Dispatches from the Culture Wars brings us a post entitled Sunday Blue Laws Should Be Abolished. Ed Brayton discusses an effort in Wichita, Kansas to allow stores to sell beer on Sunday. A local pastor is opposing it and gets dressed down by Ed for saying:
“It’s a moral issue,” claims Pastor Moore. “It is Sunday. I don’t think that liquor stores should be open on Sunday, because Sunday is a day of worship …. it’s a day of rest.”
Ed points out that this is, in fact, a legal issue. If Pastor Moore and his congregants want to rest on Sunday and not buy beer, nobody is going to hassle them about it. To the contrary, however, Pastor Moore and his congregants really want the state to be obliged to bring its police powers to bear and penalize those who have different opinions on the subject of buying beer on Sundays.
Indiana, of course, has similar laws. They strike me as particularly silly since you can buy beer in a bar or a restaurant on Sundays, you just can’t pick up a 6-pack in the store. For me, it’s more a nuisance than anything else. I’m not normally inclined toward drinking on Sundays in any case and, if I were, planning ahead by picking up enough beer on Saturday eliminates the problem. Still, I have to wonder what actual practical purpose these blue laws serve other than to symbolize obeisance of the government to certain religious preferences.