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.

Monday, November 19, 2012

Notre Dame is #1

As Mark Massa, SJ notes in his book Catholics and American Culture: Fulton Sheen, Dorothy Day, and the Notre Dame Football Team (Crossroad, 1999), one of the formative experiences of American Catholic culture has been the improbable success of Notre Dame's football team, initially under the ingenious leadership of perhaps the greatest coach in the history of the game, the Norwegian Protestant-turned Catholic convert Knute Rockne. From 1924 to 1949, Notre Dame won seven national championships and bequeathed a sense of pride and identity to generations of immigrant Catholics.

But for almost 20 years, Notre Dame football has labored in mediocrity--flashes of promise under Bob Davie, Tyrone Willingham, and Charlie Weis, but all were fired, each after a series of poor seasons and ignominious defeats (losing to Navy in 2007 after winning 43 games in a row in the series, losses at home to Syracuse and UConn in 2008 and 2009, a series of bowl embarrassments). A year ago, most of us who are rabid Notre Dame fans were prepared to face the fact that Notre Dame would never again compete at the elite level in college football and was consigned to being remembered in the display cases at the Hall of Fame--the geographical center of football had shifted from the upper Midwest to the South, and Notre Dame's academic standards, independent status, small size, and difficult schedule were slowly but surely pulling the program down.

Now, for the first time since 1993, Notre Dame is ranked the #1 team in college football. And perhaps there is a larger point here. As the Catholic Church in America faces the legacy of scandal and seeming collapse of institutional presence, there's hope that God somehow brings about dramatic changes of fortune, sometimes in mundane ways (like college football, maybe) and sometimes in ways that change the world. It may all come to a crashing end this Saturday in Los Angeles against USC or on January 7th in the BCS national championship game, but, for at least a week, we can rejoice at how quickly things can change and our hope affirmed.

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Court Grants Injunction to Tyndale in Challenge to HHS Mandate

A summary of the district court's decision granting an injunction to the plaintiff in Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. v. Sebelius is available here and the opinoin itself is available here.  The case is significant in a number of respects.

One salient feature is that Tyndale is one of the handful of for-profit entities to challenge the contraception/abortifacient/sterilization mandate.  The opinion also held that the entity had standing to challenge to the mandate on behalf of its owners and under the third-party standing doctrine.

The opinion is also significant in that the court declined to follow the decision in O'Brien v. HHS (available here) in part because Tyndale provided insurance to its employees directly through a self-insured plan whereas the plaintiff in O'Brien provided insurance to its employees through group health insurance policy separately administrered through an insurance company.  The Tyndale court also found that the O'Brien court's statement that RFRA "is not a means to force one's religious practices on others" was "not relevant to whether a plaintiff's religious exercise is substantially burdened, but rather applies to the issue of whether the government's interest is sufficiently compelling to justify the substantial burdening of plaintiff's religious exercise."  The government failed to show a compelling interest in any alleged third-party harm.

A third important feature of the opinion is that in assessing the government's alleged compelling interest in the mandate itself, the court did not simply defer to the government's broad interest in "promoting public health and ensuring that women have equal access to health care."  Instead the court insisted that the government must show "that the application of the contraceptive coverage mandate to the plaintiffs furthers those compelling interests."  That is, following the Supreme Court's opinion in Gonzales, v. O Centro Espirita Beneficente Uniao Do Vegetal, the court in Tyndale held that the analysis under RFRA must focus on "the particular claimant whose sincere exercise of religion is being substantially burdened."  The government, however, failed to provide "any proof that mandatory insurance coverage for the specific contraceptives to which the plaintiffs object -- Plan B, ella, and intrauterine devices -- furthers the government's compelling interests, or that granting the plaintiff's requested exemption would meaningfully impede the governement's interests." 

