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Activist anti-religious L**T shutting down religious foster care and adoption agencies
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Jun 12, 2019 20:21:46   #
Zemirah Loc: Sojourner En Route...
 
by Kate Anderson • June 12, 2019


To most people, helping orphans and children in the foster system find stable homes is a top priority that transcends politics and ideology. These vulnerable children, however, are quickly losing their advocates, and any hope for a stable, loving family because of rampant anti-religious bias in American society today.

In the United States, more than 400,000 children in the foster system are waiting for homes. At least 4% of children are adopted within a year of entering foster care, and 85% of children in foster care have at least two placements in their first 12 months. Eighty percent of prospective foster parents who work with the state drop out within two years. The terrible reality is that a massive number of children are spending crucial years of their lives without a stable home environment. The foster crisis is so extreme that some states are hosting foster children in hotels and office buildings because there is nowhere else to place them.

Several state governments, spurred on by L**T activist groups, are seeking to shut down some of the most effective foster care and adoption providers in the country in spite of all this. The reason? These providers believe that children do best in homes with a married mother and father, and they want to place children into those environments. Although the Constitution guarantees the right to live and work in accordance with our deeply held religious beliefs, state governments across the nation are attempting to punish religious groups, even if it means hurting vulnerable children.

Same-sex couples and unmarried couples have a multitude of options when it comes to fostering or adopting a child. Every state has identical requirements for opposite-sex and same-sex couples, and even L**T advocacy groups admit that there are no state-level restrictions against same-sex couples fostering or adopting. In some states, however, private foster care and adoption providers are permitted to prioritize placement with married, opposite-sex couples if their reasons for doing so are based in religious convictions, and that, say the L**T activists, is intolerable.

Many state governments are so cowed by political dogma that they are increasingly willing to compromise foster children’s best interests and shut down religious providers -- even if there are laws specifically protecting them. In 2015, Michigan passed a law protecting the rights of faith-based foster care and adoption providers to operate consistently with their religious beliefs, but Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, who took office this year, has violated that law, promising to cut off funding from faith-based providers that want to place children with a married mother and father.

This is anti-religious hostility, and it is similar to what the U.S. Supreme Court condemned in its ruling in Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission. In that case, the Supreme Court found that the state of Colorado had acted with unconstitutional hostility toward cake artist Jack Phillips, and it required the state to cease its hostile actions.

Catholic Charities West Michigan, represented by Alliance Defending Freedom, has filed a lawsuit against the Michigan attorney general’s discriminatory decision. The lawsuit argues that there are many providers, including state-run providers, who are happy to place children for foster care and adoption with same-sex couples and unmarried couples -- so allowing faith-based organizations to place children consistent with their religious beliefs only increases the number of available homes for children.

Religious foster care and adoption providers play a unique role in society. These faith-based organizations are often the best at finding homes for children in particularly challenging situations, such as groups of siblings, older children, and special-needs children. In 2016, 45% of the children adopted through Catholic Charities had special needs - a percentage that vastly outstrips the national average.

Eliminating religious foster care and adoption agencies because of anti-religious bias cuts off thousands of children from a permanent home. That is more than the logical conclusion; it is reality in parts of the country where anti-religious hostility has succeeded in shutting down religious adoption organizations.

Catholic Charities has already been driven out of Boston, Washington, San Francisco, Buffalo, and the entire state of Illinois - with devastating results for children. In Illinois, the shutdown of Catholic Charities drove thousands of foster parents out of the system and led to roughly 3,000 children being displaced.

Those children are real, tangible victims of an anti-religious bias that is rampant in American society today. ADF is representing other faith-based adoption organizations facing closure due to government-sanctioned discrimination. In New York, New Hope Family Services has been targeted by state officials because it prioritizes placing children in homes with a married mother and father. The state has threatened to shut down New Hope’s adoption program completely if it seeks to uphold its religious principles even though New Hope has never accepted a dollar in state funding. It receives all of its support from churches, private sources, and fees paid by adoptive families. Shortly before attempting to shut it down, the state actually sent New Hope a letter praising it for the strength of its adoption program.

Adoption providers are not the only groups facing relentless anti-religious bias. Private businesses, like Country Mill Farms in Charlotte, Michigan, have been expelled from the marketplace and banned from selling their produce because of the owners’ religious beliefs. After Country Mill’s owner posted a statement of his Catholic beliefs about marriage on Facebook, East Lansing, Mich., city officials banned his family farm from participating in the city-run farmer’s market. It even modified its market policies to specifically target Country Mill and exclude the farm from the market. Following a lawsuit by ADF, a federal judge issued a preliminary ruling requiring Country Mill Farms to be reinstated while the case continued.

But many other businesses and business owners have not been so fortunate. Barronelle Stutzman, the owner of Arlene’s Flowers in Richland, Washington, was targeted by her state’s attorney general and sued in her personal capacity after she respectfully declined to create custom floral arrangements to celebrate a longtime customer and friend’s same-sex wedding. The ACLU also sued her in her personal capacity. And now, after a second adverse ruling from the Washington Supreme Court, Stutzman is still at risk of losing her business, her retirement, and her personal assets. She has appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court again.

Even though religious freedom is protected by the Constitution, it is now under vicious assault from L**T l*****t activists and state governments. This is not merely a contest of ideas; the stakes in the real world are terribly high, and the collateral damage for vulnerable children is devastating. America is based on the principle of allowing everyone to live and work in accordance with their own conscience, and violating that principle by seeking to eliminate religious liberty for those with whom we disagree is resulting in suffering for the most vulnerable among us.


https://acton.org/pub/commentary/2019/06/12/anti-religious-hostility-takes-aim-foster-care-and-adoption-agencies?
Acton Institute
Kate Anderson, Legal counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom.

