The fascists currently running this country have decreed that government employees are now free to proselytize their fellow employees and members of the public with whom they come in contact. You know, because of freedom of religion and freedom of speech. The full memorandum issued by the Office of Personnel Management is available here.
Among other things, supervisors can organize prayer circles. Of course, participation is voluntary, with the unwritten understanding that, if you refuse, your job may be on the line.
Now, PZ Myers, over at Pharyngula jokingly points out that he is now free to advocate for atheism in his classrooms. Of course he has no intention to do so, but in any event he completely misinterprets the memo.
As I’ve pointed out in the past, I have both an advanced degree in theology, conferred by the nuns at Our Lady of Sorrows Grammar School, in Hartford and a law degree, conferred years ago when things were a tad different in the legal world, but I’ve been keeping track of the changes, so let me explain for PZ’s benefit, and anyone else who might read this, what he’s gotten wrong.
First, let me say that in the olden days (i.e., before Roberts, Alito, Thomas, Kavanaugh, etc. came along) Myers would be right, though in the olden days such a memo would never have been released. But PZ doesn’t understand how the law works now.
The rule is that people have freedom of religion and freedom of speech when they believe what Republicans claim to believe (none of them actually believe what Christ taught, you know “love thy neighbor”, etc.) and they say what Republicans want them to say.
Let’s posit a hypothetical case. An atheist federal employee attempts to persuade members of the public that there is no god, and he is immediately fired. He brings an action claiming that he was merely exercising his freedom of religion and freedom of speech as set forth in the above cited memorandum.
He might win in one of the lower courts, but he’d lose at the Supreme Court level. After all, atheism isn’t a religion, so advocating for it is advocating for freedom from religion, and that’s so Warren Court (you know, the guys who got rid of school prayer) so that’s by the boards. And of course freedom of speech is no help, since you’re not free to abuse the member of the public with whom you interact by attempting to impose your beliefs on them, unless those views are approved of by the members of the Supreme Court.
Throwing out a case brought by an atheist will be easy for the Supreme Court, but you have to wonder how they would manage to hold that a Muslim would not be free to advocate for his or her religion, though I’m sure they could come up with something.
The irony of all this is that the person currently occupying the office of President is probably the least religious person that ever occupied that office. He’s violated each of the commandments, particularly the first, which if memory serves, goes: “I am the lord thy god, though shalt not put false gods before me”. In the case of the genius, he himself is the false god.