Obviously the opinion may be of help to some other for-profit entites challenging the mandate, especially those that are self-insured.  In this regard it should also be of assistance to some religious institutions that do not fit within the law's narrow religious exemption.  I wonder, however, whether the opinion's focus on the specific characteristics of Tyndale as a claimant and its objection to certain partiuclar drugs under the mandate may not be of help to Catholic institutions whose structures of ownership and employment practices are not as religiously pure as Tyndale's and who object to a broader array of drugs and procedures under the mandate.

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Teen Denied Confirmation and Communion for Opposing MN Amendment 1

Lennon Cihak, a 17-year-old from Minnesota, has reportedly been denied confirmation and communion for opposing Minnesota Amendment 1 on his Facebook page.  The unsuccessful amendment would have defined marriage in the Minnesota Constitution as between one man and one woman in the state.  According to the report below, Cihak's entire family has been denied communion.

http://now.msn.com/catholic-teen-denied-communion-for-pro-gay-marriage-facebook-post

Friday, November 16, 2012

Why Professor Gedicks Is Plainly Wrong

Michael Perry recently posted (here) Professor Fred Gedicks' response (here) to two posts on MOJ, one by Father Bob Araujo, S.J. (here) and the other by Rick Garnett (here).  Each of these posts offered a critique of Gedicks’ issue brief entitled With Religious Liberty for All: A Defense of the Affordable Care Act’s Contraception Coverage Mandate (here).

There are many things to criticize about Gedicks’ paper, some of which have been pointed out by other commentators.  For example:

(1)  As a rhetorical matter Gedicks repeatedly refers to the exercise of an employer’s right to religious liberty in not providing contraceptives as “interfere[ing] with the liberty of others” (p.1); “intruding upon the religious liberty of employees” (p. 5); that the employer is in fact “imposing” its beliefs on non-believers, adherents of other faiths, and those who interpret the requirements of the employer’s faith differently (id.).  Gedicks concludes that religious liberty “is not the right to impose one’s religion on others” (p. 18).  Yet these statements are merely rhetorical. He fails to explain how an employer’s actions can constitute the imposition of religion and thus a violation of the employee’s religious liberty where the employee remains perfectly free to purchase and use contraceptives.  If an employer’s refusal to subsidize a specific activity to which it objects on religious grounds constitutes the imposition of its religious beliefs on an employee, then employers routinely “intrude upon the religious liberty of employees” whenever they abstain from providing direct financial support for an employee’s chosen activity.  This is an extravagant proposition for which Gedicks offers no support.

(2)  Moreover, the religious liberty protected by the First Amendment and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act is freedom from interference by the state.   Where an employer has decided to refrain from paying for contraceptives under its health plan, state action is entirely absent.  Nor does he explain how a government exemption to the law constitutes state action, Gedicks’ passing eference to Estate of Thornton v. Calder notwithstanding. 

(3)  Gedicks rather casually dismisses the argument that the fact that thousands of health insurance plans are “grandfathered in” under the ACA and so exempted from the requirement that they provide “preventive services” including contraceptives.  If, however, as the government estimates, somewhere in the neighborhood of 190 million Americans fall within the ambit of plans that are "grandfathered in” such that these plans need not comply with the contraceptive mandate, it is difficult to see how the government’s interest in mandating the provision of contraceptives by religious employers is truly “compelling.”  Demonstrating that the government’s alleged interest is in fact “compelling” is of course necessary for the law to withstand a challenge under RFRA.

(4)  Many commentators have argued that the government could have fulfilled its interest in ensuring that contraceptives be made available to women of child-bearing years at no expense through some alternate means that respected the religious liberty of religious employers.  For example, the government could have provided these contraceptives to women directly or through a government sponsored insurance program.  For Gedicks, however, the “least restrictive means” requirement is of no help to religious employers.  He insists that “a religious person’s right to an exemption does not include the right to demand that the government pay for the exemption” (p.17).  He cites no authority for this proposition, and for good reason since this is precisely wrong.  The existence of an alternate route to achieving its preferred policy objective may require the government to undertake a method that is more costly than other means that impinge upon religious liberties.  As a broader point one might add that the recognition of religious liberty interests usually involves the imposition of some costs, including costs on third-parties, but this is no less true of efforts to uphold constitutional rights in other settings.

