Here's how you quoted it:GreyICE wrote:Well we've moved past your nonsense interpretation of the 1st amendment thankfully, and moved past the idea that it was unduly disruptive to grant this.Coito ergo sum wrote:*snip*
Now we're down to arguing duration. Would there be an issue if the school district inquired as to the duration, and then suggested that 2 weeks was more appropriate? Probably not, no. That's a reasonable accommodation (5-6 day pilgrimage, traditional visit to the tomb, and 2-3 days travel time, combined with lunar and Gregorian calendars not meshing perfectly). In that hypothetical situation... I agree with SCOTUS. There is almost no point in arguing a hypothetical, because everyone involved always has their own details they are mentally adding to the hypothetical. So you end up arguing based on assumptions not stated.
If that's where we're left, then I think we've reached an agreement. Her duration may or may not have been overly long, but the school district violated the 1st amendment, and that's just not allowed.
Coito ergo sum wrote:SCOTUS hasn't chimed in on this particular issue, yet.GreyICE wrote:
Now we're down to arguing duration. Would there be an issue if the school district inquired as to the duration, and then suggested that 2 weeks was more appropriate? Probably not, no. That's a reasonable accommodation (5-6 day pilgrimage, traditional visit to the tomb, and 2-3 days travel time, combined with lunar and Gregorian calendars not meshing perfectly). In that hypothetical situation... I agree with SCOTUS.
The school need not incur more than minimal costs in order to accommodate an employee’s religious practices. An employer need not incur anything more than ordinary administrative costs, and can deny an accommodation if it would diminish efficiency (as 3 weeks of the regular teacher being away would, in fact, do). They also need not infringe on other employees’ job rights or benefits, impair workplace safety, or causes coworkers to carry the accommodated employee’s share of work (and here, obviously, 3 weeks out means that coworkers and substitutes would have to carry on the employee's share of work). Three weeks is a long time, and any employer would consider that a hardship. So, you say it's not a hardship - it's seems lengthy to the point of ridiculousness to me. Let's see where the court goes with it.
If the duration was overly long, than there was no violation, and the school can and will argue that any requested time off - even the week - was (a) not required by the religion because it only requires attendance once in the person's life (if they are able) and reasonable accommodation doesn't mean that they get to go anytime and every time they wan, and (b) that even a week or 10 days poses an undue burden because of its effect on classroom education and the cost to the school district - among other things. They will likely also argue that if this is a required reasonable accommodation of religion then any religious person must be given time off for any religious observance, even one that is not mandatory, and that would pose an undue administrative burden.GreyICE wrote:
There is almost no point in arguing a hypothetical, because everyone involved always has their own details they are mentally adding to the hypothetical. So you end up arguing based on assumptions not stated.
If that's where we're left, then I think we've reached an agreement. Her duration may or may not have been overly long, but the school district violated the 1st amendment, and that's just not allowed.
And, if there is a constitutional violation found that violation would be of the 14th Amendment, which INCORPORATES the freedoms of and from religion. The First Amendment does not apply directly to the school district. How much do you want to bet that in the Justice Department pleadings in the case, they will state exactly that?
Now I am utterly done with your senseless derails. I don't really fucking care to follow your wanderings, and I don't really care what you think about that. As I said before, I've pretty much been fucking done with you since you felt a burning desire to argue by altering my words, and everything since then has confirmed this was a giant waste of fucking time. People who feel the need to lie when quoting others are rarely worth it.
Lets do a final summary, which you have not objected to once so far: this action by the school district violated the first amendment, the DOJ is entirely right to intervene in first amendment cases, and what she was asking for was a reasonable accommodation.