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Religious Liberty Held Hostage

A Tale of Politics as Usual

Rating: 5.00


After years of defending persecuted believers worldwide, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom may have to close its doors.

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Chuck  Colson

Last week, the Obama administration issued a memo making the rights of lesbians, gays, bisexuals, and transgendered people “a major element of its foreign policy,” that’s a quote from a Washington Post article. The article noted the president’s concern for discrimination and violence against LGBTs (as they are known).

Coordinating with the memo Secretary of State Hillary Clinton addressed the UN’s Human Rights Commission on the issue. Clinton lamented that LGBT people, “are arrested, beaten, imprisoned — even executed. Many are treated with contempt and violence by their fellow citizens while authorities empowered to protect them look the other way or, too often, even join in the abuse.”

I believe that “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” are inalienable rights just as our Declaration of Independence says. Neither LGBT people nor anyone else should be singled out for discrimination and persecution. But I can’t help noticing that while President Obama and Secretary Clinton were vigorously defending sexual freedom, religious freedom is being ditched.

The Senate has not reauthorized the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom and, unless that changes, the commission will shut down Friday, ending its vital work. The independent, bi-partisan commission monitors religious freedom and makes policy recommendations. The Commission is not restrained by diplomatic niceties the same way the State Department often is, and can speak out candidly about violations of religious freedom wherever they may occur. That is, the commission has teeth.

Writing at National Review Online, Nina Shea, a member of the commission and Director of the Hudson Institute’s Center for Religious Freedom, credits the commission with clarifying the religious nature of the civil war in Sudan, publicizing Iraq’s persecution of religious minorities including Christians and Jews and bringing the ongoing “plight” of Egypt’s Coptic Christians into the spotlight. Shea says it doggedly pursues persecution whether it’s in China, or Saudi Arabia, or Vietnam, or Egypt, “even when the State Department does not.”

In fact the U.S. Commission is so successful, writes Shea, that Canada, the Netherlands, Germany, and the Philippines are considering creating their own religious liberty commissions based on the US model.

So why is it losing its funding, by Washington’s standards, a paltry $4 million? Politics as usual is the answer. According to an article in Congressional Quarterly, Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin is holding the commission hostage to his demand that the federal government purchase and open a prison in his home state of Illinois. Claiming it would create a thousand new jobs and add a billion dollars to the state’s economy, Durban has decided that if he doesn’t get his way, persecuted religious believers, well, will just have to put up with discrimination, imprisonment, terrorism, and death. Apart from being cynical, Durbin’s actions are downright cruel.

Can the commission be saved? Yes, but it will take grassroots contact with your two senators, Senator Durbin, and the White House. Tell them religious freedom is too precious and too endangered to be a political bargaining chip. Tell them to reauthorize the US Commission on International Religious Freedom.

Further Reading and Information

United States Commission on International Religious Freedom
USCIRF.gov

Will the Senate Quietly Kill the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom?
Nina Shea | National Review Online | October 17, 2011

Religious-Freedom Panel in Limbo Pending Prison Purchase
Shawn Zeller | Congressional Quarterly | November 12, 2011

Obama administration targets anti-gay discrimination abroad
Karen DeYoung and Scott Wilson | Washington Post | December 6, 2011

 


Comments:

Conservative Christians and the Kill the Gays Bill
http://www.publiceye.org/magazine/v24n4/us-christian-right-attack-on-gays-in-africa.html
Steps to Take
PLEASE--IF YOU CARE ABOUT INTERNATIONAL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM--CONTACT SENATE LEADERSHIP (REID/DURBIN/MCCONNELL/KYL) AND YOUR OWN SENATORS AND CONGRESSMEN TODAY AND DEMAND IMMEDIATE PASSAGE OF S. 1875. We only have until Friday 12-16 to get this passed.

CONTACT INFORMATION AVAILABLE AT: https://www.google.com/search?rlz=1C1TSND_enUS410US410&gcx=w&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=main+senate+phone+number

This is a great article and other recent commentators say that there may be more nefarious reasons for Durbin's opposition than the Thomson Prison--covert lobbying by Saudi interests seeking to eliminate USCIRF as a key international critic of attempts by Muslims to silence those who speak out against their intolerance for other faiths.
Religious liberty
One wonders if he succeeds whether Durbin will go home and, at election time, attempt to dupe his constituents with predictable cliches on supporting religious freedom and Biblical causes.
Makes you go Hmm.
An interesting juxtaposition of these issues. Homosexuals get more protection, religious people get less. Why are we not supprised, considering the president that the USA has now.
Kostya
Evangelicals have always been out front on issues of discrimination no matter the person's faults. To suggest that evangelicals would support a "Kill the Gay's Bill" is plain stupid. Evangelicals all know that we are all sinners and with Christ's forgiveness we can change our lives and become servants to Christ. We'll still struggle but our whole purpose will change! I suggest that you simply trust Jesus Christ to forgive you Kostya and let his love shine through you. You won't be sorry!!!!
Keep it honest
Colson, has religious freedom been ditched more than LGBT rights? Is there a U.S. Commission on LGBT rights?

You give lip service to LGBT rights while minimizing them. Watch out or we'll think that you support Uganda's "Kill the Gay's Bill" along with some of your fellow evangelicals.