B
BillP
Guest
Nope, everyone gets to be heard. Catholics are free to speak (and, individually, vote!) whatever is on their minds. Similarly, The Church can say whatever she likes and even enforce her dictates on her members.and who gets to define morality? what about Natural Law?
Should all private lobby groups be banned from attempting to, in your words, “define morality”? what about the AARP or NRA or ATLA or any of the other thousands of groups that want their voices heard? or is it only Catholics that need to shut up and sit down? why can’t Christians be heard in the public sphere?
However, being heard doesn’t imply or require being accommodated.
How does being “heard” equate to being “accommodated”?
The Church has been heard on this matter. I doubt she will be accommodated. The majority of people simply don’t agree that this is a significant impingement of religious liberty. The Republicans will probably attempt to use it as an election issue, indeed they appear to have already started. Given the popularity of ABC among the population at large, I doubt they will get much leverage from it. Note that the popularity of ABC doesn’t in any way validate its morality, but it does mean it will be covered by insurance.
In our society, the authority of the government comes from the consent of the governed. Which means that the opinions of the majority (with a few exceptions pertaining to the rights of the minority) determine the content of public morality.