Don't tell Kim Davis about North Carolina's religious exemption law
Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis may face fines or even jail time for denying same-sex couples marriage licenses in Kentucky. But it’s a good thing she’s not clerking in North Carolina, because then her actions would have been protected by law.
The Movement Advancement Project (MAP) has released a report on state and federal religious exemptions and the consequences therein for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender Americans. Such legislation has been passed in roughly half of the United States, and, whether intentionally or not, it leaves the door open for various forms of discrimination against LGBT people—not to mention with women, people seeking healthcare, children, and other vulnerable groups.
According to MAP, a total of 21 states have some sort of broad, explicit religious exemption law on the books. It’s worth noting that 43% of all LGBT Americans—that’s nearly half—live in these states.