Reply
Jun 12, 2019 21:18:16   #
Mr. Rogers
 
Zemirah wrote:
by Kate Anderson • June 12, 2019


To most people, helping orphans and children in the foster system find stable homes is a top priority that transcends politics and ideology. These vulnerable children, however, are quickly losing their advocates, and any hope for a stable, loving family because of rampant anti-religious bias in American society today.

In the United States, more than 400,000 children in the foster system are waiting for homes. At least 4% of children are adopted within a year of entering foster care, and 85% of children in foster care have at least two placements in their first 12 months. Eighty percent of prospective foster parents who work with the state drop out within two years. The terrible reality is that a massive number of children are spending crucial years of their lives without a stable home environment. The foster crisis is so extreme that some states are hosting foster children in hotels and office buildings because there is nowhere else to place them.

Several state governments, spurred on by L**T activist groups, are seeking to shut down some of the most effective foster care and adoption providers in the country in spite of all this. The reason? These providers believe that children do best in homes with a married mother and father, and they want to place children into those environments. Although the Constitution guarantees the right to live and work in accordance with our deeply held religious beliefs, state governments across the nation are attempting to punish religious groups, even if it means hurting vulnerable children.

Same-sex couples and unmarried couples have a multitude of options when it comes to fostering or adopting a child. Every state has identical requirements for opposite-sex and same-sex couples, and even L**T advocacy groups admit that there are no state-level restrictions against same-sex couples fostering or adopting. In some states, however, private foster care and adoption providers are permitted to prioritize placement with married, opposite-sex couples if their reasons for doing so are based in religious convictions, and that, say the L**T activists, is intolerable.

Many state governments are so cowed by political dogma that they are increasingly willing to compromise foster children’s best interests and shut down religious providers -- even if there are laws specifically protecting them. In 2015, Michigan passed a law protecting the rights of faith-based foster care and adoption providers to operate consistently with their religious beliefs, but Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, who took office this year, has violated that law, promising to cut off funding from faith-based providers that want to place children with a married mother and father.

This is anti-religious hostility, and it is similar to what the U.S. Supreme Court condemned in its ruling in Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission. In that case, the Supreme Court found that the state of Colorado had acted with unconstitutional hostility toward cake artist Jack Phillips, and it required the state to cease its hostile actions.

Catholic Charities West Michigan, represented by Alliance Defending Freedom, has filed a lawsuit against the Michigan attorney general’s discriminatory decision. The lawsuit argues that there are many providers, including state-run providers, who are happy to place children for foster care and adoption with same-sex couples and unmarried couples -- so allowing faith-based organizations to place children consistent with their religious beliefs only increases the number of available homes for children.

Religious foster care and adoption providers play a unique role in society. These faith-based organizations are often the best at finding homes for children in particularly challenging situations, such as groups of siblings, older children, and special-needs children. In 2016, 45% of the children adopted through Catholic Charities had special needs - a percentage that vastly outstrips the national average.

Eliminating religious foster care and adoption agencies because of anti-religious bias cuts off thousands of children from a permanent home. That is more than the logical conclusion; it is reality in parts of the country where anti-religious hostility has succeeded in shutting down religious adoption organizations.

Catholic Charities has already been driven out of Boston, Washington, San Francisco, Buffalo, and the entire state of Illinois - with devastating results for children. In Illinois, the shutdown of Catholic Charities drove thousands of foster parents out of the system and led to roughly 3,000 children being displaced.

Those children are real, tangible victims of an anti-religious bias that is rampant in American society today. ADF is representing other faith-based adoption organizations facing closure due to government-sanctioned discrimination. In New York, New Hope Family Services has been targeted by state officials because it prioritizes placing children in homes with a married mother and father. The state has threatened to shut down New Hope’s adoption program completely if it seeks to uphold its religious principles even though New Hope has never accepted a dollar in state funding. It receives all of its support from churches, private sources, and fees paid by adoptive families. Shortly before attempting to shut it down, the state actually sent New Hope a letter praising it for the strength of its adoption program.

Adoption providers are not the only groups facing relentless anti-religious bias. Private businesses, like Country Mill Farms in Charlotte, Michigan, have been expelled from the marketplace and banned from selling their produce because of the owners’ religious beliefs. After Country Mill’s owner posted a statement of his Catholic beliefs about marriage on Facebook, East Lansing, Mich., city officials banned his family farm from participating in the city-run farmer’s market. It even modified its market policies to specifically target Country Mill and exclude the farm from the market. Following a lawsuit by ADF, a federal judge issued a preliminary ruling requiring Country Mill Farms to be reinstated while the case continued.

But many other businesses and business owners have not been so fortunate. Barronelle Stutzman, the owner of Arlene’s Flowers in Richland, Washington, was targeted by her state’s attorney general and sued in her personal capacity after she respectfully declined to create custom floral arrangements to celebrate a longtime customer and friend’s same-sex wedding. The ACLU also sued her in her personal capacity. And now, after a second adverse ruling from the Washington Supreme Court, Stutzman is still at risk of losing her business, her retirement, and her personal assets. She has appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court again.

Even though religious freedom is protected by the Constitution, it is now under vicious assault from L**T l*****t activists and state governments. This is not merely a contest of ideas; the stakes in the real world are terribly high, and the collateral damage for vulnerable children is devastating. America is based on the principle of allowing everyone to live and work in accordance with their own conscience, and violating that principle by seeking to eliminate religious liberty for those with whom we disagree is resulting in suffering for the most vulnerable among us.


https://acton.org/pub/commentary/2019/06/12/anti-religious-hostility-takes-aim-foster-care-and-adoption-agencies?
Acton Institute
Kate Anderson, Legal counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom.
by Kate Anderson • June 12, 2019 br br br To mos... (show quote)


L***Q demands are unnatural and immoral.

Reply
Jun 12, 2019 22:54:59   #
Canuckus Deploracus Loc: North of the wall
 
Zemirah wrote:
by Kate Anderson • June 12, 2019


To most people, helping orphans and children in the foster system find stable homes is a top priority that transcends politics and ideology. These vulnerable children, however, are quickly losing their advocates, and any hope for a stable, loving family because of rampant anti-religious bias in American society today.

