In 2004, a group of fertility doctors refused to treat a lesbian on the basis that their religious beliefs prohibit them from helping lesbians reproduce. Yesterday, the California Supreme Court
unanimously held that they violated state antidiscrimination laws:
The woman, Guadalupe Benitez, successfully filed suit against the doctors and their medical group in 2004 on the basis that their refusal to treat her violated California's anti-discrimination laws.
However an appeal court in San Diego ruled against Benitez, a decision that led to the supreme court ruling.In an unanimous decision the justices ruled that Benitez was entitled to be treated like other patients with the same condition, and that constitutional protections for religious liberty do not excuse unlawful discrimination.
The fact that the San Diego appeals court actually held that religious liberty
does excuse unlawful discrimination is a little troubling. Would a emergency room physician who holds a white supremacist theology, and believes that non-whites do not deserve to live, be entitled to walk off on patients of color at random on the basis that his religious liberty trumps their right to treatment? If we don't draw the line at medical treatment, where
do we draw the line?
Related: History of the Gay Rights Movement
A new Department of Justice report (
Juvenile Transfer Laws: An Effective Deterrent to Delinquency?; hat tip to the
ACLU Blog of Rights) has documented that laws prosecuting juveniles as adults, stamped in bold print in every right-wing demagogue politician's political playbook, don't actually help anybody. The
New York Times' assessment of the report is spot on:
The value of specialized courts for young people is underscored in a new report from the Justice Department’s Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. After evaluating the available research, it concludes that transferring juveniles for trial and sentencing to an adult criminal court has increased recidivism, especially among violent offenders, and has led many young people to a permanent life of crime.
But even the
Times fell for faulty reasoning. As part of its editorial in support of the report's findings, the Gray Lady adds in this nugget:
Young people who commit serious, violent crimes deserve severe punishment. But...
No judge is qualified to decide what criminals deserve, and no punishment is fine-tuned enough to deliver it to them. The purpose of the criminal justice system is to protect the general population from criminals, and to reduce criminal recidivism through a mix of rehabilitation and deterrence. That's the best we mortals can do. A criminal justice system that takes it upon itself to play God will soon find itself in the business of building Hells, and the foolish and shortsighted strategy of throwing the book at juvenile offenders inevitably results from this sort of thinking.
Lawmakers, in other words, need to stop locking criminals away because they deserve to be locked up and focus instead on locking criminals away because we deserve to
have them locked up. That's a much more sensible approach to the problem of crime. Americans need to be protected, not avenged.
Related: The Eighth Amendment