Another Inch Closer to Liber...
Aug. 18th, 2008 09:00 pm
The California Supreme Court decides that a state antidiscrimination law trumps the religious freedom rights of doctors.SAN FRANCISCO -- -- Doctors may not discriminate against gays and lesbians in medical treatment, even if the procedures being sought conflict with physicians' religious beliefs, the California Supreme Court decided today.
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In the second, major gay-rights victory this year, the state high court said religious physicians must obey a state law that bars businesses from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation.
Read the rest here.
no subject
Date: 2008-08-19 02:07 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-19 02:38 am (UTC)Anyone that disagrees deserves neither.
no subject
Date: 2008-08-19 11:35 am (UTC)yes i can see the argument that "Well then no one would server (us/them/it/whatever difference)" but that simply is not the case, if your opposed to some one exercising their rights not to server and you do not agree with them do not shop there and they will suffer the lose.
Don't force them to do anything
Just my 2 cent
no subject
Date: 2008-08-19 01:18 pm (UTC)The whole point of antidiscrimination laws is situations like this - a majority wants to deny access to rights and services to a minority. This has a direct negative impact on the lives of people in the minority.
That's why it has to be enshrined in law.
no subject
Date: 2008-08-19 01:30 pm (UTC)In a modern society, human rights - health, shelter, not getting the shit beat out of you, etc - trump one's belief in an invisible sky fairy and what he tells you to do.
If you are a provider of a service to these ends (e.g healthcare, property management, etc) it is your responsibility to society to practice them without discrimination, and if you can't, you should either move to a place more suited to your demographic, or at the very least, refer a patient to someone else. Total refusal to practice medicine based on the practitioner's religious belief, when the procedure is well established, amounts to malpractice. God forbid you ever end up in the ER with a doctor that refuses to administer antibiotics because he believes laying on hands will cure you.