In the United States, more than 400,000 children in the foster system are waiting for homes. At least 4% of children are adopted within a year of entering foster care, and 85% of children in foster care have at least two placements in their first 12 months. Eighty percent of prospective foster parents who work with the state drop out within two years. The terrible reality is that a massive number of children are spending crucial years of their lives without a stable home environment. The foster crisis is so extreme that some states are hosting foster children in hotels and office buildings because there is nowhere else to place them.

Several state governments, spurred on by L**T activist groups, are seeking to shut down some of the most effective foster care and adoption providers in the country in spite of all this. The reason? These providers believe that children do best in homes with a married mother and father, and they want to place children into those environments. Although the Constitution guarantees the right to live and work in accordance with our deeply held religious beliefs, state governments across the nation are attempting to punish religious groups, even if it means hurting vulnerable children.

Same-sex couples and unmarried couples have a multitude of options when it comes to fostering or adopting a child. Every state has identical requirements for opposite-sex and same-sex couples, and even L**T advocacy groups admit that there are no state-level restrictions against same-sex couples fostering or adopting. In some states, however, private foster care and adoption providers are permitted to prioritize placement with married, opposite-sex couples if their reasons for doing so are based in religious convictions, and that, say the L**T activists, is intolerable.

Many state governments are so cowed by political dogma that they are increasingly willing to compromise foster children’s best interests and shut down religious providers -- even if there are laws specifically protecting them. In 2015, Michigan passed a law protecting the rights of faith-based foster care and adoption providers to operate consistently with their religious beliefs, but Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, who took office this year, has violated that law, promising to cut off funding from faith-based providers that want to place children with a married mother and father.

This is anti-religious hostility, and it is similar to what the U.S. Supreme Court condemned in its ruling in Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission. In that case, the Supreme Court found that the state of Colorado had acted with unconstitutional hostility toward cake artist Jack Phillips, and it required the state to cease its hostile actions.

Catholic Charities West Michigan, represented by Alliance Defending Freedom, has filed a lawsuit against the Michigan attorney general’s discriminatory decision. The lawsuit argues that there are many providers, including state-run providers, who are happy to place children for foster care and adoption with same-sex couples and unmarried couples -- so allowing faith-based organizations to place children consistent with their religious beliefs only increases the number of available homes for children.

Religious foster care and adoption providers play a unique role in society. These faith-based organizations are often the best at finding homes for children in particularly challenging situations, such as groups of siblings, older children, and special-needs children. In 2016, 45% of the children adopted through Catholic Charities had special needs - a percentage that vastly outstrips the national average.

Eliminating religious foster care and adoption agencies because of anti-religious bias cuts off thousands of children from a permanent home. That is more than the logical conclusion; it is reality in parts of the country where anti-religious hostility has succeeded in shutting down religious adoption organizations.

Catholic Charities has already been driven out of Boston, Washington, San Francisco, Buffalo, and the entire state of Illinois - with devastating results for children. In Illinois, the shutdown of Catholic Charities drove thousands of foster parents out of the system and led to roughly 3,000 children being displaced.

Those children are real, tangible victims of an anti-religious bias that is rampant in American society today. ADF is representing other faith-based adoption organizations facing closure due to government-sanctioned discrimination. In New York, New Hope Family Services has been targeted by state officials because it prioritizes placing children in homes with a married mother and father. The state has threatened to shut down New Hope’s adoption program completely if it seeks to uphold its religious principles even though New Hope has never accepted a dollar in state funding. It receives all of its support from churches, private sources, and fees paid by adoptive families. Shortly before attempting to shut it down, the state actually sent New Hope a letter praising it for the strength of its adoption program.

Adoption providers are not the only groups facing relentless anti-religious bias. Private businesses, like Country Mill Farms in Charlotte, Michigan, have been expelled from the marketplace and banned from selling their produce because of the owners’ religious beliefs. After Country Mill’s owner posted a statement of his Catholic beliefs about marriage on Facebook, East Lansing, Mich., city officials banned his family farm from participating in the city-run farmer’s market. It even modified its market policies to specifically target Country Mill and exclude the farm from the market. Following a lawsuit by ADF, a federal judge issued a preliminary ruling requiring Country Mill Farms to be reinstated while the case continued.

But many other businesses and business owners have not been so fortunate. Barronelle Stutzman, the owner of Arlene’s Flowers in Richland, Washington, was targeted by her state’s attorney general and sued in her personal capacity after she respectfully declined to create custom floral arrangements to celebrate a longtime customer and friend’s same-sex wedding. The ACLU also sued her in her personal capacity. And now, after a second adverse ruling from the Washington Supreme Court, Stutzman is still at risk of losing her business, her retirement, and her personal assets. She has appealed to the U.S. Supreme Courtdeviancy...
Even though religious freedom is protected by the Constitution, it is now under vicious assault from L**T l*****t activists and state governments. This is not merely a contest of ideas; the stakes in the real world are terribly high, and the collateral damage for vulnerable children is devastating. America is based on the principle of allowing everyone to live and work in accordance with their own conscience, and violating that principle by seeking to eliminate religious liberty for those with whom we disagree is resulting in suffering for the most vulnerable among us.


https://acton.org/pub/commentary/2019/06/12/anti-religious-hostility-takes-aim-foster-care-and-adoption-agencies?
Acton Institute
Kate Anderson, Legal counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom.
by Kate Anderson • June 12, 2019 br br br To mos... (show quote)


Things like this make me want to spit...

There was little t***h to the claim of desiring e******y and tolerance back in the day...

This is outright aggression towards any and all who don't support their deviancy...

