Friday, November 1, 2013
A "new approach" to adoption in Texas
Exploitation and the Culture of Impunity
High on my list of contemporary heroes are Donna Hughes, a professor of women's and gender studies at the University of Rhode Island, and lawyer Melanie Shapiro. These two fearless and determined women have done more than anyone I know to fight the unspeakable evil of human trafficking. They don't just talk, they act. And that means taking on the powerful and well-funded sex industry, and the "respectable" people wh directly and indirectly profit from it. Sometimes it has also meant taking on the National Organization for Women and the ACLU, as Donna and Melanie did in the fight against the legalization of prostitution in Rhode Island. (These women know what the actual consequences of legalization would be for women trafficked in from southeast and central Asia and eastern Europe and for American teenage runaways.) Today they have an op ed in the Providence Journal. It directly concerns recent incidents in a "gentleman's club" (a minomer if ever I saw one) in Rhode Island and a prosecution following from those incidents, but its message against the "culture of impunity" in which exploitation thrives is one that is relevant across the country.
The officials of Rhode Island need to end the culture of impunity for the big pimps, the pimps that operate inside the state, the pimps who call themselves businessmen and have well-connected lawyers and associates. The Providence Police charged that Tapalian was “permitting prostitution” in his Cheaters Club. To Police Commissioner Steven Paré’s credit, he wanted the licensing board to shut down the club. Instead, Tapalian got a penalty that is little more than a cost of doing business. Paré said he will appeal the decision as well.
The Department of Business Regulation should deny Tapalian’s appeal and the Providence Board of Licenses should revisit its decision. The City of Providence should revise its ordinance to prohibit private booths in strip clubs. These can be the first steps to ending the culture of impunity for sex trafficking in Rhode Island.
Read the entire piece here: http://www.providencejournal.com/opinion/commentary/20131101-donna-m.-hughes-and-melanie-shapiro-impunity-for-sex-trafficking-in-r.i..ece
Jennifer Lahl on the dark side of the "assisted reproduction" industry
Today at the indispensable site Public Discourse, Jennifer Lahl casts a bright light on features of "assisted reproduction" that the industry has shoved into the darkness:
We find ourselves in a world in which a global multi-billion-dollar per year fertility industry feeds reproductive tourism. Women old enough to be grandmothers become first-time mothers, and litter births like the Octumom's . . . are distressingly common. Pre-implantation genetic screening, which is in reality a "search and destroy" mission, has become the modern face of eugenics. Grandmothers are carrying their daughters' babies (their own grandchildren) to term. Doctors are now creating three-parent embryos using DNA from two women and one man. Single-by choice mothers and fathers, same-sex parents, and parenting partnerships between non-romantically involved couples have become "The New Normal."
The entire essay is available here: http://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2013/11/11111/
Jennifer Lahl is producer of the the important documentary film Eggsploitation. Her new documentary film on the exploitation of poor women for the reproductive purposes of the affluent, Breeders: A Subclass of Women? will be released soon.
Thursday, October 31, 2013
Now This is Getting Ridiculous: NSA Spying on the Pope
A few months ago (here), I suggested that we should be troubled by the growth of the "Surveillance State" in the United States as an affront to human dignity, which demand appropriate respect for privacy and confidentiality. As the Catholic Catechism says, even beyond the special protection of professional secrets, “private information prejudicial to another is not to be divulged without a grave and proportionate reason.”
Now we learn (here) that even Pope Francis is apparently a suspect in the eyes of the National Security Agency, which intercepted telephone calls from his villa during the Vatican Conclave at which he was elected pontiff. To the government's assurances that it abides by strict constraints in conducting its surveillance and that abuses are rare, wiretapping bishops and cardinals serves as a contradicting response.
More on Balancing the Demands of Work and Family
I've recently come across two new helpful resources for those recurring conversations with students and friends about the holy grail of 'balance' between professional and private demands. Dr. Denise Hunnell's essay on Truth and Charity Forum, an online publication of Human Life International, Distinguishing Vocations from Occupations, suggests that we keep clear the distinction between the 'vocations' (as priest, consecrated religious, parent, spouse, or single person) within which we live out our 'professions' (as taeacher, doctor, lawyer). She concedes "There is no doubt that the way we conduct our occupations will impact our vocations. Our challenge is to keep our occupations in perspective so that they never overshadow our vocations."