(5)  Gedicks is eager to find United States v. Lee dispositive of the claim that the mandate forces religious employers to subsidize contraceptive use to which they object on religious grounds.  For Gedicks, forcing an employer to pay for contraceptives is “virtually the same” as the “compelled payment of a netural and general tax” some portion of which goes to fund activities to which the
taxpayer objects on religious grounds. As Mike Moreland has noted (here) “Lee involved a general tax to finance a government program (there Social Security, but the same logic would apply to national defense or other examples), while the HHS mandate is a requirement that employers include a cost-free benefit in their health plans (or be fined if they don't provide coverage at all).  Surely that is a distinction with respect to the burden on religious free exercise and the ease with which the government can accommodate religious objectors.”

(6)  Gedicks’ claim that the burden of the contraception mandate “approaches the vanishing point” (p. 13) because religious employers “already cover the mandated contraceptives for treatment of conditions unrelated to preventing pregnancy” is simply wrong.  Religious employers are opposed to contraceptive practices, and they object to being forced to support these practices under the mandate through their insurance plans.  They are not opposed to making the same prescription drugs available under these plans when used for a purpose to which they have no religious objection.

I could go on, but suffice it to say that there are many grounds on which to find fault with Gedicks’ paper.

What I want to focus on here, however, is Gedicks’ response to the MOJ posts wherein he argues that it is wrong to “conceptualize the mandate” as a “subsidy” for contraceptives.  To show why this is so, Gedicks asks us to imagine two extremes. 

On the one hand, Gedicks argues that an employer paying an employee a wage or salary above subsistence “creates the possibility of discretionary employee spending” and thus the possibility that the employee may use this money to purchase contraceptives.  Yet no one argues that “religious employers have a free exercise right to prohibit employees from buying contraceptives with their wages or salary.”

On the other hand, Gedicks asks us to “imagine a law mandating an unambiguous subsidy of contraceptive use, such as a legal requirement that employers purchase vouchers good only for the purchase of contraceptives, and then distribute these free of charge to their employees.”  Although Gedicks does not expressly say so, presumably such a law would violate the idea of religious freedom protected under RFRA and the First Amendment prior to Employment Division v. Smith

In his original paper Gedicks articulated the same point this way (p. 11): “It is axiomatic that religious employers have no religious liberty interest to limit the spending of employee compensation to conform to the employer’s religious sensibilities.  Health care insurance coverage is simply employee compensation. Instead of compensating employees entirely in wages or salary, the employer pays a reduced wage or salary plus a health insurance benefit.”

In his response to the MOJ posts Gedicks is somewhat more modest.  Instead of declaring that health insurance is “simply” employee compensation, he concludes that “[w]hile the benefit created by the contraception mandate is not identical to wages or salary, it is close” in part because “health insurance benefits are a form of employee compensation which, like wages and salary, employees may consume in a variety of ways as they wish, free of employer restriction.”

Gedicks is right to draw a comparison between salary and insurance benefits, but he is wrong to conclude that the latter are equivalent to the former.  Instead, insurance benefits more closely resemble the voucher that he implicitly concedes is a violation of religious liberty.

Gedicks is correct that health insurance under the mandate is not “good only for the purchase of contraceptives” (my emphasis).  It is not limited to prescriptions of Yaz and Ortho Tri-Cyclen.  Instead, the benefits of health insurance can take many forms.  Health insurance can be used to obtain wellness examines, flu shots, and appendectomies.  But these health benefits are not interchangeable.  An insulin shot is no substitute for kidney dialysis treatment, and chemotherapy
cannot take the place of cardiac bi-pass surgery. 

Furthermore, money can be used to purchase literally anything that is available on the market.  In that sense it is pluripotent.

Health insurance, by contrast, only provides the employee with those specific benefits that are covered under the plan.  As such, the concrete benefits of health insurance can take many forms, but not any form.  Although employees may consume health insurance “in a variety of ways” they may not consume it in all ways.  That is to say, the benefit of health insurance is not pluripotent like money.  It is instead like a series of binary choices: appendectomy or not; dialysis treatment or not; bi-pass surgery or not.

