GOVERNMENT-FUNDED DISCRIMINATION: (7/11/2008)
ISSUE
SUMMARY:
In the
waning days of his administration, President Bush is continuing his campaign to
allow taxpayer funds to be used for religious discrimination. His “faith-based initiatives” grant
religious social service providers - who have long provided admirable and
essential services to America’s communities - the right to
discriminate, proselytize and play by different rules than other charities while
spending tax dollars.
The next
administration must address the many problems that exist under the program’s
current design. Under Bush’s program, for example, social workers,
psychologists, counselors and others seeking to work in tax-funded social
service programs can be denied jobs solely because of their faith.
Supporting
the good work of faith-based social service providers should not mean abandoning
basic American ideals. We must not allow the vital services of faith-based
groups to become co-opted by the administration as mere government-funded
religion.
The
government can and does work collaboratively with faith-based
organizations. It has long granted
tax dollars to religious social service providers that agree not to discriminate
in hiring or providing services, and that operate their social services in a
secular manner. These types of
religiously affiliated charities do not deny people employment based on faith,
nor do they mix religious activity in with their government-funded
services.
TALKING
POINTS:
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Taxpayer
dollars must not fund discrimination. When using their own funds, religious
organizations have the right to choose their employees on the basis of religion
or religious beliefs. But they must
not be allowed to do so with taxpayer dollars. Federally funded organizations must
respect the civil rights of all Americans, not gut them.
§
Faith is
a matter that is best left to individuals, their families and religious
communities. All
Americans deserve individual religious freedom, including the right to receive
professional social services without being subjected to attempts at religious
conversion.
§
Government
should stay out of religion. The
government should not be in the business of choosing to fund one religion over
another. Religious institutions, which currently enjoy a great amount of
independence from the government, will become "hired hands" of the state,
trading autonomy for government funds.
The government invariably regulates who and what it funds - money almost
always comes with strings attached.
§
These
proposals endanger people who are in serious need of help. We should not remove federal rules and
licensing requirements for religious programs administering professional social
services. The federal government should not fund unqualified groups to provide
mental health services. We need these guidelines to protect the people who most
need help. Giving religious groups
a special exemption just doesn’t make sense.
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