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  • FRIDAY JUNE 15 2007 6:00 AM

Religion is the New Black



Or so says the Justice Department anyway.

In recent years, the Bush administration has recast the federal government’s role in civil rights by aggressively pursuing religion-oriented cases while significantly diminishing its involvement in the traditional area of race.

Paralleling concerns of many conservative groups, the Justice Department has successfully argued in a number of cases that government agencies, employers or private organizations have improperly suppressed religious expression in situations that the Constitution’s drafters did not mean to restrict.

The shift at the Justice Department has significantly altered the government’s civil rights mission, said Brian K. Landsberg, a law professor at the University of the Pacific and a former Justice Department lawyer under both Republican and Democratic administrations.

“Not until recently has anyone in the department considered religious discrimination such a high priority,” Professor Landsberg said. “No one had ever considered it to be of the same magnitude as race or national origin.”


Well, what’s the problem with that, really? The Free Exercise of religion is protected in the First Amendment, after all. It’s one of the bedrock principles of this country’s founding. What’s the big deal if the Bush Administ… er, Justice Department wants to focus on ensuring that pillar of American liberty?

Well, it could be because they’re promoting one aspect of the First Amendment (the Free Exercise Clause) at the expense of another (that thing about the “Establishment”)

The changes are evident in a variety of actions:
Intervening in federal court cases on behalf of religion-based groups like the Salvation Army that assert they have the right to discriminate in hiring in favor of people who share their beliefs even though they are running charitable programs with federal money.

Supporting groups that want to send home religious literature with schoolchildren; in one case, the government helped win the right of a group in Massachusetts to distribute candy canes as part of a religious message that the red stripes represented the blood of Christ.

Vigorously enforcing a law enacted by Congress in 2000 that allows churches and other places of worship to be free of some local zoning restrictions. The division has brought more than two dozen lawsuits on behalf of churches, synagogues and mosques.


Herein lies the problem of prosecutorial discretion. The Justice Department, like all government agencies, does not posses unlimited resources. Thus, it must chose its battles carefully and attempt to maximize the effect on the greater good. While they can’t take on every case for purely economic reasons, once the Justice Department makes its determination that they intervene in a case, they bring the full weight of the federal government with them.

So it could be a bit of a problem when that weight is being used to ensure that students may proselytize on high school grounds or allow religious organizations to circumvent civil rights laws.

Possibly more problematic is the DoJ’s notoriously shitty hiring practices. According to the New York Times:

Along with its changed civil rights mission, the department has also tried to overhaul the roster of government lawyers who deal with civil rights. The agency has transferred or demoted some experienced civil rights litigators while bringing in lawyers, including graduates of religious-affiliated law schools and some people vocal about their faith, who favor the new priorities. That has created some unease, with some career lawyers disdainfully referring to the newcomers as “holy hires.”


Nothing wrong with a little Nepotism in the Name of The Lord, eh? Especially when those hires come from such top-flight law schools as Catholic University (Tier 2, according to the U.S. News and World Report Law School Rankings), Regent University (Tier 4), and legal powerhouse Ave Maria School of Law (Tier 4).

[Former Civil Rights Prosecutor Rigel] Oliveri recalled that when she was hired in 2000 by the Justice Department, she was impressed by the accomplishments of her peers. But once the political appointees controlled the hiring, she said, “The change in the quality of people who were chosen was very pronounced.”
When the front office sent around the résumés of those newly hired for the honors program, she said, “It was obvious what they had: conservative and religious bona fides.”


The DoJ justifies these policies by citing constitutional and congressional mandates.

[Cynthia] Magnuson, the Justice Department spokeswoman, said it was justified in devoting so much attention to the issue because Congress has demonstrated its interest by including religion in the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964 and enacting the 2000 law involving zoning restrictions, the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act.

Ms. Magnuson also said the department had not diminished its interest in enforcing racial and national origin discrimination cases. The changes at the Justice Department began under Attorney General John Ashcroft, but have accelerated under Alberto R. Gonzales, his successor.

