Instead of addressing existential, teleological, or cosmological matters, Creativity presents only a singular concern of racial dominance, framed in terms of social, political, and ideological struggles. Thus, Creativity does not address ultimate ideas.
Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Showing posts with label Creativity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Creativity. Show all posts
Sunday, January 13, 2019
10th Circuit: Church of the Creator Does Not Qualify As A "Religion"
In Hale v. Federal Bureau of Prisons, (10th Cir., Jan. 7, 2019), the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals, in a prisoner free exercise case, held that the white supremacist Church of the Creator does not qualify as a "religion". Thus the protections of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act do not apply to claims of an inmate whose participation in Creativity was limited because of its designation as a security threat group. The court applied a 5-factor test set out in earlier cases to determine whether Creativity was a religious belief system. The court said in part:
Labels:
Creativity,
Prisoner cases
Monday, April 02, 2018
Creativity Movement Is Not A "Religion"
In Hale v. Federal Bureau of Prisons, (D CO, March 28, 2018), a Colorado federal district court in a 33-page opinion held that the White supremacist Creativity movement is not a "religion" for purposes of the Free Exercise clause of the First Amendment or the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. In reaching this conclusion, the court (applying tests from a 1996 10th Circuit opinion) said that while Creativity has many of the accoutrements of religion, several other factors weigh against accepting its claim as being religious:
Creativity lacks an ultimate belief system that addresses philosophical and existential issues such as the nature of man, whether there is life after death, what role man plays in the universe, and the like. These beliefs address only the relative positions of people of different races during their lifetimes. Thus, the Court finds that Creativity fails to address ultimate ideas or metaphysical issues because it lacks any cosmological, teleological and existential focus....
Creativity does have a moral or ethical system, found mostly in its commandments. These commandments take definitive positions on what constitutes good, evil, right, and wrong in Creativity’s belief system. However, the system is less of a system and more of a single, binary precept.... Also at the same time, Creativity creates duties to itself, not to a higher power. There is no religious connotation to Creativity’s moral or ethical system; it is entirely based on the secular concern of white supremacy....
Creativity does not attempt to answer human kind’s basic questions; it either avoids questions or to the extent it has an answer, that answer is reduced to the single-dimensional idea of white dominance.
Labels:
Colorado,
Creativity,
Prisoner cases,
RFRA
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