AU's problems with faith-based initiatives
http://www.au.org/site/PageServer?pagename...hure_faithbased[snip]
While houses of worship have played an important role in this country since its founding, these institutions have thrived on voluntary contributions. Forcing taxpayers to subsidize religion they may not believe in is no different from forcing them to put money in the collection plates of churches, synagogues, temples and mosques.
Another controversy raised by charitable choice is the specter of federally funded employment discrimination. Under Bush's proposal, for example, churches would be legally permitted to discriminate on the basis of religion when hiring, despite receiving a massive infusion of public dollars. A Bob Jones-style religious group, for example, could receive tax aid to hire people to perform social services and hang up a sign that says "Jews And Catholics Need Not Apply." That's not "compassionate conservatism," that's outrageous bigotry.
In addition, under charitable choice, religious institutions would receive taxpayer support while seeking to convert people seeking assistance. The religious freedom of beneficiaries would therefore be seriously threatened, because disadvantaged Americans could face religious coercion while seeking the food, shelter or other critical benefits. Placing people in need in this position is wrong.
Moreover, religious institutions face a series of unintended, and very unappealing, consequences as a result of feeding from the hand of government. For example, the government always regulates what it finances. This occurs because public officials are obligated to make certain that taxpayer funds are properly spent. Once churches, temples, mosques and synagogues are being financed by the public, some of their freedom will be placed in jeopardy by the almost certain regulation to follow.
Houses of worship that have flourished as private institutions may suddenly have their books audited or face regular spot checks by federal inspectors in order to ensure appropriate "accountability."
In addition, millions of Americans are active with their local houses of worship, making special contributions as a way to strengthen their ties to their faith traditions and increase personal piety. Once religious institutions are working in tandem with the government and receiving tax dollars to provide services, members may be less inclined to "dig a little deeper" to help with expenses. Making religious institutions dependent on the government for money will only harm these congregations and their vitality.
The faith-based initiative also threatens interfaith peace by pitting faith groups against each other in competition for public funds. Since the founding of the nation, all religious groups have stood equal in the eyes of the law. With a separation between church and state, government has been neutral on religious issues, and no specific faith tradition received favoritism or support. In contrast, Bush's charitable choice plan calls for competition between religious groups. For the first time in American history, religious groups will be asked, indeed encouraged, to battle it out for a slice of the government pie.
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Bush opened a Pandora's Box with his OoF-BI, and I'm sorry, Barack should close it, not try and "fix" it. You can't fix what's unconstitutional, and a constitutional law professor should know that.