gramps wrote:I am not sure what it means to say one standard of review is superior to another? What do you mean by that.
Anyway, I am just wondering something. Do you agree then that a court should except sincere religious believers from generally applicable laws, for example, criminal laws, because those laws burden religious practice? That was the big argument (at least one of them) in Smith and I would love to know what you think about that.
Because of RFRA, we have a strange situation out there. On the one hand, if I join the O Centro church in the states, I can legally trip my balls off with DMT brew (ayahuasca), share it even with my kids and parents (assuming they are members too), and never worry about the law coming down on me. This despite the fact that DMT is a Schedule I drug.
Here's the thing: religious minorities don't get exempted if the government can demonstrate that it has a "compelling interest" in enforcing the law against them. So for example, someone whose religion tells them to kill people isn't gonna get a pass. Neither is someone whose religion tells them not to let their kid get a blood transfusion. There are compelling reasons for the government to impose itself on conscience in those cases. But what happened with peyote is that the Court looked at the scientific evidence and found that peyote poses no real health risks, and therefore the government's supposed basis for the ban against peyote was specious. In that case, the Court found that the criminal law was violating people's conscience for no good reason.
This is actually a good example of the difference between the "rational basis" and "compelling interest" standards. Under "rational basis," the Court would have to just accept the government's health concerns about peyote, because they
are rational. Under "compelling interest," the Court gets to look closely at those concerns and decide whether they're legitimate or just some specious BS. In other words, "rational basis" asks whether the government has a
reason for violating conscience. "Compelling interest" asks whether it has a
good reason.
The danger of the weaker standard is that whenever you want to impose your religious views, you can just invent "rational" reasons for them. Want to ban gay marriage? No one cares if your science is fabricated, as long as you have some "scientific" reasons.