Thanks for the article

Reply
 
 
Jun 12, 2019 23:54:53   #
debeda
 
Zemirah wrote:
by Kate Anderson • June 12, 2019


To most people, helping orphans and children in the foster system find stable homes is a top priority that transcends politics and ideology. These vulnerable children, however, are quickly losing their advocates, and any hope for a stable, loving family because of rampant anti-religious bias in American society today.

In the United States, more than 400,000 children in the foster system are waiting for homes. At least 4% of children are adopted within a year of entering foster care, and 85% of children in foster care have at least two placements in their first 12 months. Eighty percent of prospective foster parents who work with the state drop out within two years. The terrible reality is that a massive number of children are spending crucial years of their lives without a stable home environment. The foster crisis is so extreme that some states are hosting foster children in hotels and office buildings because there is nowhere else to place them.

Several state governments, spurred on by L**T activist groups, are seeking to shut down some of the most effective foster care and adoption providers in the country in spite of all this. The reason? These providers believe that children do best in homes with a married mother and father, and they want to place children into those environments. Although the Constitution guarantees the right to live and work in accordance with our deeply held religious beliefs, state governments across the nation are attempting to punish religious groups, even if it means hurting vulnerable children.

Same-sex couples and unmarried couples have a multitude of options when it comes to fostering or adopting a child. Every state has identical requirements for opposite-sex and same-sex couples, and even L**T advocacy groups admit that there are no state-level restrictions against same-sex couples fostering or adopting. In some states, however, private foster care and adoption providers are permitted to prioritize placement with married, opposite-sex couples if their reasons for doing so are based in religious convictions, and that, say the L**T activists, is intolerable.

Many state governments are so cowed by political dogma that they are increasingly willing to compromise foster children’s best interests and shut down religious providers -- even if there are laws specifically protecting them. In 2015, Michigan passed a law protecting the rights of faith-based foster care and adoption providers to operate consistently with their religious beliefs, but Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, who took office this year, has violated that law, promising to cut off funding from faith-based providers that want to place children with a married mother and father.

This is anti-religious hostility, and it is similar to what the U.S. Supreme Court condemned in its ruling in Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission. In that case, the Supreme Court found that the state of Colorado had acted with unconstitutional hostility toward cake artist Jack Phillips, and it required the state to cease its hostile actions.

Catholic Charities West Michigan, represented by Alliance Defending Freedom, has filed a lawsuit against the Michigan attorney general’s discriminatory decision. The lawsuit argues that there are many providers, including state-run providers, who are happy to place children for foster care and adoption with same-sex couples and unmarried couples -- so allowing faith-based organizations to place children consistent with their religious beliefs only increases the number of available homes for children.

Religious foster care and adoption providers play a unique role in society. These faith-based organizations are often the best at finding homes for children in particularly challenging situations, such as groups of siblings, older children, and special-needs children. In 2016, 45% of the children adopted through Catholic Charities had special needs - a percentage that vastly outstrips the national average.

Eliminating religious foster care and adoption agencies because of anti-religious bias cuts off thousands of children from a permanent home. That is more than the logical conclusion; it is reality in parts of the country where anti-religious hostility has succeeded in shutting down religious adoption organizations.

Catholic Charities has already been driven out of Boston, Washington, San Francisco, Buffalo, and the entire state of Illinois - with devastating results for children. In Illinois, the shutdown of Catholic Charities drove thousands of foster parents out of the system and led to roughly 3,000 children being displaced.

Those children are real, tangible victims of an anti-religious bias that is rampant in American society today. ADF is representing other faith-based adoption organizations facing closure due to government-sanctioned discrimination. In New York, New Hope Family Services has been targeted by state officials because it prioritizes placing children in homes with a married mother and father. The state has threatened to shut down New Hope’s adoption program completely if it seeks to uphold its religious principles even though New Hope has never accepted a dollar in state funding. It receives all of its support from churches, private sources, and fees paid by adoptive families. Shortly before attempting to shut it down, the state actually sent New Hope a letter praising it for the strength of its adoption program.

Adoption providers are not the only groups facing relentless anti-religious bias. Private businesses, like Country Mill Farms in Charlotte, Michigan, have been expelled from the marketplace and banned from selling their produce because of the owners’ religious beliefs. After Country Mill’s owner posted a statement of his Catholic beliefs about marriage on Facebook, East Lansing, Mich., city officials banned his family farm from participating in the city-run farmer’s market. It even modified its market policies to specifically target Country Mill and exclude the farm from the market. Following a lawsuit by ADF, a federal judge issued a preliminary ruling requiring Country Mill Farms to be reinstated while the case continued.

But many other businesses and business owners have not been so fortunate. Barronelle Stutzman, the owner of Arlene’s Flowers in Richland, Washington, was targeted by her state’s attorney general and sued in her personal capacity after she respectfully declined to create custom floral arrangements to celebrate a longtime customer and friend’s same-sex wedding. The ACLU also sued her in her personal capacity. And now, after a second adverse ruling from the Washington Supreme Court, Stutzman is still at risk of losing her business, her retirement, and her personal assets. She has appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court again.

Even though religious freedom is protected by the Constitution, it is now under vicious assault from L**T l*****t activists and state governments. This is not merely a contest of ideas; the stakes in the real world are terribly high, and the collateral damage for vulnerable children is devastating. America is based on the principle of allowing everyone to live and work in accordance with their own conscience, and violating that principle by seeking to eliminate religious liberty for those with whom we disagree is resulting in suffering for the most vulnerable among us.


https://acton.org/pub/commentary/2019/06/12/anti-religious-hostility-takes-aim-foster-care-and-adoption-agencies?
Acton Institute
Kate Anderson, Legal counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom.
by Kate Anderson • June 12, 2019 br br br To mos... (show quote)


I'm so sick and tired of "social awareness" undermining safety nets, especially for children. Get RID of these sick, inhuman pols!!!!!!!!!!!