Mr. Gonzales has increasingly cited his agency’s record on behalf of religious causes as among his most important accomplishments, often noting the successful intervention in cases on behalf of people who had suffered discrimination for wearing Muslim head coverings. In speeches, he routinely says that religious freedom is the nation’s “first freedom because our founders saw fit to place it first in the Bill of Rights.”


Last I checked, the First Amendment actually placed a restriction against mingling religion with the state first. But what do I know? I’m just a first-year attorney, not the nation’s most powerful law-enforcement official.

Still, the question remains: Why is this a problem?

At the same time, the department has sharply reduced its efforts to combat voting rights plans that may dilute black electoral strength.
[..]
Joseph D. Rich, who recently stepped down as head of the voting rights section after a 37-year career at Justice, said that only the federal government had the resources to bring voting dilution cases, while private groups have been able to bring the language cases. The civil rights division also brought the first case ever on behalf of white voters, alleging in 2005 that a black political leader in Noxubee County, Miss., was intimidating whites at the polls.

The shift in priorities at the criminal section of the civil rights division has been especially stark. The criminal section — which previously had mostly focused on hate crimes or lawsuits against police officers who may have violated someone’s civil rights — began taking on human trafficking cases that had previously been handled elsewhere.
[…]
Pursuing trafficking cases, rather than those involving hate crimes or police abuse, was seen as important to moving ahead in the department, current and former career officials said. They added that political appointees in supervisory positions frequently vetoed proposed hate crime investigations or questioned them to death.

“You only needed for that to happen a few times and people got the message they shouldn’t be eager to send up such cases,” said one lawyer who would talk only on condition of anonymity.


Thank goodness Republicans blocked a no-confidence vote for Gonzales on Monday. He’s clearly doing a bang-up job all-around.

 

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Comments
MrCrisp

MrCrisp

I'm lost
August 2004

JUN 15, 2007 03:24 PM

thatoneguy23 said:

aldushuxley said:
I guess I am kind of removed from the bulk of Americans, being part of an "elitist" society you naturally class people in two categories, guy who's got your back and civilians. So I don't really know what is going on with civies most of the time I use sights like this to get my news. Yes I am serious. For your previous question about homosexuality that doesn't affect me so I do not worry about it.



LOL, military = "elite". Ah priceless.

We're not elite, we just love signing our names a little more then other people.

Sometimes that can cause 4 or more years of putting up with a lot of goofy, misinformed and occationally retarded fuckers.

Then again, it is a great frat to be a part of... gets you beer and I happen to be a big supporter of beer. Plus its nice to have a pad to crash at no matter where in the world you are.

In closing, another fine article Subrosa and mmm... beer.



word.

Chainlink

Chainlink

Key West, FL
August 2005

JUN 15, 2007 04:05 PM

MrCrisp said:

thatoneguy23 said:

aldushuxley said:
I guess I am kind of removed from the bulk of Americans, being part of an "elitist" society you naturally class people in two categories, guy who's got your back and civilians. So I don't really know what is going on with civies most of the time I use sights like this to get my news. Yes I am serious. For your previous question about homosexuality that doesn't affect me so I do not worry about it.



LOL, military = "elite". Ah priceless.

We're not elite, we just love signing our names a little more then other people.

Sometimes that can cause 4 or more years of putting up with a lot of goofy, misinformed and occationally retarded fuckers.

Then again, it is a great frat to be a part of... gets you beer and I happen to be a big supporter of beer. Plus its nice to have a pad to crash at no matter where in the world you are.

In closing, another fine article Subrosa and mmm... beer.



word.




Comforting to hear the guys protecting the country are doing it for the beer and a couch. I hope it at least gets you good beer, not that American piss. wink

Flux

Flux

SUICIDEGIRL

Georgia, USA

JUN 15, 2007 04:08 PM

Azuri said:
For example, to be a Hindu, you have to be born a Hindu. You can't become a Hindu. The closest thing that they have for people who want to be a Hindu is the Hare Krishna sect. You could say that it's a very exclusive religion, and be mad about that and think it's unfair, yada, yada, yada...



Just because nobody else picked this up, you absolutely don't have to be born Hindu to be Hindu, unless you consider it an ethnicity rather than a faith.

