Angie's List is the latest to stand up in opposition to Indiana's
discriminatory RFRA, and this one could cost Indiana 1,000 jobs…
We can now add to the list Angie’s List – you may have seen their commercials.
They are a word-of-mouth business rating network.
And this one is going to cost Indiana more than just hurt feelings. It
is going to cost Hoosiers some money – and about 1,000 jobs.
Apparently, word-of-mouth is that Indiana is not the
place to be. So in the spirit of the free marketplace so touted by
Republicans, Angie’s List has announced that they’re going to delay
going forward with a $40 million expansion to their Indiana
headquarters.
Of course, the egregiously misnamed Religious
Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) is touted as a protection for businesses,
but this is one business that is not amused.
This is what co-founder and Chief Executive Bill Oesterle had to say:
“We are putting the ‘Ford Building Project’ on hold
until we fully understand the implications of the Freedom Restoration
Act on our employees, both current and future. Angie’s List is open to
all and discriminates against none and we are hugely disappointed in
what this bill represents.”
And what timing. Turning the old Ford assembly plant into a new office space was to have had its groundbreaking in a few days.
Ironically, Oesterle, a Republican supported Pence for governor.
Ironically, Oesterle, a Republican supported Pence for governor.
On Saturday he had this to say:
Look, I’m very proud to be a Republican. I’m concerned about the direction that the legislature and governor have chosen to go here. … I’m concerned that very valid input around this type of legislation is not being heard in the Statehouse.
Of course it’s not being heard. Did you hear the one
about the Republican Congresswoman who asked her constituents to post
their “Obamacare horror stories” on Facebook and was swamped with
success stories praising the president’s healthcare law instead? Did she
change her mind about the law? Her answer: because she got only success
stories, she used recycled stories from a GOP website to denounce Obamacare anyway.
They don’t want to hear the truth. Until Oesterle
and other Republicans realize the full extent of the problem, it is
going to continue to be a problem, and the people of states like Indiana
are going to suffer for it. Pence’s corporate owners will fly him to
basketball games, an option not open to most Hoosiers.
Oesterle seems to understand the source of the hate, at least, pointing to a photograph of Pence signing the RFRA into law:
That photograph told me everything I needed to know. I’ve been on the other side of this issue with them for a long time, going back to the governor’s (Daniels’) campaign. That’s when I first became exposed to those people. The most prominent three figures standing directly behind the governor were those three individuals.
He was speaking of Micah Clark of the homophobic and anti-Semitic American Family Association of Indiana (see some of his hateful quotes at GLAAD), Eric Miller of the ironically-named Advance America (whom NUVO calls the “most powerful man in the Indiana statehouse”), and Curt Smith of the Indiana Family Institute (see some of his hateful quotes at GLAAD) – all vocal supporters of religious tyranny and discrimination in the state of Indiana.
Maybe we should thank Pence for pulling these people
out of the shadows in a way we can only dream of doing here. By all
means, let’s have some more photo ops. As many of us have observed, the
GOP is a gift that keeps on giving. It’s a pity the mainstream media
refuses to receive.
The worst of it is – and I know this as a fact
because I have family there – Republican Hoosiers will blame Obama for
their economic woes, not the fact that they live in a Red State. They
haven’t, and they steadfastly refuse, to learn a thing.
Even as the denunciations continue:
You may have noticed on Friday that Apple CEO Tim
Cook, of the company that the phones that many of those Hoosier
Republican bigots no doubt use – and who also just happens to be gay –
has also come out against the law, tweeting,
On Saturday, there came a joint statement from the NBA, WNBA, and the Indiana Pacers and Indiana Fever joining the NCAA in denouncing the RFRA:
The game of basketball is grounded in long established principles of inclusion and mutual respect. We will continue to ensure that all fans, players and employees feel welcome at all NBA and WNBA events in Indiana and elsewhere.
Pacers and Fever owner Herb Simon had this to say, and it is not something Mike Pence wanted to hear:
The Indiana Pacers, Indiana Fever and Bankers Life Fieldhouse have the strongest possible commitment to inclusion and non-discrimination on any basis. Everyone is always welcome at Bankers Life Fieldhouse. That has always been the policy from the very beginning of the Simon family’s involvement and it always will be.
You have to wonder at what point enough will be
enough. It is up to the people of Indiana – Hoosiers – to affect change
in the next election. The people they voted into office are taking
Indiana down a dark and troubling path, to a place America thought it
had escaped from two hundred years ago, when bigotry was commonplace.
We have slowly, if imperfectly, and in fits and
starts, but sometimes with glorious success like the Emancipation
Proclamation, the Civil Rights Act, and other shining deeds, continued
to crawl out of that gutter. We might never reach our exceptions and our
hopes, but we continue to try.
In a single act, the state of Indiana has committed
itself to 13th century-style bigotry and persecution of minorities in
the name of religion. It is illegal, un-American, and it is wrong, and
if it is to end, Hoosiers will have to wake up and realize they’ve put
fascists in charge of their state. All we can do meanwhile, is fly over
the accursed place, or if you have to stop, enter only places that bear this sign:
No comments:
Post a Comment