Gedicks’ analogy to employee salary would work if in place of the present HHS mandate the law instead required an employer to provide an employee with a voucher that the employee could then use to freely purchase whatever insurance plan suited her needs as judged by the employee herself.  Obviously, that is not the insurance scheme enacted under the ACA. 

The payment of money as salary or wages does indeed offer an unlimited set of choices as to how that money is to be spent.  The employer might, in the exercise its own judgment, find some of these choices to be moral and others to be immoral.  None of these uses, however, is specifically offered, suggested or facilitated by the employer.

Unlike the payment of salaries and wages, the mandated benefit requires that the employer set up a health insurance program which includes a single binary choice that the employer considers to be immoral.  The government is requiring the employer to, in effect, place the following choice before the employee: you may choose to use contraceptives for free under our plan, or you may forgo that option. This aspect of the mandated health coverage does not present a universe of choices for which the employer has no accountability.

Since the objecting employer views contraceptive use (including, in some circumstances, uses that are abortifacient in nature, or that facilitate sex outside of marriage) as immoral, this binary choice involves the employer in the immoral conduct in a way that a salary payment does not.  In contrast to a salary check that is cashed and then spent however the employee chooses, the health plan involves on-going facilitation – negotiating plans, creating resources to explain plan details, conducting workshops, troubleshooting for employees, maintaining connections to the insurance plan, etc. – all of which take place under the auspices of the employer itself, and at its expense.

If instead the employer objected on religious grounds to gambling, or pornography, or alcohol consumption, and the state required the employer to provide each employee with a voucher that could only be used on the state lottery, or a special allowance earmarked for the exclusive purchase of pornographic materials, or a “booze bonus” good only for the purchase of intoxicating beverages, the employer would be made to violate its religious principles by making a specific (objectionable) benefit available to each employee.  The individual’s decision – the binary choice – to make use of or decline the benefit that the employer is compelled to make available does not somehow eliminate the fact that the employer must invite the employee to this specific transaction rather than leave the employee free to do what she wills with her salary (that is not designated for any particular benefit) in the tangle of the marketplace.

The HHS contraceptive mandate does precisely what these hypothetical vouchers would do.  As such, it is equivalent to the example that Gedicks identifies as a violation of religious liberty – “a law mandating an unambiguous subsidy of contraceptive use.”

In its opinion granting defendants’ motion to dismiss in O’Brien v. U.S. Dept. of Health & Human Services, the district court said (p. 11, here) that “plaintiffs remain free to exercise their religion by not using contraceptives and by discouraging employees from using contraceptives.”  In doing so, the court recognized that the simple act of sharing one’s religious beliefs – in this case, discouraging the use of contraceptives – is a part of the employer’s religious liberty.  Indeed, living one’s religious faith with integrity – not being compelled by the government to undermine that faith by offering the very thing to which one objects – is at the heart of religious freedom.

Given this acknowledgment, it is difficult to see how the HHS mandate is anything other than a “substantial burden” on religious liberty.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

John Dewey: Philosopher of the “Common Good”?

When Paul Blanshard published in 1949 his attack on the Catholic Church under the title, American Freedom and Catholic Power, John Dewey praised the book, saying, “Mr. Blanshard has done a difficult and necessary piece of work with exemplary scholarship, good judgment, and tact.” This recommendation appears on the jacket of the book and is signed, “John Dewey, Dean of American Philosophers.” Dewey's influence may be seen throughout Blanshard’s work. His two chapters against American Catholic schools conclude with the following quotation from Dewey, arguing against any government support for Catholic education: “It is essential that this basic issue be seen for what it is — namely, as the encouragement of a powerful reactionary world organization in the most vital realm of democratic life, with the resulting promulgation of principles inimical to democracy.”

Excerpt from Rev. John A. Hardon, S.J., John Dewey — Radical Social Educator.

