What started with Jack Daniel’s and birth control has ended up at the Supreme Court.
Under the Affordable Care Act’s guidelines, which went into effect last year, private insurance plans must cover contraceptives. While explicitly religious institutions are exempted, 43 for-profit companies have sued, saying they oppose birth control and that the regulation violates their religious freedom. One of the companies is organic foods maker Eden Foods, which in March sued in federal court in Michigan over the requirements. The company lost twice.
Last week, it asked the Supreme Court to review the decision, arguing that the appeals court relied on a “low-quality” “web ‘blog’” to rule against Eden Foods.
That “blog” is actually the online magazine, Salon. The Sixth Circuit had noted in a footnote an April interview I conducted for Salon with Michael Potter, the founder and chairman of Eden Foods.
“I don’t care if the federal government is telling me to buy my employees Jack Daniel’s or birth control,” Potter had said in the interview. “What gives them the right to tell me that I have to do that? That’s my issue, that’s what I object to, and that’s the beginning and end of the story.”
No mention of religious freedom.
The interview, wrote Sixth Circuit Judge Martha Craig Daughtrey, indicated that “Potter’s ‘deeply held religious beliefs’ more resembled a laissez-faire, anti-government screed.”
Eden Foods isn’t questioning the accuracy of Potter’s quotes. Instead, it’s just trying to paint Salon as unworthy of citation. Its proof: Salon also published articles about sex and pop culture.
By the end of this month, the Supreme Court will likely decide whether to take up the Eden Foods case or another, similar case. The government asked the Court to take up another birth control refusal case, filed by the craft store chain Hobby Lobby. The appeals court said in that case that the requirement did violate religious freedom. Either way, the question of whether corporations even have religious liberty rights seems destined for the highest court.
Eden Foods’ organic products are popular in liberal enclaves, but its lawsuit had fallen under the radar. My first piece on the suit prompted hundreds of people to leave complaints on the company’s Facebook page. Eventually, there were over 62,000 signatures on an online petition demanding they drop the case.
That’s when Potter decided to return my call. “I’ve got more interest in good quality long underwear than I have in birth control pills,” he told me. And why was that, I asked? “Because I’m a man, number one and it’s really none of my business what women do,” Potter said. So, then, why bother suing? That’s when he explained that he doesn’t like being told by the government what to do.
This, along with a follow-up interview, inflamed Internet commenters. It also seemed to undermine Potter’s case. “The reason why these quotes matter is because there is nothing in federal law allowing someone to sue because they generally object to having the government tell them what to do — if that were the case, speed limits, workplace safety laws and the minimum wage would all be illegal,” wrote ThinkProgress’s Ian Millhiser at the time. He added, “Based on Carmon’s reporting, it’s not at all clear that Potter actually holds the religious beliefs that make up the backbone of his case.”
The Department of Justice, which had to defend the mandate in court, agreed and included the interview quotes in their brief. Eden Foods described the Salon interview in a later filing as an “‘out of context, out of court quotation.’” But as the DOJ later pointed out: “Plaintiffs did not deny the accuracy of the quotation, nor did they provide any context.” That’s what got the attention of the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, too.
While Potter’s comments were considered noteworthy, they weren’t ultimately why Eden Foods lost the case.