Reply
Jun 12, 2019 23:55:16   #
debeda
 
Canuckus Deploracus wrote:
Things like this make me want to spit...

There was little t***h to the claim of desiring e******y and tolerance back in the day...

This is outright aggression towards any and all who don't support their deviancy...

Thanks for the article



Reply
Jun 13, 2019 00:42:33   #
BigMike Loc: yerington nv
 
Zemirah wrote:
by Kate Anderson • June 12, 2019


To most people, helping orphans and children in the foster system find stable homes is a top priority that transcends politics and ideology. These vulnerable children, however, are quickly losing their advocates, and any hope for a stable, loving family because of rampant anti-religious bias in American society today.

In the United States, more than 400,000 children in the foster system are waiting for homes. At least 4% of children are adopted within a year of entering foster care, and 85% of children in foster care have at least two placements in their first 12 months. Eighty percent of prospective foster parents who work with the state drop out within two years. The terrible reality is that a massive number of children are spending crucial years of their lives without a stable home environment. The foster crisis is so extreme that some states are hosting foster children in hotels and office buildings because there is nowhere else to place them.

Several state governments, spurred on by L**T activist groups, are seeking to shut down some of the most effective foster care and adoption providers in the country in spite of all this. The reason? These providers believe that children do best in homes with a married mother and father, and they want to place children into those environments. Although the Constitution guarantees the right to live and work in accordance with our deeply held religious beliefs, state governments across the nation are attempting to punish religious groups, even if it means hurting vulnerable children.

Same-sex couples and unmarried couples have a multitude of options when it comes to fostering or adopting a child. Every state has identical requirements for opposite-sex and same-sex couples, and even L**T advocacy groups admit that there are no state-level restrictions against same-sex couples fostering or adopting. In some states, however, private foster care and adoption providers are permitted to prioritize placement with married, opposite-sex couples if their reasons for doing so are based in religious convictions, and that, say the L**T activists, is intolerable.

Many state governments are so cowed by political dogma that they are increasingly willing to compromise foster children’s best interests and shut down religious providers -- even if there are laws specifically protecting them. In 2015, Michigan passed a law protecting the rights of faith-based foster care and adoption providers to operate consistently with their religious beliefs, but Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, who took office this year, has violated that law, promising to cut off funding from faith-based providers that want to place children with a married mother and father.

This is anti-religious hostility, and it is similar to what the U.S. Supreme Court condemned in its ruling in Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission. In that case, the Supreme Court found that the state of Colorado had acted with unconstitutional hostility toward cake artist Jack Phillips, and it required the state to cease its hostile actions.

Catholic Charities West Michigan, represented by Alliance Defending Freedom, has filed a lawsuit against the Michigan attorney general’s discriminatory decision. The lawsuit argues that there are many providers, including state-run providers, who are happy to place children for foster care and adoption with same-sex couples and unmarried couples -- so allowing faith-based organizations to place children consistent with their religious beliefs only increases the number of available homes for children.

Religious foster care and adoption providers play a unique role in society. These faith-based organizations are often the best at finding homes for children in particularly challenging situations, such as groups of siblings, older children, and special-needs children. In 2016, 45% of the children adopted through Catholic Charities had special needs - a percentage that vastly outstrips the national average.

Eliminating religious foster care and adoption agencies because of anti-religious bias cuts off thousands of children from a permanent home. That is more than the logical conclusion; it is reality in parts of the country where anti-religious hostility has succeeded in shutting down religious adoption organizations.

Catholic Charities has already been driven out of Boston, Washington, San Francisco, Buffalo, and the entire state of Illinois - with devastating results for children. In Illinois, the shutdown of Catholic Charities drove thousands of foster parents out of the system and led to roughly 3,000 children being displaced.

Those children are real, tangible victims of an anti-religious bias that is rampant in American society today. ADF is representing other faith-based adoption organizations facing closure due to government-sanctioned discrimination. In New York, New Hope Family Services has been targeted by state officials because it prioritizes placing children in homes with a married mother and father. The state has threatened to shut down New Hope’s adoption program completely if it seeks to uphold its religious principles even though New Hope has never accepted a dollar in state funding. It receives all of its support from churches, private sources, and fees paid by adoptive families. Shortly before attempting to shut it down, the state actually sent New Hope a letter praising it for the strength of its adoption program.

Adoption providers are not the only groups facing relentless anti-religious bias. Private businesses, like Country Mill Farms in Charlotte, Michigan, have been expelled from the marketplace and banned from selling their produce because of the owners’ religious beliefs. After Country Mill’s owner posted a statement of his Catholic beliefs about marriage on Facebook, East Lansing, Mich., city officials banned his family farm from participating in the city-run farmer’s market. It even modified its market policies to specifically target Country Mill and exclude the farm from the market. Following a lawsuit by ADF, a federal judge issued a preliminary ruling requiring Country Mill Farms to be reinstated while the case continued.

But many other businesses and business owners have not been so fortunate. Barronelle Stutzman, the owner of Arlene’s Flowers in Richland, Washington, was targeted by her state’s attorney general and sued in her personal capacity after she respectfully declined to create custom floral arrangements to celebrate a longtime customer and friend’s same-sex wedding. The ACLU also sued her in her personal capacity. And now, after a second adverse ruling from the Washington Supreme Court, Stutzman is still at risk of losing her business, her retirement, and her personal assets. She has appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court again.

Even though religious freedom is protected by the Constitution, it is now under vicious assault from L**T l*****t activists and state governments. This is not merely a contest of ideas; the stakes in the real world are terribly high, and the collateral damage for vulnerable children is devastating. America is based on the principle of allowing everyone to live and work in accordance with their own conscience, and violating that principle by seeking to eliminate religious liberty for those with whom we disagree is resulting in suffering for the most vulnerable among us.


https://acton.org/pub/commentary/2019/06/12/anti-religious-hostility-takes-aim-foster-care-and-adoption-agencies?
Acton Institute
Kate Anderson, Legal counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom.
by Kate Anderson • June 12, 2019 br br br To mos... (show quote)


Children, the misuse, abuse and trafficking of, not to mention k*****g of in a******n mills have been in the news more and more lately. The threads are becoming more obvious and they are closing with each other.