Dewey, the leading philosophical influence on American secular liberalism, was a determined critic of traditional religion. He claimed that there was “nothing left worth preserving in the notions of unseen powers, controlling human destiny to which obedience, reverence and worship are due.” Unlike the scientific method, which is “open and public” and based on “continued and rigorous inquiry,” religion is “a body of definite beliefs that need only to be taught and learned as true.” Religion, he said, is based on the “servile acceptance of imposed dogma.” This did not mean that Dewey and his followers were skeptical toward all moral teaching, or that the government should remain “neutral” toward conflicting points of view. To the contrary, Dewey contended that the public schools have an “ethical responsibility” to inculcate social values derived from scientific and democratic principles.

Michael W. McConnell, Religious Freedom at a Crossroads, 59 U. Chi. L. Rev. 115, 123 (1992) (footnote omitted)

Cheese Part II

In my previous post, I quoted extensively from Chesterton's essay Cheese. You can find a 15 minute lecture on the essay here. (It starts about the 10 minute mark). As the lecturer states, besides the higher quality and better taste that often comes from non-industrial local food, there is a placedness and a connectedness tying farmer and cheesemaker to the land as they practice their respective crafts, hopefully with love for the thing they are creating and the person who will consume it.

"Beyond politics" envisions building and perserving culture, which, almost by definition, means attending to the local and the quotidian even in the face of hostile bureaucrats. This story from eight years ago tells of a 40 year old Czech farmer who has to sell his cheese as "animal feed" because it was too costly to comply with the EU's cheese making regulations. A sign outside his farm reads: "Goat's cheese made from non-pasteurised milk. Hand kneaded. Recipe kept for six generations. Absolutely failing to meet EU norms, therefore designated for animal feeding purposes. Tested on people."  The EU's cheese police (health inspectors) stand outside his farm "interviewing customers about what they plan to do with the cheese."

Today I will do a little toward perserving local culture when I pick up my Thanksgiving turkeys (and some cheese) from the Oklahoma Food Coop.  

Cheese

Rick, thank you for reminding me of my posts after the last election, which I titled "Beyond Politics."  As grace would have it, my Chesterton group (which includes two of Rick's former students) met at a local public house the Monday after the election to discuss G.K.'s essay Cheese, which sums up all of his thinking in two short pages. In discussing "the holy act of eating cheese," he says:

Once in endeavouring to lecture in several places at once, I made an eccentric journey across England, a journey of so irregular and even illogical shape that it necessitated my having lunch on four successive days infour roadside inns in four different counties. In each inn they had nothing but bread and cheese; ... In each inn the cheese was good; and in each inn it was
different. There was a noble Wensleydale cheese in Yorkshire, a Cheshire cheese in Cheshire, and so on. Now, it is just here that true poetic civilization differs from that paltry and mechanical civilization that holds us all in bondage. Bad customs are universal and rigid, like modern militarism. Good customs are universal and varied, like native chivalry and self-defence. Both the good and the bad civilization cover us as with a canopy, and protect us from all that is
outside. But a good civilization spreads over us freely like a tree, varying and yielding because it is alive. A bad civilization stands up and sticks out above us like an umbrella - artificial, mathematical in shape; not merely universal, but uniform. So it is with the contrast between the substances that vary and the substances that are the same wherever they penetrate.

When I had done my pilgrimage in the four wayside public-houses I reached one of the great northern cities, and there I proceeded, with great rapidity and complete inconsistency, to a large and elaborate restaurant, where I knew I could get a great many things besides
bread and cheese. I could get that also, however; or at least I expected to get it; but I was sharply reminded that I had entered Babylon, and left England behind. The waiter brought me cheese, indeed, but cheese cut up into contemptibly small pieces; and it is the awful fact that instead of Christian bread, he brought me biscuits. Biscuits - to one who had eaten the cheese of
four great countrysides! Biscuits - to one who had proved anew for himself the sanctity of the ancient wedding between cheese and bread! I addressed the waiter in warm and moving terms. I asked him who he was that he should put asunder those whom Humanity had joined. I asked him if he did not feel, as an artist, that a solid but yielding substance like cheese went naturally with a solid, yielding substance like bread; to eat it off biscuits is like eating it off slates. I asked him if, when he said his prayers, he was so supercilious as to pray for his daily biscuits. He gave me generally to understand that he was only obeying a custom of Modern Society. I have therefore resolved to raise my voice, not against the waiter, but against Modern Society, for this huge and
unparalleled modern wrong.

