LGBT
Related: About this forumThe Trump DOJ writes letter supporting firing of gay faculty from schools
Yesterday, the Trump administrations Department of Justice (DOJ) filed a Statement of Interest letter to a court supporting the Archdiocese of Indianas firing of a gay teacher from a Catholic school in July 2019.
While the letter isnt surprising considering the administrations support of anti-LGBTQ discrimination under the banner of so-called religious freedom, many U.S. Catholic schools are taxpayer-funded, essentially meaning that the U.S. government supports using our money to fund schools and other religious entities that oppress us.
When Cathedral High School discovered that guidance counselor Joshua Payne-Elliott was married to his husband, Layton Payne-Elliott, the local Archdiocese directed the school to fire him, and Payne-Elliott subsequently sued the Archdiocese alleging it illegally interfered with his contractual and employment relationship, according to the IndyStar.
However, in the DOJs letter to the court, Eric Dreiband, Assistant Attorney General for the DOJs Civil Rights Division, writes, The First Amendment to the United States Constitution protects the right of religious institutions and people to decide what their beliefs are, to teach their faith, and to associate with others who share their faith. The First Amendment rightly protects the free exercise of religion.
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Response to Behind the Aegis (Original post)
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samnsara
(18,281 posts)Girard442
(6,400 posts)In a wastebasket somewhere the scissored-out clause "shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion" rests next to "a well-regulated militia."
paleotn
(19,165 posts)safeinOhio
(34,057 posts)and remarried. I can't find anything Jesus said about gay people, but he sure said a lot about divorce. That was always the big deal for the Christian Right, until Reagan. He divorced and remarried then introduced no-fault divorce in California. Seems he changed Christianity.
Strange.
rainin
(3,167 posts)It's amazing how selective they are. Divorce okay. Wealth okay. Even extreme wealth. Deny someone healthcare okay. Christian leaders are the most unprincipled people I now. I'd trust an atheist over a Christian any day.
safeinOhio
(34,057 posts)the Gospel according to John Galt. I like many Christians that are loving, kind and fair to everyone.
that's just me.
rainin
(3,167 posts)I'm sure they're out there, but I live in a community of hateful church goers. I spent years when my children were young searching for a church home that taught the gospel of Jesus: love, charity, etc. I found the wealth gospel. I found tribalism. I found political centers. I live in a very red community - full of churches, but largely absent of decency IMO. We visited church after church until I quit trying. The situation may be worse than you think. Or maybe, it's glaringly obvious how bad things are by how many self described Christians support trump.
safeinOhio
(34,057 posts)are the ones that never claim to be Christians. I find that out much later and not by them saying a word about it.
Trueblue Texan
(2,919 posts)...I should have the right to withhold my tax dollars used to cage mothers, fathers, and children at the border. Everything about that violates my religious sensibilities.
dickthegrouch
(3,546 posts)Morality is for others
Righteousness is our own domain
Planks in our own eyes blind us to our own stupidity
Deflection of our own faults by pointing out those of others is far easier than addressing those we know about
Religions based on the concepts of sin, guilt, and punishment are toxic to human existence.
(Sorry for the mixed metaphors, I'm having trouble putting my fury into words).