The Supreme Court’s two, term-ending First Amendment decisions, Burwell v. Hobby Lobby and Harris v. Quinn, advance conservative policy goals. But they don’t do that in a way that seems particularly conservative.
In bygone days, conservatives often complained that liberals dispensed rights with abandon while seldom imposing corresponding responsibilities. Especially in the 1960s and 1970s, liberals stood accused of presiding over a “rights revolution” in Congress and the courts, expanding protections for racial and ethnic minorities, women, accused criminals, and the poor. These groups enjoyed greater freedom, the conservative argument went, but in the process avoided necessary societal obligations. “It is time,” then-Gov. Ronald Reagan of California said in 1968 at the Republican National Convention, “to restore the American precept that each individual is accountable for his actions.”
You don’t hear this sort of conservative rhetoric quite so much anymore. Partly that’s because once Reagan became president he stopped preaching personal responsibility and embraced a more hedonistic variety of conservatism. Taxes were cut without corresponding cuts in spending, ushering in an era of out-of-control budget deficits. Regulations were eased on business. Enforcement of civil rights and labor protections fell by the wayside, though this was done quietly. The idea wasn’t to restore accountability; rather, it was to shift prior non-accountability (real or imagined) to a more conservative clientele.
Burwell v. Hobby Lobby and Harris v. Quinn are the logical outcome of this shift.
This is especially so in Hobby Lobby. Congress (in passing the Affordable Care Act) and the Health and Human Services Department (in issuing regulations) decided that government-mandated health insurance should cover contraception. They created a right to contraception where none existed before. In the old days, the conservative counterargument might have been that creating this right was irresponsible because the broader society had a more compelling interest in discouraging extramarital sex. Because free (or heavily discounted) access to contraception could not be extended without making extramarital sex more common, that right, conservatives might have argued, ought not be granted. That would be more straightforward and honest.
Just this type of argument was laid out by Justice Antonin Scalia in Employment Division v. Smith, which denied two Native American drug rehab counselors the right to smoke peyote — even though it was part of a traditional Native American religious ceremony. The broader society, the Court found, had a more compelling interest in saying no to drugs. Ironically, this decision prompted a Democratically-controlled Congress to pass, in 1993, the very religious-freedom law on which the Supreme Court purports to base its Hobby Lobby decision.
Conservatives are much less inclined today to argue that rights outweigh societal responsibilities. With libertarianism now ascendant on the right, today’s preferred method is to apply the language of pluralism and tolerance. Society doesn’t care whether you engage in extramarital sex at all. But society does care if your exercise of such liberties happens to violate someone else’s freedom — in this instance, freedom of religion. That “someone else” in Hobby Lobby is a privately held for-profit corporation. And in this instance, the aversion is not to extramarital sex but to any recreational, non-procreative sex, even between married people.
For the record, for-profit corporations do not hold religious views, no matter what the Supreme Court says. They’re legal constructs, not spiritual beings, nor even, for that matter, atheists. But lets concede the point so we can examine the implications. Fine, Mitt Romney, corporations are people.
The reason these corporate “people” exist is to limit investors’ personal liability. There are tax advantages, too. For instance, while the top income tax rate on homo sapiens is 39.6%, the rate for corporations is 35% — and a lot of folks think that’s too high. Why should a for-profit corporation get to be a person under the Constitution’s First Amendment but not under the 16th, which established the personal income tax? To pile on top of these privileges the additional privilege of ignoring a legal mandate to provide contraceptive coverage to employees is awfully indulgent.