Who h**es children more than the devil? The spirit of the antichrist is alive and working hard to do its master's bidding. This is where all the threads lead.

But time is running out for them. This is an appointed time and God is doing what He wants as He said He would.

Reply
Jun 13, 2019 03:44:20   #
Zemirah Loc: Sojourner En Route...
 
...and who loves them more than our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.

The soul of each of these little ones is being welcomed into heaven, for Jesus said, "Suffer the little children to come unto me, and forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of heaven." Matthew 19:14

He also said, "Whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believed in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea."
Matthew 18:6."

The raucous celebratory applause in the New York State legislature when they succeeded in passing a bill earlier this year that would allow them to commit infanticide of live children will forever ring in my ears.

Surely this was the same cries of joy one would have heard in the Roman Coliseum as the Christians were being mauled to death by wild animals.

This is what we as a nation have come to!

Maranatha! Come, Lord Jesus.



BigMike wrote:
Children, the misuse, abuse and trafficking of, not to mention k*****g of in a******n mills have been in the news more and more lately. The threads are becoming more obvious and they are closing with each other.

Who h**es children more than the devil? The spirit of the antichrist is alive and working hard to do its master's bidding. This is where all the threads lead.

But time is running out for them. This is an appointed time and God is doing what He wants as He said He would.
Children, the misuse, abuse and I trafficking of,... (show quote)

Reply
 
 
Jun 13, 2019 03:51:56   #
Zemirah Loc: Sojourner En Route...
 
Indeed, debeda, being "socially aware" in our nation has become a buzzword for an immoral, unfair and inhumane standard of conduct which should be illegal.

Anyone who would harm one child is spiritually impaired. Those who systematically harm thousands for personal or political gain will someday have a reckoning with their Creator, and they are without excuse.


debeda wrote:
I'm so sick and tired of "social awareness" undermining safety nets, especially for children. Get RID of these sick, inhuman pols!!!!!!!!!!!

Reply
Jun 13, 2019 04:03:48   #
Zemirah Loc: Sojourner En Route...
 
When I was a child, I never heard of anyone attacking or harming a homosexual man or a lesbian woman.

The persecution they claim they suffered is imaginary unless they provoke an incident.

Like rebellious children, they have always sought attention, like a kindergartner, "Look at me, look at what I can do with my body..."

In the past, they lived their lives, as do the rest of us.

Then, a few decades ago, that was no longer enough for them. It was if someone had shaken a hornet's nest.

They insist on being in the public eye and in God's face.

No law that is passed on their behave will ever be enough to satisfy them.

I do not mean to "stereotype," but that is my observation of a lifetime.



Canuckus Deploracus wrote:
Things like this make me want to spit...

There was little t***h to the claim of desiring e******y and tolerance back in the day...

This is outright aggression towards any and all who don't support their deviancy...

Thanks for the article

Reply
Jun 13, 2019 04:33:19   #
BigMike Loc: yerington nv
 
Zemirah wrote:
...and who loves them more than our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.

The soul of each of these little ones is being welcomed into heaven, for Jesus said, "Suffer the little children to come unto me, and forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of heaven." Matthew 19:14

He also said, "Whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believed in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea."
Matthew 18:6."

The raucous celebratory applause in the New York State legislature when they succeeded in passing a bill earlier this year that would allow them to commit infanticide of live children will forever ring in my ears.

Surely this was the same cries of joy one would have heard in the Roman Coliseum as the Christians were being mauled to death by wild animals.

This is what we as a nation have come to!

Maranatha! Come, Lord Jesus.
...and who loves them more than our Lord and Savio... (show quote)


Six, no seven things the Lord h**es...

One of those was hands that shed innocent blood.

Oh yeah...this is an appointed time for sure

Reply
Jun 13, 2019 07:43:21   #
Rose42
 
Where are the L***Q apologists? How can they defend this growing sickness?

I remember growing up it was still classified as an illness and rightly so. It was political pressure - not science - that changed that. People have no sense anymore.

And now in their depravity they are hurting children. This makes me sick.

Those who support this and the k*****g of the unborn have hard hearts. They serve evil.

God is love but He is also a God of judgement.

Reply
 
 
Jun 13, 2019 08:28:48   #
debeda
 
Zemirah wrote:
Indeed, debeda, being "socially aware" in our nation has become a buzzword for an immoral, unfair and inhumane standard of conduct which should be illegal.

Anyone who would harm one child is spiritually impaired. Those who systematically harm thousands for personal or political gain will someday have a reckoning with their Creator, and they are without excuse.


Absolutely!! They are inhuman. Not just inhumane, but not human. They have no decency or moral compass it seems

Reply
Jun 13, 2019 08:29:23   #
debeda
 
Zemirah wrote:
When I was a child, I never heard of anyone attacking or harming a homosexual man or a lesbian woman.

The persecution they claim they suffered is imaginary unless they provoke an incident.

Like rebellious children, they have always sought attention, like a kindergartner, "Look at me, look at what I can do with my body..."

In the past, they lived their lives, as do the rest of us.

Then, a few decades ago, that was no longer enough for them. It was if someone had shaken a hornet's nest.

They insist on being in the public eye and in God's face.

No law that is passed on their behave will ever be enough to satisfy them.

I do not mean to "stereotype," but that is my observation of a lifetime.
When I was a child, I never heard of anyone attack... (show quote)



Reply
Jun 13, 2019 09:29:39   #
bahmer
 
Zemirah wrote:
by Kate Anderson • June 12, 2019


To most people, helping orphans and children in the foster system find stable homes is a top priority that transcends politics and ideology. These vulnerable children, however, are quickly losing their advocates, and any hope for a stable, loving family because of rampant anti-religious bias in American society today.

