Religious people have moral views just like secular people do, and they’re just as entitled as secular people to use the political process to enact their views into law. True, religious people’s moral views may rest on unproven and probably unprovable metaphysical assumptions — but the same is generally true as to secular people’s moral views.To say that religious arguments must be excluded from public debate, while equally unprovable secular moral arguments may continue to be made, would be to turn into second-class citizens those people whose basic moral views come from their religion. Neither the Constitution nor sound political morality require this.
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
In case you wondered …
… The Volokh Conspiracy — Is It Unconstitutional for Laws to Be Based on Their Supporters’ Religiously Founded Moral Beliefs? (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)
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