A free pass to be a whiny baby


A gay atheist doctor in Indiana wonders if the shiny new RFRA lets him refuse service to assholes.

“Dear Governor Pence and the Republicans in the state legistlature,” Freiheit’s letter begins, “As a gay atheist doctor in a small town in Indiana, I want to applaud your bravery and standing up for your principles, because it would seem that you have given me a chance to finally stop having to treat asshole, bigoted Christians at my practice, based on my own deeply held religious views, and not anything more sinister or petty, of course.”

That is what we want, right? To make all public services and interactions conditional on agreement with each other’s world views? We want to have to fill out applications listing our beliefs and allegiances and political views every time we go to the grocery store, right?

“Governor Pence, I submit that if I am now to be treated as a second class citizen on an arbitrary basis, whenever the personal, religious beliefs of a shop owner or employee butts up against my sexual orientation, then every Christian who believes that in 2015 they still have a right to discriminate based on what makes them feel ‘icky’ and their desire to hold onto antiquated philosophical and mythological texts as if they are hard and fast universal truths will have to go seek medical treatment somewhere else, if that’s okay by you and your friends, Mr. Pence.” Freiheit then writes, “Therefore, I would like to ask directly if I can consider myself protected under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act that you signed to discriminate against Christians based on my religious beliefs. If I am not, then I believe your law is unconstitutional as it is not written equally and does not apply equally to all citizens of Indiana.”

Let’s all invent religions that require us to reject and refuse and deny service to all sorts of people for all sorts of random (but belief-based) reasons. Then when the gridlock stretches from sea to sea, we can point out the consequences of their tiny-minded bigotry.

“The funny thing to me,” Freiheit told our reporter, “is that all day, every day I treat people who I know deep-down think my husband and children and I are all going to Hell and that we shouldn’t even be allowed to be a family in the first place, and I still suck it up and give them their antibiotic prescriptions, diagnose their various illnesses, and ultimately help heal them.” Dr. Freiheit continued, “I don’t know why the baker or the florist in town should be given a free pass to be a whiny, baby about life and the rest of us are expected to suck it up. I don’t get why if we expect doctors and lawyers to take any and all clients that come through their doors, we can’t expect everyone who operates a business in the public square, under state regulated corporate protection for their assets, to behave with the same maturity and respect.”

Because they’re in business, and business is god’s favorite job title description category.

Comments

  1. M'thew says

    Yay, Dr Freiheit (hey – someone named Liberty – should get the Right Wingers’ attention, no?).

    Stick it to ’em, every which way you can. Rub their noses in the unintended consequences of their bigotry, the things they didn’t bother to think through, because it never occurs to them that the trick could work the other way as well.

    It’ll still be a long struggle, but taking it lying down is not going to get us any further.

  2. iknklast says

    My religion does not allow me to serve global warming deniers. Now all I need is to think up a name and a catchy slogan and logo for my religion, and voila! No more AGW deniers in my classrooms!

  3. another stewart says

    Now all I need is to think up a name and a catchy slogan and logo for my religion

    If you were a Christian, Stewardship Christian would do nicely.

  4. sc_770d159609e0f8deaa72849e3731a29d says

    Dr. Freiheit is a physician and everyone – including physicians – assumes that phyicians will try to rise to a higher moral standard than most of us, even – or especially – those who are in business. I can understand Dr. Freifeit’s immediate response, but in the end, someone might die if he applies it absolutely and I don’t think he would carry his principles that far. Being refused flowers and cakes are petty matters, no matter how irritating the refusal and no matter how vile and absurd the prejudice inspiring the refusal may be. Refusing to give or being refused medical treatment is not petty.
    In fairness, I don’t think physicians who are religious believers would allow their beliefs to overrule their obligations as physicians either.

  5. moarscienceplz says

    @#6 (I.e., too lazy to think up a pseudonym)
    Thanks so much for the Dear Muslima!

