Corolinth wrote:
Of course. Because the only people qualified to weigh in on religious freedom are priests and theologians. That's exactly the freedom of religion guaranteed by the Bill of Rights.
Since Fluke's stated position is that somehow mandating private institutions to provide birth control contrary to their own religious beliefs is somehow not a religious freedom issue
at all, but a women's health issue and ONLY a women's health issue, no, she has no insight to share, just as Vindicarre stated. The Bill of Rights guarantees "free exercise" not "free exercise unless it can be classified as a women's health issue."
So yes, it pretty much is the freedom of religion guaranteed by the Bill of Rights. Fluke has a right to say whatever she wants; she doesn't have a right to demand an audience for her bigoted ignorance before Congress.