Dr. Hunnell offers this as a "tweak" to the approach I took in my book chapter, Dueling Vocations, where I offer some suggestions from Catholic teachings on navigating the tensions between what I called our public vocations ("our responsibilities to live and witness as Christians in and to the various social institutions to which we belong--the Church, our local communities, our places of employment, our country, and our world") and our private vocations ("our calling to live according to a Christian understanding of the web of relationships into which we are all personally imbedded"). Dr. Hunnell objects to the fact that I seem to give the two equal weight in my balancing, which is true. My argument is that both vocations should be viewed as responses to God's call, and that striving to honestly responding to that call rather than our own ambitions, insecurities, preferences, or weaknesses ought to help us make good decisions when conflicts arise.
Dr. Hunnell's essay also discusses another recent essay which I found very intriguing: No Happy Harmony (First Things, Oct. 2013), by Elizabeth Corey, associate professor of political science in the Honors College at Baylor University. Corey argues that something important is missing from the whole work/life balance debate of Anne-Marie Slaughter, Sheryl Sandberg, et al. It's this: "Work and family evoke from us two distinct modes of being and of relation to others. The conflicts between these modes cannot, if we are honest with ourselves, be wished away or ignored." Drawing on Aristotle & Josef Pieper, Corey points out that professional excellence demands an Aristotlean dedication to the pursuit of "moral and intellectual perfection." In contrast, motherhood demands Peiper's notion of leisure: "the condition of attention and activity that isn't striving." She concludes: " these two endeavors require different orientations of the self, and we simply cannot approach marriage and family in the spirit of achievement at all. If we try to do so, we will find ourselves frustrated and conflicted. For well-behaved or smart children are not markers of our success; children are ends in themselves, to be loved and cared for as individuals. They need from us something other than our talents; they need us, full stop." She argues that attempts to offer solutions to these sorts of conflict are illusory, simply "evasions." I suppose I'm a bit more positive than she is about how we can attempt to make peace with those tensions, but her analysis of the situation stikes me as insightful and helpful.
Law and the Bible
Movsesian on Dworkin's "Religion Without God"
My colleague, Mark Movsesian, has a short summary and discussion of the late Ronald Dworkin's posthumously published book, Religion Without God. I recently received the book and am about half way through (it's quite short). It also seems to me that Dworkin had made these sorts of claims about the superfluousness of God several times before. I recall arguments in Life's Dominion, for example, about how believing in the imago Dei is totally unnecessary to affirm the inherent human dignity of all people, because it should be obvious that we all believe in the objective moral fact that all human beings are "creative masterpieces" of human and natural creation. I'm not sure who actually believes that sort of aesthetic claim, or how Dworkin was so certain that everybody does. Even if I believed it, it seems to me that some people are much more masterpieces than others.
I guess the new stuff in the book is the legal claim in the second half that religion as a category deserves no constitutional protection.
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
A Counter-Letter on Same-Sex Marriage and Religious Liberty
MOJ readers are of course familiar with the letters and testimony that our two groups of religious-liberty scholars (including MOJers Garnett, Perry, and Berg) have submitted to legislators in various states, arguing for strong religious-liberty protections as the states vote on recognizing same-sex marriage. Now another group of scholars (Dale Carpenter, Andrew Koppelman, Ira Lupu, William Marshall, and Douglas Nejaime) have submitted a letter to Illinois legislators arguing that the protections we've sought there are not necessary. (The link is to Dale Carpenter's posting of their letter, over at the Volokh Conspiracy; as usual at the VC, there's plenty of action in the comments.)
The counter-letter deserves a considered reply, which you can expect sometime soon. Doubtless we'll have some back and forth in the coming weeks.
On the Insulting Claim That Religious Displays Are Insulting
Hurt feelings are unreliable bases for constitutional law. People are insulted by all sorts of things,
their feelings of insult can change at breathtaking speed, and it is difficult to explain what ought to count as a constitutionally cognizable insult, and what ought not to, and why. And there is no area of constitutional law that is more dependent on judicial investigation and perception of insult or hurt feelings than the Establishment Clause--particularly the standard used to evaluate the constitutionality of religious displays by the government. Readers of this blog are probably familiar with the endorsement test, which demands that judges inquire after the degree to which a display might make someone feel like an outsider, or not fully part of the political community. That is a standard that depends on both judicial perception of insult and comparative valuations of insult (not all insults count).
