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In reply to the discussion: Salvation Army [View all]Morning Dew
(6,539 posts)36. this is an older story (2005) from the WaPo
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/19/AR2005101902122_pf.html
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Chalk up a big legal victory for President Bush's effort to help religious charities get taxpayer funding. And score a symbolic win, too, for those who think Bush's "faith-based initiative" is just pork-barrel politics in disguise.
Bush's big victory came Sept. 30 in New York, where a federal judge threw out most elements of a religious discrimination lawsuit against the Salvation Army. Eighteen employees claimed they were fired or demoted because they refused to pledge support to the Salvation Army's mission of "proclaiming Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord," disclose what church they attended or name gay co-workers.
U.S. District Judge Sidney H. Stein noted that all the plaintiffs worked for a children's services division of the Salvation Army that gets 95 percent of its $50 million budget from government grants.
But the judge's 48-page opinion upheld the principle that a religious group can hire and fire employees on the basis of their religious beliefs and practices, even if their salaries come from taxpayer funds. That principle is at the heart of the Bush administration's policy.
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Chalk up a big legal victory for President Bush's effort to help religious charities get taxpayer funding. And score a symbolic win, too, for those who think Bush's "faith-based initiative" is just pork-barrel politics in disguise.
Bush's big victory came Sept. 30 in New York, where a federal judge threw out most elements of a religious discrimination lawsuit against the Salvation Army. Eighteen employees claimed they were fired or demoted because they refused to pledge support to the Salvation Army's mission of "proclaiming Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord," disclose what church they attended or name gay co-workers.
U.S. District Judge Sidney H. Stein noted that all the plaintiffs worked for a children's services division of the Salvation Army that gets 95 percent of its $50 million budget from government grants.
But the judge's 48-page opinion upheld the principle that a religious group can hire and fire employees on the basis of their religious beliefs and practices, even if their salaries come from taxpayer funds. That principle is at the heart of the Bush administration's policy.
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I think it's everyones decision. One way or the other who they decide to donate to or not.
alphafemale
Dec 2011
#1
I worked for Food for land County at the family dining site located in a Salvation Army center
Ferret Annica
Dec 2011
#2
I felt really guilty today when going into Big Lots and there was a Salvation Army bell ringer
RebelOne
Dec 2011
#7
would they help a gay foster kid? that's where the argument loses validity.
piratefish08
Dec 2011
#28
The dirty little secret of these organizations is that they use Federal funding for their programs
Morning Dew
Dec 2011
#30
I'm deeply conflicted because, IIRC, during the depths of the Reagan Recession (when the national
coalition_unwilling
Dec 2011
#35
They don't ask who you screw or what you believe when they hand out coffee and donuts.
aquart
Dec 2011
#38
Obama is not really for gay marriage, so I guess I won't donate my vote to him
The Straight Story
Dec 2011
#47