Not how I look at it. My re-wording :
 
More of that Leftist abuse of power.
We need to kick out the Leftists and make government regulations sane  
again.
 
"Government" isn't the enemy, BAD government is the enemy.
 
Billy
 
 
========================================================
 
 
 
12/29/2011 8:47:49 P.M. Pacific Standard Time, [email protected]  
writes:

More of that great government  regulation.

David 

  _   
 
“A society that does  not recognize that each individual has values of his 
own which he is entitled  to follow can have no respect for the dignity of 
the individual and cannot  really know freedom.”—Fredrich August von Hayek  



On 12/29/2011 2:31 PM,  [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  

 
Bishops Say Rules on Gay Parents Limit Freedom of  Religion
Laurie Goodstein ("The New York Times," December  28, 2011) 
Roman Catholic bishops in Illinois have shuttered most of the Catholic  
Charities affiliates in the state rather than comply with a new requirement  
that says they must consider same-sex couples as potential foster-care and  
adoptive parents if they want to receive state money. The charities have  
served for more than 40 years as a major link in the state’s social service  
network for poor and neglected children. 
The bishops have followed colleagues in Washington, D.C., and  
Massachusetts who had jettisoned their adoption services rather than comply  
with 
nondiscrimination laws. 
For the nation’s Catholic bishops, the Illinois requirement is a prime  
example of what they see as an escalating campaign by the government to  
trample on their religious freedom while expanding the rights of gay people.  
The 
idea that religious Americans are the victims of government-backed  
persecution is now a frequent theme not just for Catholic bishops, but also  
for 
Republican presidential candidates and conservative evangelicals. 
“In the name of tolerance, we’re not being tolerated,” said Bishop Thomas  
J. Paprocki of the Diocese of Springfield, Ill., a civil and canon lawyer  
who helped drive the church’s losing battle to retain its state contracts  
for foster care and adoption services. 
The Illinois experience indicates that the bishops face formidable  
opponents who also claim to have justice and the Constitution on their side.  
They 
include not only gay rights advocates, but also many religious  believers 
and churches that support gay equality (some Catholic legislators  among 
them). They frame the issue as a matter of civil rights, saying that  Catholic 
Charities was using taxpayer money to discriminate against same-sex  couples. 
Tim Kee, a teacher in Marion, Ill., who was turned away by Catholic  
Charities three years ago when he and his longtime partner, Rick Wade, tried  
to 
adopt a child, said: “We’re both Catholic, we love our church, but  Catholic 
Charities closed the door to us. To add insult to injury, my tax  dollars 
went to provide discrimination against me.” 
The bishops are engaged in the religious liberty battle on several  fronts. 
They have asked the Obama administration to lift a new requirement  that 
Catholic and other religiously affiliated hospitals, universities and  charity 
groups cover contraception in their employees’ health plans. A  decision 
has been expected for weeks now. 
At the same time, the bishops are protesting the recent denial of a  
federal contract to provide care for victims of sex trafficking, saying the  
decision was anti-Catholic. An official with the Department of Health and  
Human 
Services recently told a hearing on Capitol Hill that the bishops’  program 
was rejected because it did not provide the survivors of sex  trafficking, 
some of whom are rape victims, with referrals for abortions or  
contraceptives. 
Critics of the church argue that no group has a constitutional right to a  
government contract, especially if it refuses to provide required  services. 
But Anthony R. Picarello Jr., general counsel and associate general  
secretary of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, disagreed.  
“It’s 
true that the church doesn’t have a First Amendment right to have a  
government contract,” he said, “but it does have a First Amendment right not  
to 
be excluded from a contract based on its religious beliefs.” 
The controversy in Illinois began when the state legislature voted in  
November 2010 to legalize civil unions for same-sex couples, which the  state’s 
Catholic bishops lobbied against. The legislation was titled “The  Illinois 
Religious Freedom Protection and Civil Unions Act,” and Bishop  Paprocki 
said he was given the impression that it would not affect state  contracts for 
Catholic Charities and other religious social services. 
In New York State, religious groups lobbied for specific exemption  
language in the same-sex marriage bill. But bishops in Illinois did not  
negotiate, 
Bishop Paprocki said. 
“It would have been seen as, ‘We’re going to compromise on the principle  
as long as we get our exception.’ We didn’t want it to be seen as buying 
our  support,” he said. 
Catholic Charities is one of the nation’s most extensive social service  
networks, serving more than 10 million poor adults and children of many  
faiths across the country. It is made up of local affiliates that answer to  
local bishops and dioceses, but much of its revenue comes from the  government. 
Catholic Charities affiliates received a total of nearly $2.9  billion a 
year from the government in 2010, about 62 percent of its annual  revenue of 
$4.67 billion. Only 3 percent came from churches in the diocese  (the rest 
came from in-kind contributions, investments, program fees and  community 
donations). 
In Illinois, Catholic Charities in five of the six state dioceses had  
grown dependent on foster care contracts, receiving 60 percent to 92 percent  
of 
their revenues from the state, according to affidavits by the charities’  
directors. (Catholic Charities in the Archdiocese of Chicago pulled out of  
foster care services in 2007 because of problems with its insurance  
provider.) 
When the contracts came up for renewal in June, the state attorney  
general, along with the legal staff in the governor’s office and the  
Department of 
Children and Family Services, decided that the religious  providers on 
state contracts would no longer be able to reject same-sex  couples, said 
Kendall Marlowe, a spokesman for the department. 
The Catholic providers offered to refer same-sex couples to other  agencies 
(as they had been doing for unmarried couples), but that was not  
acceptable to the state, Mr. Marlowe said. “Separate but equal was not a  
sufficient 
solution on other civil rights issues in the past either,” he  said. 
Catholic Charities in the Diocese of Rockford decided at that point to  get 
out of the foster care business. But the bishops in Springfield, Peoria,  
Joliet and Belleville decided to fight, filing a lawsuit against the  state. 
Taking a completely different tack was the agency affiliated with the  
conservative Lutheran Church Missouri Synod, which, like the Catholic  Church, 
does not sanction same-sex relationships. Gene Svebakken, president  and 
chief executive of the agency, Lutheran Child and Family Services of  Illinois, 
visited all seven pastoral conferences in his state and explained  that the 
best option was to compromise and continue caring for the  children. 
“We’ve been around 140 years, and if we didn’t follow the law we’d go out 
 of business,” Mr. Svebakken said. “We believe it’s God-pleasing to serve  
these kids, and we know we do a good job.” 
In August, Judge John Schmidt, a circuit judge in Sangamon County, ruled  
against Catholic Charities, saying, “No citizen has a recognized legal right  
to a contract with the government.” He did not address the religious 
liberty  claims, ruling only that the state did not violate the church’s 
property  
rights. 
Three of the dioceses filed an appeal, but in November filed a motion to  
dismiss their lawsuit. The Dioceses of Peoria and Belleville are spinning  
off their state-financed social services, with the caseworkers, top  
executives and foster children all moving to new nonprofits that will no  
longer be 
affiliated with either diocese. 
Gary Huelsmann, executive director of Catholic Social Services of  Southern 
Illinois, in the Belleville Diocese, said the decision was  excruciating 
for everyone. 
“We have 600 children abused and neglected in an area where there are  
hardly any providers,” he said. “Us going out of business would have been  
detrimental to these children, and that’s a sin, too.” 
The work will be carried on, but the Catholic Church’s seminal, historic  
connection with it has been severed, noted Mr. Marlowe, the spokesman for  
the state’s child welfare agency. “The child welfare system that Catholic  
Charities helped build,” he said, “is now strong enough to survive their  
departure.”  
____________________________________
 
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