We’ve all heard the screams of anguish. North
Carolina and Mississippi are denying homosexuals their human rights. Companies
and entertainers refuse to have anything to do with those states because of their
“crimes.” The heinous “crimes” include not forcing people to violate their
religious beliefs, and not forcing young women to share restrooms and shower
facilities with men.
Let’s look at what human rights really are.
First, most of us in the U.S. believe that we have a
constitutionally protected right to free exercise of religion. Note the wording;
that amendment tries to protect not just belief, but exercise of that religious belief. As long as the religious
exercise does no overt harm to others, it is to be protected.
Second, most of us believe it a human right to not
expose our private parts to members of the opposite sex unless we chose to do
so voluntarily. That requires restroom and locker room facilities separated by
sex, and that sex is to be determined by body construction. A man or teenage
boy who “identifies” as a woman does not thereby obtain the right to share a
shower or restroom with our teenage daughter. The irony is that many claim that
a constitutional right to privacy allows for unrestricted abortion, then they
turn right around and deny right to privacy to women in restrooms and locker
rooms.
Sadly, many today claim that “human rights” include
the right to force people to act contrary to conscience, to photograph or bake
cakes for homosexual weddings. That is true even though the “aggrieved” could
easily find another photographer or baker. They also claim that it is a human
right for a biological male to claim to identify as female and enter the precincts
where real females should be able to expect privacy.
This would be laughable if the results weren’t so
serious and if the proponents of these new “rights” weren’t
so successful at
publicizing their ideas. The promoters of these new “rights” are making inroads
on the real human rights we all should have. They use law, money, and celebrity
to convince people to ignore the obvious and support this nonsense. That will
continue unless those who believe in our true human rights speak out – loudly and
often.