Religion Inc.
By Phil Mattera, Dirt Diggers Digest
A few days ago,
Alito wrote an outrageous opinion in the Hobby Lobby
case affirming the religious rights of corporations but insisting this would
not do much other than prevent a few companies from having to include several
kinds of birth control in their health insurance plans.
Alito’s claim about the narrow scope is already beginning to
unravel. Although the written opinion suggested that only four types of contraception
such as IUDs that religious zealots view as tantamount to abortion would be
affected, the Court subsequently ordered lower courts to rehear cases in
which employers sought to deny coverage for any form of birth control.
Business owners with other religious views contrary to federal
policy will undoubtedly soon speak up. This is exactly what Justice Ginsburg
warned about in her powerful dissent, calling Alito’s opinion “a decision of
startling breadth” that enables “commercial enterprises, including
corporations, along with partnerships and sole proprietorships, [to] opt out of
any law (saving only tax laws) they judge incompatible with their sincerely
held religious beliefs.”
In their religious zeal, Alito and the other conservatives on
the Court apparently forgot that corporations have been trying for the past
century to depict themselves as totally apart from religious and moral
concerns. Business enterprises are amoral institutions, laissez-faire
proponents such as Milton Friedman repeatedly told us—they exist only to
maximize their profit.
It has often been corporate critics who have brought
religious and moral issues into disputes over business practices.
Alito seems to embrace the notion of corporate social
responsibility (CSR) when he writes (p.23):
Modern corporate law does not require for-profit corporations to pursue profit at the expense of everything else, and many do not do so. For-profit corporations, with ownership approval, support a wide variety of charitable causes, and it is not at all uncommon for such corporations to further humanitarian and other altruistic objectives.
Alito even makes reference to growing acceptance of the benefit corporation,
which he describes as “a dual-purpose entity that seeks to achieve both a
benefit for the public and a profit for its owners” (p.24).
It’s unclear whether Alito sincerely believes in the validity of
CSR initiatives or is simply using this comparison to try to make his assertion
of corporate religious rights more palatable. Oddly, he describes as “unlikely”
the possibility that a large publicly traded company would ever make a
religious claim, even though such firms are among the biggest promoters of CSR.
Whatever Alito really thinks, his reference to CSR does not make
the ruling any more convincing. CSR is already problematic to the extent that
its practitioners try to use their supposedly high-minded voluntary initiatives
to discourage more stringent and more enforceable government regulation. But at
least these corporations are simply trying to influence government
policymaking rather than asserting an absolute right to be exempt because of
supposed religious convictions.
As much as Alito tries to deny it, his ruling has the potential
to cause a great deal of mischief. A religious component can already be seen in
the climate crisis denial camp; what will prevent companies from asserting that
their beliefs prevent them from complying with environmental regulations?
Is it
that hard to imagine that business owners holding a scripture-based belief that
women should be subservient to men may claim they should not be subject to
anti-discrimination and equal pay laws?
Alito seems to be opening the door to such aggressive stances
when he insists that “federal courts have no business addressing” the question
of whether a religious claim by a corporation is reasonable (p.36).
It’s true
that, in general, government should not be passing judgment on matters of
faith, but that principle falls apart when special interests try to use
religion to undermine democratically adopted public policies. It’s even worse
when those interests are employers asserting their beliefs at the expense of
their workers.
The Supreme Court has done considerable damage by elevating the
free speech rights of corporations; now it is compounding the sin by giving
those corporations special religious rights as well.