 

Do we desire political "rulers" or "leaders"?

I meet weekly with a group of students for a non-credit seminar.  This semester, we have read and discussed C.S. Lewis' "The Abolition of Man," which has been followed up by De Descriptione Temporum, Lewis' Inaugural Lecture from the Chair of Mediaval and Renaissance Literature at Cambridge University and delivered in 1954.  The whole thing is well worth the read. The one paragraph on politics (which we ended up not discussing) peeked my interest. It reads, in part:

In all previous ages that I can think of the principal aim of rulers, except at rare and short intervals, was to keep their subjects quiet, to forestall or extinguish widespread excitement and persuade people to attend quietly to their several occupations. And on the whole their subjects agreed with them. They even prayed (in words that sound curiously old-fashioned) to be able to live "a peaceable life in all godliness and honesty" and "pass their time in rest and quietness". But now the organisation of mass excitement seems to be almost the normal organ of political power. We live in an age of "appeal if drives", and "campaigns". Our rulers have become like schoolmasters and are always demanding "keenness". And you notice that I am guilty of a slight archaism in calling them "rulers". "Leaders" is the modem word. I have suggested elsewhere that this is a deeply significant change of vocabulary. Our demand upon them has changed no less than theirs on us. For of a ruler one asks justice, incorruption, diligence, perhaps clemency; of a leader, dash, initiative, and (I suppose) what people call "magnetism" or "personality".

Some doubts about John Dewey as the "philosopher of the common good"

Michael Perry has linked to Charles Reid's suggestion that, in the wake of the election, we look to John Dewey -- described as the "philosopher of the common good" -- for optimism and inspiration.  It seems to me that we should look elsewhere. 

John Dewey's "optimism" and "egalitarianism" included -- indeed, his approach had at its heart -- a deep antipathy to religious authority and truth-claims, and indeed to any significant role for non-state mediating associations in the formation and education of persons.  Dewey praised Paul Blanshard's anti-Catholic screeds, and in some ways inspired them.  Charles notes, of course, that praise of Dewey needs to be "qualified," and says that he "appreciate[s] the diversity religious education offers in a world where public education might otherwise become too homogeneous."  As he should, and as Dewey -- an implacable enemy of the Catholic schools -- did not. 

I wonder, does Michael endorse Reid's endorsement of Dewey?  Why or why not? 

Charles Reid's Post-Election Reflection

Before the presidential election, I posted links to University of St. Thomas law professor Charles Reid's statement of reasons for supporting President Obama in the election, despite Professor Reid's pro-life position on abortion.  Some MOJ readers may be interested in Reid's post-election reflection (here), which is focused on philosopher John Dewey.  A brief excerpt:

"Properly qualified, we might do well to reflect on Dewey this November.  He is the philosopher of the common good.  One hopes that the racist dog-whistles and the naked appeals to class hatred (the 'takers' vs. the 'makers') that marked our ugly campaign season can be replaced with the understanding that we are 'in some metaphorical sense all brothers, [that] we are ... all in the same boat, traversing the same ocean.'  (John Dewey, 'A Common Faith,' reprinted in John Dewey, 'The Later Works,' vol. IX, p. 56).

It was John Dewey's optimism that drove the 'can-do period of America's greatest public works, the 1950s and 1960s.  It was his faith in democratic government and an engaged citizenry that breathed life into the great programs for social improvement represented by the New Deal and the Great Society. Following an election that feels much like a bitterly fought, hard-won vindication of those earlier transformative contests of 1932 and 1964, we might do well to reacquaint ourselves with this great American mind."