usmarine0352_2005
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- Joined
- Oct 21, 2005
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Interesting case.
It's interesting when you ask where do someone's religious rights end and someone else's begin.
For example a family owned bakery must make a cake for gay couples against their religious views because it tramples the rights of the couple getting married. On the other hand, a group of Muslims sued a beer company that they worked for because they were forced to deliver beer which was against their religious views. So in one case religion wins and the other it loses.
I wonder how this case will pan out.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...o-id-in-gun-rights-religious-freedom-lawsuit/
It's interesting when you ask where do someone's religious rights end and someone else's begin.
For example a family owned bakery must make a cake for gay couples against their religious views because it tramples the rights of the couple getting married. On the other hand, a group of Muslims sued a beer company that they worked for because they were forced to deliver beer which was against their religious views. So in one case religion wins and the other it loses.
I wonder how this case will pan out.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...o-id-in-gun-rights-religious-freedom-lawsuit/
Amish man sues to buy firearm without photo ID in gun rights, religious freedom lawsuit
By Justin Wm. Moyer October 27
Lately, Americans have argued both about their right to bear arms and whether the free exercise of religion allows businesses and state officials to claim exemptions from requirements that conflict with their religious beliefs. It’s not everyday, however, that the two issues, guns and religion, wind up together in a single case.
In a suit that brings together the Second Amendment and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), an Amish man filed a federal lawsuit in Pennsylvania last week because he wants to buy a gun without the required photo ID — and because getting that photo ID would violate his religious beliefs.