  6. sonofrojblake says

    @6:

    I don’t think physicians who are religious believers would allow their beliefs to overrule their obligations as physicians either.

    Wow. You REALLY haven’t been paying attention, have you?

    Just one example, and not even one from the God-fearin’ US of A: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Savita_Halappanavar

    everyone – including physicians – assumes that phyicians will try to rise to a higher moral standard

    I assume no such thing. Doctors are humans, and therefore some of them are assholes and religious nutjobs and act on that fact, and this is common knowledge… isn’t it?

  7. Saad says

    sc_770d159609e0f8deaa72849e3731a29d, #6

    Read before outing yourself:

    Freiheit told The Political Garbage Chute in a phone interview that he “really has no intention of breaking the oath” he took to do no harm to anyone, but his letter is meant to seek clarification as to just how far he — or any other business owner in the state — would be able to take their personal beliefs in discriminating against and refusing service to someone else.

  8. Saad says

    sc_770d159609e0f8deaa72849e3731a29d, #6

    In fairness, I don’t think physicians who are religious believers would allow their beliefs to overrule their obligations as physicians either.

    Surely you’ve heard of Purvi Patel’s case.

    Here’s the anti-choice doctor responsible.

    Another article on the topic.

    The person who set the legal process in motion was Dr. Kelly McGuire, who was on call the night in 2013 when Purvi Patel showed up in the emergency room of St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center near South Bend, Indiana. McGuire is listed as a pro-life physician for the American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

    The association has about 2,500 members and associates. Its web site declares that a physician’s “right of conscience” in medical decision-making is a crucial part of their advocacy aims, and that the association seeks to counter “[s]trong voices within our culture (and within our professional College) [which] espouse elective abortion on demand as a standard of care for unwanted pregnancies.”

    According to its mission statement, the group’s members affirm five principles, one of which is “[t]hat elective disruption/abortion of human life at any time from fertilization onward constitutes the willful destruction of an innocent human being, and that this procedure will have no place in our practice of the healing arts.”

  9. sc_770d159609e0f8deaa72849e3731a29d says

    sonofrojblake:

    “Doctors are humans, and therefore some of them are assholes and religious nutjobs and act on that fact, and this is common knowledge.”

    Of course, and applicants for medical training are carefully selected and intensively trained in the hope “that physicians will try to rise to a higher moral standard than most of us”. The fact that religious nutjobs who believe Dr. Freiheit will deservedly go to hell consult him professionally is powerful evidence that they believe it too.

    Saad:

    Dr. Freiheit’s clarification “that he “really has no intention of breaking the oath” he took to do no harm to anyone” confirms my view that he would not carry out his “threat”. As I said, I understand his annoyance, but – apart from the moral aspect – it is not wise to threaten to do things you would not do.

    Are Dr. McGuire’s opinions relevant to Purvi Patel’s conviction?
    Any doctor, whatever their views, would surely report the case of a heavily-bleeding and probably badly-upset woman who had recently given birth to the authorities. The trial and conviction were a matter of state law.
    Pregnancy and abortion are one point where moral aspects of medicine get very complicated because there is the question of which is the patient – woman and foetus – and which should be given priority of concern. Foolishly, I wasn’t thinking of that – which is probably the most frequent instance of religious beliefs intervening in medical practise – but of another instance I saw personally, where a vociferously atheistic friend was treated by a devout muslim when I said that “In fairness, I don’t think physicians who are religious believers would allow their beliefs to overrule their obligations as physicians either”.

  10. chigau (違う) says

    sc_770d159609e0f8deaa72849e3731a29d

    Of course, and applicants for medical training are carefully selected and intensively trained in the hope “that physicians will try to rise to a higher moral standard than most of us”. The fact that religious nutjobs who believe Dr. Freiheit will deservedly go to hell consult him professionally is powerful evidence that they believe it too.

    Personally, I choose physicians for their competence.
    I hope that their med-school stressed stuff like diagnostics and treatment over Morality®.

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