My aim in this post is not to talk about that category of hurt feeling or insult, but about a related but less prominent argument about insults that one sometimes hears in connection with state-sponsored religious displays. It is the argument that for a religious person, when the government displays a religious symbol, it thereby robs or despoils the symbol of its sacredness. And when government then describes the nature and value of the symbol in non-religious terms (in cultural terms, for example, or in historical terms, or in secular terms), that constitutes an insult to religious people. So, for example, the constitutional category of "ceremonial deism" that is used to describe the phrase "In God We Trust" on money, or the phrase "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance, is said to be deeply offensive to religious believers. Similarly, the description of the crucifix by Italian judges in the Lautsi v. Italy litigation as a symbol of national historical importance is said to cause hurt feelings among Catholics. By describing (or perhaps defining) a symbol in cultural or historical terms, the government thereby appropriates and degrades the symbol in the eyes of religious believers--and it's "their" symbol, after all--draining it of religious content. One can see strong traces of the claim and the sense of indignation and insult in Justice Thomas's concurring opinion in Van Orden v. Perry: "Telling either nonbelievers or believers that the words 'under God' have no meaning contradicts what they know to be true. Moreover, repetition does not deprive religious words or symbols of their traditional meaning. Words like 'God' are not vulgarities for which the shock value diminishes with each successive utterance." This argument from insult certainly is understandable and it resonates with many people, including some of my friends.
But not with me, I'm afraid. If anything, I find the argument itself insulting. The argument assumes that religious people are so thick-headed, or so culturally illiterate, or so confused about the nature of their faith and its symbols' meanings, or so hyper-attentive to the government's activities, or so insular, parochial, and unsophisticated, that they cannot understand the difference among (a) a cross that is displayed in a church; (b) a cross that is displayed at a cemetery; and (c) a cross that is displayed as a Halloween joke. Who doesn't understand those differences, and the differences in meaning that they convey? Who is confused? And is not the imputation of confusion, hurt feelings, and cultural simple-mindedness itself offensive? Those poor hayseed religious believers, bearing the psychological cross of their egg-shell sensitivities about their symbols! To argue that any act of the state--least of all its display of a cross at a war memorial or some statement about God on money or in a secular national pledge--could adulterate what a religious symbol like the cross means to Christians is to make a very unflattering claim about the strength with which those Christians believe, about the quality of their intellectual awareness and cultural acumen, and about just how little it takes to shake them up and distress them.
The argument also assumes that a government's decisions about a symbol really command, and ought to command, the attention of the religious. But what difference should it make that government "degrades" a symbol like the cross? Does the government have the power to degrade the Christian meaning of the cross? Do we look to the government to define the Christian meaning of the cross? That meaning is not the government's to define, or to degrade! To fret about state-sponsored religious degradation is implicitly to acknowledge the state's authority in an area where it has none. That the government (or anyone else, for that matter) may use a symbol for secular purposes of its own should do nothing to trivialize the Christian meaning, or to destabilize religious commitment or religious understanding, unless the suggestion is that the religious commitment runs no deeper than attachment to the symbol's secular meanings. Brand dilution may work for trademark law, where all symbols operate and compete at the level of the profane market, but it has little place here.
But as I say, it is difficult to tell someone not to feel hurt or insulted. I can certainly understand the sense of insult at a perceived usurpation of a religious symbol, but it is not a feeling I share at all when the Supreme Court trots out such coarse euphemisms as "ceremonial deism" to justify and explain the sorts of secular uses of religious symbols and religious language that have been going on at least as far back as the late Roman empire. For myself, I am more offended by what the arguments from insult imply about religious believers' savvy and understanding of the world, as well as of their own beliefs.
All of that, I suppose, is to return to the beginning, and to repeat my view that feelings of insult and offense are unsound grounds for constitutional law.
[Image: Delaroche's "Charles I Insulted by Cromwell's Soldiers"]
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Religious Liberty Arguments in Hawaii Same-Sex Marriage Debate
As in previous states (see archive here), our two groups of religious liberty scholars have submitted letters to legislators in Hawaii, where same-sex marriage is under consideration in a special session this week, arguing for meaningful religious-liberty protections that are absent from the current bills.
Here are the longer-form letter memo and testimony, from scholars who hold differing views on whether to recognize same-sex marriage (the testimony is from an expanded group adding Robert Destro, Marie Failinger, and Michael McConnell). And here are the letters and testimony from another group of scholars who all support same-sex marriage but also support strong religious accommodations.