Casey County, Kentucky clerk, Casey Davis, showed up at his governor’s office
without an appointment to get privileged standing for his bigotry
against same-sex couples. The governor was out of town, but Davis told
the State Journal he had an “inspirational moment” after
celebrating the Fourth of July. “The part of our national anthem that
talks about the bombs bursting in air and how our flag was still there
made me think of how those men and women were persecuted (during the
American Revolution) and homosexuals were afforded their rights and I’m
afforded mine.”
The privilege he wants is for the government to set
up a website to sell marriage licenses so that he can perform his job
“without it conflicting with [his] religious beliefs.” He also said, “I
want [Governor Beshear] to call a special session about it. My
solution would be to what everybody else called the law of the land, is
to have an online issuance for marriage licenses so it takes it out of
the hands of the individual.” And, “I think I deserve some sort of
relief, that I took my oath to do this job to the best of my ability so
help me God,” Davis said. “I cannot go beyond what my conscience
allows.”
Thomas Weddle, the attorney for Casey County, said
Casey Davis is wrong on this issue and has two choices. Casey can find a
deputy clerk who will do the job or be removed from his job as County
Clerk. Mr. Weddle might well have added that Davis is free to do as a similarly-situated counterpart in Mississippi did and resign himself.
All three options point to this fact: Davis does
not want to do his job. His claim of religious beliefs is merely an
attempt to give socially acceptable cover to bigotry. That can work in
the private sector or if the employee works for a church. Not so for
someone holding government office and who perforce must be willing to
serve taxpayers – any and all taxpayers who ask him and expect him to do
his job. Such a person admits outright they are unwilling to do what
they have sworn to do and want someone else to do
constitutionally-mandated work for them. Davis’s song and dance about
an “inspirational moment” amounts to asking taxpayers to accommodate his
bigotry. He’s not asserting his religious rights, he’s claiming he is
entitled to special treatment.
This is not to say online marriage licensing is a
bad idea. The prospect of modernizing service to taxpayers is always a
good idea.
But there is something particularly galling about
asking for the privilege of having the government support bigotry. We
are indeed talking about bigotry here. People choose to be bigots, to
disrespect and discommode and even condemn others for who they are.
That is exactly what Davis is doing.
And stupidly at that. As Republicans are so happy
to point out regarding online health insurance exchanges, there can be
problems with websites, meaning that eventually some applicants will
have to have contact with a human being. Also, someone has to set up
the system in the first place, and someone else has to test it and
someone else again will have to approve it. And since it’s Casey’s
idea, he ends up assisting in the very thing he opposes anyway.
Just another example of how bigotry, stupidity and demands for special privileges go hand in hand.
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