Stephen Knapp lays it down.


Carry on.

joker_

joker_

Minneapolis, MN
October 2005

JUN 15, 2007 04:15 PM

Flux said:

Azuri said:
For example, to be a Hindu, you have to be born a Hindu. You can't become a Hindu. The closest thing that they have for people who want to be a Hindu is the Hare Krishna sect. You could say that it's a very exclusive religion, and be mad about that and think it's unfair, yada, yada, yada...



Just because nobody else picked this up, you absolutely don't have to be born Hindu to be Hindu, unless you consider it an ethnicity rather than a faith.

Stephen Knapp lays it down.


Carry on.



I noticed that and was going to say in which Vedic scripture does it say anything about that

Thank you Flux.

NadirByte

NadirByte

I'm lost
May 2007

JUN 15, 2007 04:16 PM


[[...]] candy canes [[were distributed by a group in Massachusetts]]] as part of a religious message that the red stripes represented the blood of Christ.



"Mmmmm, sugar-sweet Christ-blood" -- some neo-khristian lunacy, most ripe and in season, no?

The author Camille Paglia is one author having used the phrase, Pauline Christianity. It is a fact, in fact, that most of the New Testament is identified as a work of the man called the apostle, Paul. So, I think she was onto something.

As for what Paul was up to, darned if I can really give a rat's candy-cane -- unless it might be addressed in an (hopefully, objective) analysis of the social, ergo primarily secular phenomenon, the Christian religion.

(NB: This is said not as if any other thing identitified as "religion" was not social, ergo primarily secular. Insofar as I can determine, it appears that all things called "religion" are social, primariliy secular.)

As such: If religion is the new black, that may be quite fitting for the matter. Propers, Subrosa

Rush

Rush

Memphis, TN
June 2005

JUN 15, 2007 04:18 PM

Subrosa said:

fountainofdreams said:
...I just got the title.

Wow. That took me a few minutes.



It works on multiple levels, see.


I came to post that I think this title is the cleverest yet.

Riva

Riva

Apopka, FL
May 2005

JUN 15, 2007 09:29 PM

Flux said:

Azuri said:
For example, to be a Hindu, you have to be born a Hindu. You can't become a Hindu. The closest thing that they have for people who want to be a Hindu is the Hare Krishna sect. You could say that it's a very exclusive religion, and be mad about that and think it's unfair, yada, yada, yada...



Just because nobody else picked this up, you absolutely don't have to be born Hindu to be Hindu, unless you consider it an ethnicity rather than a faith.

Stephen Knapp lays it down.


Carry on.



Well, actually my Hindu Thought and Culture Teacher who was from Yemen (and who spent a lot of time in India) said that the folks in India don't think very much of non-Hindus (the faith) trying to "become" Hindus (i.e. some young, idealistic American kids wandering through marijuana fields...) I say that jokingly, but I use it as an example.

So I guess what my teacher was trying to say is that technically you can adopt those values and beliefs, but Hindu society as a whole might not accept your decision and actually snub you for trying to cut in.

BlastProcessing

BlastProcessing

USA
OLD SKOOL

JUN 15, 2007 09:41 PM

aldushuxley said:
I guess I am kind of removed from the bulk of Americans, being part of an "elitist" society you naturally class people in two categories, guy who's got your back and civilians. So I don't really know what is going on with civies most of the time I use sights like this to get my news. Yes I am serious. For your previous question about homosexuality that doesn't affect me so I do not worry about it.



So, wait-wait-wait. You're the one who categorically sees people as either "my Armed Services brah" or "second-class civilian", but everyone else on here are somehow the ones with the problem relating to people?

ardour

ardour

Canada
March 2006

JUN 15, 2007 10:03 PM

Damn, this aldushuxley guy sure has been a glutton for punishment over the past few days.

joker_

joker_

Minneapolis, MN
October 2005

JUN 15, 2007 11:07 PM

Azuri said:

Flux said:

Azuri said:
For example, to be a Hindu, you have to be born a Hindu. You can't become a Hindu. The closest thing that they have for people who want to be a Hindu is the Hare Krishna sect. You could say that it's a very exclusive religion, and be mad about that and think it's unfair, yada, yada, yada...



