Flogging dead horses, I know, but this article caught my eye, and
reminded me (quite illogically, I must admit) of the overly long
thread "Need some help".

But, it makes many interesting points, whether you agree with the author or not.

---
>From the Balkinization blawg:
<http://balkin.blogspot.com/2009/05/support-your-local-bigot.html>

Support your local bigot
Andrew Koppelman
I have written several times that there should be accommodation for
religious conservatives who have conscientious objections to
recognizing same-sex marriages. Religious exemptions from
antidiscrimination laws are fairly costless, I’ve argued: as long as
the religious dissenters are idiosyncratic outliers – and they
generally will be, based on the scant number of accommodation claims
we’ve seen – they’ll have no effect on gay people’s opportunities, and
so they can harmlessly be left to live out their ideals in peace.

This has elicited the following objection from several friends: why do
you want to accommodate bigots? The issue is now being squarely
presented in New Hampshire, where opponents of religious accommodation
are now ready to let same-sex marriage die in that state rather than,
as one supporter has put it, “enshrine homophobia into the statutes of
the New Hampshire Legislature.”

What is bigotry, anyway, and why is it a bad thing? The answer to this
question will provide an answer to my skeptical friends, and also show
why the legislators resisting religious accommodations in New
Hampshire are sadly mistaken in their priorities.

Bigotry is wrong for two reasons. First, it harms the people who are
its objects. Second, it is a moral failing on the part of the bigot.
It is important to distinguish these.

The most obvious harm of bigotry is that people are hurt by it. Racism
hurts racial minorities; sexism hurts women; homophobia hurts gay
people. This harm occurs even if the people who are doing the
discriminating are innocently deluded about what they are up to.
“Honest to God when I was a kid, I believed that junk,” a white
southerner, Hugh Wilson, explains in Jason Sokol’s recent book There
Goes My Everything: White Southerners in the Age of Civil Rights,
1945-1975. “I was just like everybody else. Too many of us thought
that, we knew individual blacks to be awful fine folks but we thought
of blacks as a race as being sort of an Amos and Andy situation . . .
. I began to get a lot older before I began to realize.” Perhaps, in
his situation, Wilson can be excused for his ignorance. But excusable
or not, his attitudes were profoundly destructive. Calling young
Wilson a bigot is not to say that he’s a bad person who should be
punished. It’s saying that he’s a deluded person who needs to be
stopped from damaging others.

A second wrong of bigotry is the wrong of unjust perception. This is
wrong even if it causes no harm at all. In a revealing little parable
in her 1971 book, The Sovereignty of Good, Iris Murdoch elegantly
refutes a then-fashionable school of moral philosophy that concerned
itself only with the appropriateness of conduct, and which was
entirely indifferent to people’s internal mental states.

A woman, M, feels hostile toward her daughter-in-law, D. M thinks that
her son has married beneath him, and finds D unrefined, brusque, and
rude. However, M always behaves beautifully toward D, and keeps her
real opinion well concealed. And then suppose that the young couple
emigrates, or D dies, so that whatever happens after that happens only
in M’s mind. M now reflects on D, moved only by love for her son and a
desire to be just. She concludes that D has many good qualities that M
had failed to appreciate: she is not undignified but spontaneous, not
vulgar but refreshingly simple, and so on. In the course of these
reflections, Murdoch insists, M has been “active, she has been doing
something, something which we approve of, something which is somehow
worth doing in itself.”

The relevance here of Murdoch’s point can be made clearer, perhaps, by
considering the odd case of Japanese anti-Semitism, which our host
Jack Balkin describes in his book Cultural Software. “[A]nti-Semitic
books and comments have appeared continually in Japan over the years,
often repeating the most vicious claims of Nazi ideology and Eastern
European anti-Semitism. Especially popular are beliefs about a secret
worldwide Jewish financial and media conspiracy of enormous scope and
power.” This nonsense functions for the Japanese as a way of
accounting for and complaining about the power of the United States,
which is taken to be controlled by the Jews. It does not, however,
have much impact on anyone: “There are very few Jews in Japan today
and thus very few opportunities for discrimination against them.”
Bigotry is bigotry in Germany or in Japan, but it doesn’t matter for
the same reasons in both places. In Japan, the complaint is entirely
Murdochian: it is wrong to judge people unjustly. But why should the
law care about this kind of harmless injustice?

There is, of course, a moral category of reprehensible ignorance,
recognized as far back as Aquinas, who thought that error was culpable
if it were either directly voluntary (because the agent deliberately
avoided uncomfortable information) or if the agent were negligent
about knowing what he ought to know. And one can be reprehensible in
this way both for one’s private thoughts, in the Murdochian sense, and
for one’s actions that ignorantly damage other people. I have no doubt
that there are some homophobes who are culpable in just this way. I
also think that there are others who are in the grip of a world view
according to which homosexuality just can’t imaginably be morally
acceptable, and who aren’t penetrable by any data to the contrary. I’m
less inclined to blame them, particularly since, as the struggles of
those within the “ex-gay movement” shows, there are some gay people
among them.

Finally to return to the question of religious exemptions! The
objection to religious exemptions can’t be that they’ll harm gay
people, because they will only be invoked by a few people and won’t
have much effect on gay people’s opportunities. It is rather that we
shouldn’t accommodate bigotry. Now, I disagree with the views of
religious conservatives who think homosexual conduct to be morally
wrong. I think that these views are mistaken in just the way that M’s
views had been in the early part of Murdoch’s story. I even think that
some of those who hold those views are morally culpable. But does this
mean that the law ought to be used to punish them?

Retribution is appropriate only if there is harm. Imagine you discover
that someone has spent all afternoon sticking pins in dolls
representing some people he doesn’t like (but has no just complaint
against), hoping that this will cause their painful deaths. You’re
entitled to decide that he’s a nasty person. But does he deserve
punishment? For what, exactly?

If they can be rendered harmless, antigay bigots, even the morally
reprehensible ones, will be just like the guy with the pins and the
dolls. Nasty, maybe (though I know people on that side of the
political divide who, I’m convinced, are honestly doing their best to
pursue the right as it is given to them to see the right). But why is
it important for the law to beat up on them?

More pertinently, why is beating up on them so important that it’s
worth letting same-sex marriage die in New Hampshire altogether rather
than give those people any accommodation?

There are people who are reprehensibly embracing self-aggrandizing
fantasies that are hurting real people. But I’m sorry to say that
they’re not the Christian conservatives. They are the people on my
side, the gay rights side, who are willing to sacrifice the hopes of
New Hampshire gays who want to marry, out of pure malice toward their
political opponents.

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