The Indiana Law is not the same as RFRA 1993 or pretty much any other state's law.
Indiana Law is based on RFRA 1993 but has additional provisions which allow free exercise of religion rights to any corporation, business or groups, irrespective of their religious beliefs . RFRA does not do that. The discrepancy in language is made abundantly clear in Sec 7 of the bill.
Indiana is opening the door wide open to any kind of broad ranged discrimination against race, sexual orientation etc., on religious grounds, whether or not any individual claiming their religious rights is even religious. So it's badly thought out law anyway.
At the same time it provides no counter against those being discriminated against by any so called - religious exercise of freedoms -
...or bigotry to give it its real description.
Bullshit answer. All section seven does is define the word "person". The Context of the law is defined in section Eight.
Sec. 7. As used in this chapter, "person" includes the following: (1) An individual.
(2) An organization, a religious society, a church, a body of communicants, or a group organized and operated primarily for religious purposes.
(3) A partnership, a limited liability company, a corporation, a company, a firm, a society, a joint-stock company, an unincorporated association, or another entity that:
(A) may sue and be sued; and
(B) exercises practices that are compelled or limited by a system of religious belief held by:
(i) an individual; or
(ii) the individuals;
who have control and substantial ownership of the entity, regardless of whether the entity is organized and operated for profit or nonprofit purposes.
The context of the law defined in section 8 is virtually identical. Yes it applies to individuals, the businesses they own, Corporations they may hold stock in and the Churches they attend. Not to exclude the Corp and Church themselves.
For your other concerns they are not addressed in the 1993 Federal Act.
The rights of a person who feels they have been discriminated against haven't diminished, they have avenues to seek on an individual basis. This keeps Governments out of the process and protects religious rights.
Try again.