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Hoist by their own RFRA

Social conservatives were overjoyed by the passage of RFRA, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, passed by Congress in 1990 to restrict government interference in religious practice. Their idea, of course,…

Social conservatives were overjoyed by the passage of RFRA, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, passed by Congress in 1990 to restrict government interference in religious practice. Their idea, of course, was that this would stop the Evil Secularists in Government from blocking Christians from doing their various rituals and practices.

Of course, the bill doesn’t (quite properly) just mention Chistianity. Which leads to amusing bits like this, when non-Christian groups keep insisting that should let them use controlled substances for religious purposes:

The administration is challenging the New Mexico group — O Centro Espirita Beneficiente Uniao Do Vegetal — and its practice of drinking hoasca, a sacred herbal tea that members believe connects them to God. The tea contains dimethyltryptamine, a controlled substance under the Controlled Substances Act and one the administration claims is banned by international treaty. The Supreme Court will decide whether to hear the case, Gonzales v. O Centro Espirita Beneficiente Uniao Do Vegetal, No. 04-1084, at its conference Friday.

O Centro Espirita was founded in Brazil in 1961. The tea, hoasca, which in the Quechuan Indian language means “vine of the soul,” “vine of the dead,” and “vision vine,” comes from the Amazon rainforest. Members drink the tea at least two times a month during ceremonies. Approximately 130 members of the church reside in the United States, 8,000 in Brazil. Brazil, a member of the international treaty at issue, has exempted hoasca from its controlled substances list.

But the Bush administration claims that no such exemption should exist in the United States. The administration is arguing that the high court should overturn a November 2004 en banc ruling from the 10th U.S Circuit Court of Appeals that affirmed an earlier injunction prohibiting the administration from enforcing the Controlled Substances Act and the United Nations Convention on Psychotropic Substances.

Ah. Well, the War on Drugs trumps other laws in this case — especially since, again, it’s not a mainstream conservative Christian sect being “inconvenienced.”

Lawyers from Freedman Boyd Daniels Hollander & Goldberg of Albuquerque, N.M., who are arguing for O Centro Espirita, say that the government failed to prove its case under the compelling interest standard. They write that the government “does not fairly summarize the facts” and that evidence shows the tea does not cause health problems or lead to drug abuse.

This is just the type of case in which religious practice should be exempted from government interference, says John Boyd, a lawyer for O Centro Espirita. He draws an analogy between this case and a hypothetical one in which the government reinstitutes Prohibition. “Under [the RFRA], the Catholic Church would be able to say, ‘We have to be able to conduct mass, and we need wine in order to do that,’ ” says Boyd. “The courts would say [that] unless the government can show that it had a genuine compelling interest of preventing the Catholic Church from using wine as its sacrament, then the Catholic Church would prevail under RFRA if it challenged Prohibition.”

[…] Furthermore, lawyers for O Centro Espirita point out in their brief that the government allows certain religious uses of peyote in the Native American Church: “The government has never attempted to explain how it can ask the courts to ignore the [Native American Church’s] possession, distribution, and ritual use of peyote while claiming that [O Centro Espirita’s] similar use of hoasca must be conclusively presumed to be a menace to society.” In 1994, Congress amended the American Indian Religious Freedom Act to say that Native Americans’ use of peyote for ceremonial purposes was lawful and could not be prohibited by law.

The 10th Circuit’s ruling is grounded in the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which protects individuals from governmental interference in the exercise of religion. Congress passed the act after the Supreme Court, in the 1990 case Employment Division v. Smith, affirmed Oregon’s prohibition on Native Americans’ use of peyote and marijuana for religious purposes, ruling that the First Amendment free exercise clause afforded them no protection. And although the Supreme Court struck down part of the RFRA in the 1997 case City of Boerne v. Flores, the act still applies to federal laws such as the Controlled Substances Act.

Under the RFRA, the government must show that it has a “compelling governmental interest” in restricting the religious practice and that the interest is fulfilled in the “least restrictive” way. The 10th Circuit ruled that the government had not proved that use of the tea, which contains 25 mg of DMT per typical serving, would lead to adverse health effects or abuse of the drug outside of a religious context.

That pesky Law of Unintended Consequences rears its ugly head again …

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3 thoughts on “Hoist by their own RFRA”

  1. RFRA and the Religious Liberty Protection Act which followed in 1998 had huge bipartisan support. For example, Edward Kennedy was a proponent of the latter bill. Um, isn’t seeking a particular outcome over and against applying legal principles judicial activism?

    Emerson said a foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds.

    Call me a hobgoblin. The 10th Circuit is correct.

  2. The appeals court rightly ruled in favor of the church, and the Supremes should have thrown the Bush administration’s appeal in the crapper. Instead, they are going to hear the case, and they ought to rule decisively on the side of freedom.

    The church should win this case, of course. It’s about the right to control one’s own consciousness. What’s more fundamental than that? How can anyone possibly argue that there is a constitutional right to rip apart a baby in your womb, but not a constitutional right to do as you please with your own mind? Asshats!

    I took hoasca (ayahuasca) prepared by a shaman in the Peruvian Amazon a few years back, and it was one of the most incredible trips of my life.

    Jack-booted thugs attack church

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