In the United States, more than 400,000 children in the foster system are waiting for homes. At least 4% of children are adopted within a year of entering foster care, and 85% of children in foster care have at least two placements in their first 12 months. Eighty percent of prospective foster parents who work with the state drop out within two years. The terrible reality is that a massive number of children are spending crucial years of their lives without a stable home environment. The foster crisis is so extreme that some states are hosting foster children in hotels and office buildings because there is nowhere else to place them.

Several state governments, spurred on by L**T activist groups, are seeking to shut down some of the most effective foster care and adoption providers in the country in spite of all this. The reason? These providers believe that children do best in homes with a married mother and father, and they want to place children into those environments. Although the Constitution guarantees the right to live and work in accordance with our deeply held religious beliefs, state governments across the nation are attempting to punish religious groups, even if it means hurting vulnerable children.

Same-sex couples and unmarried couples have a multitude of options when it comes to fostering or adopting a child. Every state has identical requirements for opposite-sex and same-sex couples, and even L**T advocacy groups admit that there are no state-level restrictions against same-sex couples fostering or adopting. In some states, however, private foster care and adoption providers are permitted to prioritize placement with married, opposite-sex couples if their reasons for doing so are based in religious convictions, and that, say the L**T activists, is intolerable.

Many state governments are so cowed by political dogma that they are increasingly willing to compromise foster children’s best interests and shut down religious providers -- even if there are laws specifically protecting them. In 2015, Michigan passed a law protecting the rights of faith-based foster care and adoption providers to operate consistently with their religious beliefs, but Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, who took office this year, has violated that law, promising to cut off funding from faith-based providers that want to place children with a married mother and father.

This is anti-religious hostility, and it is similar to what the U.S. Supreme Court condemned in its ruling in Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission. In that case, the Supreme Court found that the state of Colorado had acted with unconstitutional hostility toward cake artist Jack Phillips, and it required the state to cease its hostile actions.

Catholic Charities West Michigan, represented by Alliance Defending Freedom, has filed a lawsuit against the Michigan attorney general’s discriminatory decision. The lawsuit argues that there are many providers, including state-run providers, who are happy to place children for foster care and adoption with same-sex couples and unmarried couples -- so allowing faith-based organizations to place children consistent with their religious beliefs only increases the number of available homes for children.

Religious foster care and adoption providers play a unique role in society. These faith-based organizations are often the best at finding homes for children in particularly challenging situations, such as groups of siblings, older children, and special-needs children. In 2016, 45% of the children adopted through Catholic Charities had special needs - a percentage that vastly outstrips the national average.

Eliminating religious foster care and adoption agencies because of anti-religious bias cuts off thousands of children from a permanent home. That is more than the logical conclusion; it is reality in parts of the country where anti-religious hostility has succeeded in shutting down religious adoption organizations.

Catholic Charities has already been driven out of Boston, Washington, San Francisco, Buffalo, and the entire state of Illinois - with devastating results for children. In Illinois, the shutdown of Catholic Charities drove thousands of foster parents out of the system and led to roughly 3,000 children being displaced.

Those children are real, tangible victims of an anti-religious bias that is rampant in American society today. ADF is representing other faith-based adoption organizations facing closure due to government-sanctioned discrimination. In New York, New Hope Family Services has been targeted by state officials because it prioritizes placing children in homes with a married mother and father. The state has threatened to shut down New Hope’s adoption program completely if it seeks to uphold its religious principles even though New Hope has never accepted a dollar in state funding. It receives all of its support from churches, private sources, and fees paid by adoptive families. Shortly before attempting to shut it down, the state actually sent New Hope a letter praising it for the strength of its adoption program.

Adoption providers are not the only groups facing relentless anti-religious bias. Private businesses, like Country Mill Farms in Charlotte, Michigan, have been expelled from the marketplace and banned from selling their produce because of the owners’ religious beliefs. After Country Mill’s owner posted a statement of his Catholic beliefs about marriage on Facebook, East Lansing, Mich., city officials banned his family farm from participating in the city-run farmer’s market. It even modified its market policies to specifically target Country Mill and exclude the farm from the market. Following a lawsuit by ADF, a federal judge issued a preliminary ruling requiring Country Mill Farms to be reinstated while the case continued.

But many other businesses and business owners have not been so fortunate. Barronelle Stutzman, the owner of Arlene’s Flowers in Richland, Washington, was targeted by her state’s attorney general and sued in her personal capacity after she respectfully declined to create custom floral arrangements to celebrate a longtime customer and friend’s same-sex wedding. The ACLU also sued her in her personal capacity. And now, after a second adverse ruling from the Washington Supreme Court, Stutzman is still at risk of losing her business, her retirement, and her personal assets. She has appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court again.

Even though religious freedom is protected by the Constitution, it is now under vicious assault from L**T l*****t activists and state governments. This is not merely a contest of ideas; the stakes in the real world are terribly high, and the collateral damage for vulnerable children is devastating. America is based on the principle of allowing everyone to live and work in accordance with their own conscience, and violating that principle by seeking to eliminate religious liberty for those with whom we disagree is resulting in suffering for the most vulnerable among us.


https://acton.org/pub/commentary/2019/06/12/anti-religious-hostility-takes-aim-foster-care-and-adoption-agencies?
Acton Institute
Kate Anderson, Legal counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom.
by Kate Anderson • June 12, 2019 br br br To mos... (show quote)


Wow all that about Illinois and Dick Durbin is supposed to be a good Catholic as well. Illinois is pretty much democrat controlled and quite a number of democrats were Catholic as well that doesn't speak very well of all those Catholics in Illinois to allow this to happen. Thanks for the article Zemirah I wasn't aware of that and I live in Illinois but at 76 I am in no condition to adopt either.