Just because nobody else picked this up, you absolutely don't have to be born Hindu to be Hindu, unless you consider it an ethnicity rather than a faith.

Stephen Knapp lays it down.


Carry on.



Well, actually my Hindu Thought and Culture Teacher who was from Yemen (and who spent a lot of time in India) said that the folks in India don't think very much of non-Hindus (the faith) trying to "become" Hindus (i.e. some young, idealistic American kids wandering through marijuana fields...) I say that jokingly, but I use it as an example.

So I guess what my teacher was trying to say is that technically you can adopt those values and beliefs, but Hindu society as a whole might not accept your decision and actually snub you for trying to cut in.



I never noticed this behavior with all the Hindus I was around. Of course, I realize that my anecdotal evidence cannot be stated as any kind of objective truth. It is contrary to what your teacher from Yemen experienced.

Zarth

zarth

Seattle, WA
December 2004

JUN 16, 2007 08:17 AM

joker_c said:

Azuri said:

Flux said:

Azuri said:
For example, to be a Hindu, you have to be born a Hindu. You can't become a Hindu. The closest thing that they have for people who want to be a Hindu is the Hare Krishna sect. You could say that it's a very exclusive religion, and be mad about that and think it's unfair, yada, yada, yada...


Just because nobody else picked this up, you absolutely don't have to be born Hindu to be Hindu, unless you consider it an ethnicity rather than a faith.

Stephen Knapp lays it down.


Carry on.


Well, actually my Hindu Thought and Culture Teacher who was from Yemen (and who spent a lot of time in India) said that the folks in India don't think very much of non-Hindus (the faith) trying to "become" Hindus (i.e. some young, idealistic American kids wandering through marijuana fields...) I say that jokingly, but I use it as an example.

So I guess what my teacher was trying to say is that technically you can adopt those values and beliefs, but Hindu society as a whole might not accept your decision and actually snub you for trying to cut in.


I never noticed this behavior with all the Hindus I was around. Of course, I realize that my anecdotal evidence cannot be stated as any kind of objective truth. It is contrary to what your teacher from Yemen experienced.


I think it really depends on the sect, and who you're hanging around with. I also think it would be more appropriate to say that there's no mechanism (that I know of) for joining a caste, which is - or at least formerly was - a pretty basic Hindu social unit.

That being said, of course, individual Westerners and other non-Hindus have been taken on as chelas by various gurus for centuries.

emotedcreations

emotedcreations

Germany
July 2006

JUN 16, 2007 11:50 AM

Zarth said:
...there are people I like and care about who are Christian, Muslim, Jewish, Pagan, and Hindu

Don't forget Buddhist. tongue

PointBlank said:

aldushuxley said:
I hate being right, but still being wrong. Okay today the billy goats have the victory this troll is fleeing with the last shreds of his dignity.

I guess this would be the wrong time to tell you that you spelled Aldous wrong, then?

shocked

Zarth

zarth

Seattle, WA
December 2004

JUN 16, 2007 12:32 PM

emotedcreations said:

Zarth said:
...there are people I like and care about who are Christian, Muslim, Jewish, Pagan, and Hindu


Don't forget Buddhist. tongue


I omitted Buddhism from that list purposely, since, like Taoism, it's a nontheistic religion, so I don't see it as fundamentally erroneous in the way I see Abrahamic or polytheistic faiths as being.

So there.

emotedcreations

emotedcreations

Germany
July 2006

JUN 16, 2007 12:37 PM

Zarth said:

emotedcreations said:

Zarth said:
...there are people I like and care about who are Christian, Muslim, Jewish, Pagan, and Hindu


Don't forget Buddhist. tongue


I omitted Buddhism from that list purposely, since, like Taoism, it's a nontheistic religion, so I don't see it as fundamentally erroneous in the way I see Abrahamic or polytheistic faiths as being.

So there.

That's right bitch.

Zarth

zarth

Seattle, WA
December 2004

JUN 16, 2007 12:38 PM

emotedcreations said:
That's right bitch.


I didn't know they made a Zarth smilie.

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