Three years ago in 2015 Kelvin
Cochran, fire chief, was dismissed from his job because he is a Christian. The
city of Atlanta announced on Monday, October 15, 2018, that it will pay $1.2
million to Cochran for violating his First Amendment freedoms. Of course,
Atlanta is not acting on its own but is following the orders of a federal
court. Cochran made the following statement to The Daily Signal.
All my life, I dreamed of being a
firefighter, and I had to overcome many instances of discrimination because of
the color of my skin.
Those challenges and my faith taught me
the value of creating an inclusive, diverse, and tolerant environment in the
workplace. Regardless of any characteristic or belief of my fellow
firefighters, I was honored to serve alongside them.
Every day of my 34-year career, I would
have gladly laid down my life to protect anyone in Atlanta or in Shreveport [in
Louisiana], where I served before that – no matter who they were or what they
believed.
But in serving the public as a
firefighter, I did not forfeit my constitutional right to speak freely on my
own time.
Cochran was fired because he wrote a
book, and the book had one page where he wrote that homosexuality is against
the Christian lifestyle. Cochran was represented by Alliance Defending Freedom,
and Rachel del Guidice wrote the following about the case.
According to the Alliance Defending
Freedom, a nonprofit Christian public interest law firm, the U.S. District
Court for the Northern District of Georgia found that the city’s rules
regulating non-work-related speech, such as Cochran’s book, “were too broad,
and allowed city officials to unconstitutionally discriminate against views
with which they disagree.”
Ryan T. Anderson, senior research fellow
at The Heritage Foundation… said that Atlanta’s decision strengthens the
freedom of speech.
“This is a big win for the First
Amendment rights of all Americans,” Anderson said. “No one, not even public
servants, gives up their rights to freedom of speech or free exercise of
religion – not even if they hold beliefs that elites scorn.”
It is nice to hear of court cases
where conservatives win. This writer was upset with the firing of Cochran and
was happy to learn that he won his court case.
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