washington Post.  He asks, here, whether Pres.Obama is "sidelining" religious freedom:

President Obama has on several occasions articulated his commitment to international religious freedom. Unfortunately, his State Department appears to be on a course that will seriously downgrade the nation's international religious freedom policy. . . .

Other new Obama foreign policy initiatives, from outreach to Muslim communities to the normalization of gay rights in international law, are getting serious policy attention and resources. But religious freedom -- which enjoys broad support among the American people and can contribute both to justice and national security -- is, in effect, being sidelined.

How, and why, is this happening? . . .

Read the whole thing!