Reply
Jun 13, 2019 11:08:16   #
kemmer
 
Zemirah wrote:
by Kate Anderson • June 12, 2019


To most people, helping orphans and children in the foster system find stable homes is a top priority that transcends politics and ideology. These vulnerable children, however, are quickly losing their advocates, and any hope for a stable, loving family because of rampant anti-religious bias in American society today.

In the United States, more than 400,000 children in the foster system are waiting for homes. At least 4% of children are adopted within a year of entering foster care, and 85% of children in foster care have at least two placements in their first 12 months. Eighty percent of prospective foster parents who work with the state drop out within two years. The terrible reality is that a massive number of children are spending crucial years of their lives without a stable home environment. The foster crisis is so extreme that some states are hosting foster children in hotels and office buildings because there is nowhere else to place them.

Several state governments, spurred on by L**T activist groups, are seeking to shut down some of the most effective foster care and adoption providers in the country in spite of all this. The reason? These providers believe that children do best in homes with a married mother and father, and they want to place children into those environments. Although the Constitution guarantees the right to live and work in accordance with our deeply held religious beliefs, state governments across the nation are attempting to punish religious groups, even if it means hurting vulnerable children.

Same-sex couples and unmarried couples have a multitude of options when it comes to fostering or adopting a child. Every state has identical requirements for opposite-sex and same-sex couples, and even L**T advocacy groups admit that there are no state-level restrictions against same-sex couples fostering or adopting. In some states, however, private foster care and adoption providers are permitted to prioritize placement with married, opposite-sex couples if their reasons for doing so are based in religious convictions, and that, say the L**T activists, is intolerable.

Many state governments are so cowed by political dogma that they are increasingly willing to compromise foster children’s best interests and shut down religious providers -- even if there are laws specifically protecting them. In 2015, Michigan passed a law protecting the rights of faith-based foster care and adoption providers to operate consistently with their religious beliefs, but Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, who took office this year, has violated that law, promising to cut off funding from faith-based providers that want to place children with a married mother and father.

This is anti-religious hostility, and it is similar to what the U.S. Supreme Court condemned in its ruling in Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission. In that case, the Supreme Court found that the state of Colorado had acted with unconstitutional hostility toward cake artist Jack Phillips, and it required the state to cease its hostile actions.

Catholic Charities West Michigan, represented by Alliance Defending Freedom, has filed a lawsuit against the Michigan attorney general’s discriminatory decision. The lawsuit argues that there are many providers, including state-run providers, who are happy to place children for foster care and adoption with same-sex couples and unmarried couples -- so allowing faith-based organizations to place children consistent with their religious beliefs only increases the number of available homes for children.

Religious foster care and adoption providers play a unique role in society. These faith-based organizations are often the best at finding homes for children in particularly challenging situations, such as groups of siblings, older children, and special-needs children. In 2016, 45% of the children adopted through Catholic Charities had special needs - a percentage that vastly outstrips the national average.

Eliminating religious foster care and adoption agencies because of anti-religious bias cuts off thousands of children from a permanent home. That is more than the logical conclusion; it is reality in parts of the country where anti-religious hostility has succeeded in shutting down religious adoption organizations.

Catholic Charities has already been driven out of Boston, Washington, San Francisco, Buffalo, and the entire state of Illinois - with devastating results for children. In Illinois, the shutdown of Catholic Charities drove thousands of foster parents out of the system and led to roughly 3,000 children being displaced.

Those children are real, tangible victims of an anti-religious bias that is rampant in American society today. ADF is representing other faith-based adoption organizations facing closure due to government-sanctioned discrimination. In New York, New Hope Family Services has been targeted by state officials because it prioritizes placing children in homes with a married mother and father. The state has threatened to shut down New Hope’s adoption program completely if it seeks to uphold its religious principles even though New Hope has never accepted a dollar in state funding. It receives all of its support from churches, private sources, and fees paid by adoptive families. Shortly before attempting to shut it down, the state actually sent New Hope a letter praising it for the strength of its adoption program.

Adoption providers are not the only groups facing relentless anti-religious bias. Private businesses, like Country Mill Farms in Charlotte, Michigan, have been expelled from the marketplace and banned from selling their produce because of the owners’ religious beliefs. After Country Mill’s owner posted a statement of his Catholic beliefs about marriage on Facebook, East Lansing, Mich., city officials banned his family farm from participating in the city-run farmer’s market. It even modified its market policies to specifically target Country Mill and exclude the farm from the market. Following a lawsuit by ADF, a federal judge issued a preliminary ruling requiring Country Mill Farms to be reinstated while the case continued.

But many other businesses and business owners have not been so fortunate. Barronelle Stutzman, the owner of Arlene’s Flowers in Richland, Washington, was targeted by her state’s attorney general and sued in her personal capacity after she respectfully declined to create custom floral arrangements to celebrate a longtime customer and friend’s same-sex wedding. The ACLU also sued her in her personal capacity. And now, after a second adverse ruling from the Washington Supreme Court, Stutzman is still at risk of losing her business, her retirement, and her personal assets. She has appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court again.

Even though religious freedom is protected by the Constitution, it is now under vicious assault from L**T l*****t activists and state governments. This is not merely a contest of ideas; the stakes in the real world are terribly high, and the collateral damage for vulnerable children is devastating. America is based on the principle of allowing everyone to live and work in accordance with their own conscience, and violating that principle by seeking to eliminate religious liberty for those with whom we disagree is resulting in suffering for the most vulnerable among us.


https://acton.org/pub/commentary/2019/06/12/anti-religious-hostility-takes-aim-foster-care-and-adoption-agencies?
Acton Institute
Kate Anderson, Legal counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom.
by Kate Anderson • June 12, 2019 br br br To mos... (show quote)

Why does this garbage remind me of baton-swinging cops beating black teenagers trying to attend a gov't-ordered integrated high school in Birmingham Alabama?

Reply
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