T
_thaddeus
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$600 a day = $3,000 per week = $156,000 per year. (plus expenses) “in good conscience” - Sounds ok.
No, Kansas, you can’t ban contractors from boycotting Israel
https://www.kansascity.com/opinion/editorials/article197720274.html
No, Kansas, you can’t ban contractors from boycotting Israel
https://www.kansascity.com/opinion/editorials/article197720274.html
A federal judge in Topeka has ruled that Kansas cannot tell contractors what they can and cannot boycott. That would seem obvious to anyone familiar with free speech protections under the First Amendment.
But last summer, Kansas passed a law requiring all those who contract with the state to certify that they are not boycotting Israel.
Why? In his opinion blocking enforcement of the law while the suit by the American Civil Liberties Union continues, U.S. District Judge Daniel Crabtree wrote that its supporters in the Kansas Legislature argued that it was intended “to stop people from antagonizing Israel.”
They “emphasized the need to oppose ‘Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions’ campaigns,” Crabree wrote, “which protest the Israeli government’s treatment of Palestinians in the occupied territories.”
In other words, the law is supposed to limit political speech. A similar bill proposed in Congress, the Israel Anti-Boycott Act, would criminalize such speech outright.
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The ACLU suit challenging the law was brought on behalf of Esther Koontz, a Mennonite math curriculum coach from Wichita who had been encouraged by her church to join a boycott of Israeli companies last spring.
A couple of months after Koontz decided to stop buying Israeli products, she was invited to start coaching teachers across the state, as part of the Kansas Department of Education’s Math and Science Partnerships program.
She was eager to take on the extra work, which pays $600 a day plus expenses. But the program director told her that she first had to sign a certificate that she wasn’t boycotting Israel.
After a lot of thought, Koontz decided that she couldn’t in good conscience do that.
The program director said that in that case, she couldn’t have a contract with the state.
In its defense, Kansas argued that it would have given Koontz a waiver on religious grounds had she asked for one.
But had she reached the same conclusion on non-religious grounds, she’d still have the same right to express herself politically.
Kansas also argued that Israel might refuse to do business with or in the state if it did not punish boycotters. But it presented no evidence of any threat to the Kansas economy.
And as a thought exercise, maybe Republican proponents of the law should consider how they’d react if the state barred boycotts of Keurig, or Starbucks, or Nordstrom, or Target or the NFL.
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