(Weirder is that your religious belief can be incorrect and is still protected. That is, if a Catholic says "it is my sincerely held religious belief that my Catholicism says I am prohibited from serving hot dog buns at my job in the school cafeteria," and the parish priest, bishop, and pope all say "uhhhh, no?" that person is still protected in their refusal to serve hot dog buns. Or in practice, sell contraception or get a vaccine, which is how we know the courts' opinions on the matter. An atheist's moral choices -- or even a religious person's moral choices which they don't ascribe to religion -- get no such protections.)
no subject
That's the US for ya.
(Weirder is that your religious belief can be incorrect and is still protected. That is, if a Catholic says "it is my sincerely held religious belief that my Catholicism says I am prohibited from serving hot dog buns at my job in the school cafeteria," and the parish priest, bishop, and pope all say "uhhhh, no?" that person is still protected in their refusal to serve hot dog buns. Or in practice, sell contraception or get a vaccine, which is how we know the courts' opinions on the matter. An atheist's moral choices -- or even a religious person's moral choices which they don't ascribe to religion -- get no such protections.)