Republicans Speak Out on Freedom of the Press After President Trump Calls Media the ‘Enemy’ – Fortune

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks at a rally at the Fort Worth Convention Center on February 26, 2016 in Fort Worth, Texas. Tom Pennington/Getty Images

Republicans disagreed this weekend with President Donald Trump 's claim that the media is the "enemy" of the American people .

Trump has repeatedly attacked what he calls the "FAKE NEWS media," and on Friday he lashed out on Twitter, saying outlets like the New York Times , NBC News, ABC, CBS and CNN are the "enemy of the American People!"

Following the attacks, members of his administration and party defended the need for a free press.

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said on Sunday that he had no problems with the press.

"I've had some rather contentious times with the press. But no, the press, as far as I'm concerned are a constituency that we deal with," Mattis said when asked about Trump's criticism during a trip to the Middle East. "And I don't have any issues with the press, myself."

Arizona Sen. John McCain came out strongly against Trump's assertion during an interview with NBC's Meet the Press .

"That's how dictators get started," he said of Trump's tweet about the media. Later, McCain said a free press is "vital."

South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham partially echoed McCain during an interview with CBS's Face the Nation , although he scolded the press for "acting more like an opposition party" when it comes to reporting on Trump and urged reporters to step up their game.

"The backbone of democracy is a free press and an independent judiciary, and they're worth fighting and dying for," Graham said. "The bottom line is America is not becoming a dictatorship."

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Republicans Speak Out on Freedom of the Press After President Trump Calls Media the 'Enemy' - Fortune

Not so fast: Freedom for imprisoned Tejano singer delayed – Chron.com

Texas prison officials have delayed the release of Grammy-wining Tejano singer Jose "Joe" Lopez from later this year until at least 2018.

Texas prison officials have delayed the release of Grammy-wining Tejano singer Jose "Joe" Lopez from later this year until at least 2018.

Texas parole officials determined that Jose "Joe" Lopez needed to take a nine-month Sex Offender Treatment Class starting in May. The move pushes his potential release date from September until sometime in 2018.

Texas parole officials determined that Jose "Joe" Lopez needed to take a nine-month Sex Offender Treatment Class starting in May. The move pushes his potential release date from September until

A jury in Brownsville found Grupo Mazz singer Jose "Joe" Lopez guilty of having sex with a teenage girl. He was sentenced to three decades in prison. His parole comes because Lopez agreed to take a Sex Offender Treatment Class in prison, along with a several other conditions that would keep him away from his victim.

>>>Scroll through the gallery to see other cases of musicians behaving badly.

A jury in Brownsville found Grupo Mazz singer Jose "Joe" Lopez guilty of having sex with a teenage girl. He was sentenced to three decades in prison. His parole comes because Lopez agreed

Not so fast: Freedom for imprisoned Tejano singer delayed

Freedom for Jose Manuel "Joe" Lopez seemed within reach. The man who became famous as the singer for Grupo Mazz could see the end of his prison term just months away.

Now, that horizon has been pushed a bit farther down the way.

The Texas Pardons and Parole Board on Friday ordered the 66-year-old Lopez to complete a nine-month Sex Offender Treatment Program staring in May.

CLEAN SLATE: Family of Tejano singer wants to exonerate him

That move delays the release of Lopez from around September until 2018.

Board spokesman Raymond Estrada told The Brownsville Herald the panel determined that the longer program was more appropriate for Lopez.

Lopez became famous as the groups lead vocalist, producing several hits and albums for the Brownsville-based band. He and co-founder Jimmy Gonzalez went on to form separate bands, but each kept the name Mazz in some fashion.

IN COURT: Rapper Paul Wall appears before a judge in Houston

A jury convicted Lopez, a Grammy-winning artist, in 2004 of having sex with a 13-year-old relative and being sentenced to up to 32 years in prison.

Lopez was imprisoned at the W.F. Ramsey Unit in Rosharon, Texas.

Grupo Mazz had no statement on it's Facebook page about Lopez on Sunday. It's unclear what Lopez will do once released or whether he will return to music.

>>>Scroll through the gallery above to see other instances of musicians and rock stars behaving badly

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Not so fast: Freedom for imprisoned Tejano singer delayed - Chron.com

Justice Secretary Liz Truss backs freedom of the press in wake of Brexit court case criticism – The Sun

The Cabinet minister hit back at claims she failed to protect courts over media outcry

JUSTICE Secretary Liz Truss insisted the freedom of the Press was a vital tenet of democracy yesterday as she was urged to condemn coverage of the Brexit court case.

Liz Truss said she would never say to the media what they should be printing after law chief Lord Neuberger complained reporting of the case risked undermining the rule of law.

PA:Press Association

Defending her position, Ms Truss told BBCs Andrew Marr Show: I will never say to the media what they should be printing on their headlines.

I think it would be totally wrong for a Government minister to go around saying this is acceptable, this isnt acceptable.

Freedom of the press is another really important part of our democracy, just like independence of the judiciary.

The Cabinet minister also insisted the Brexit vote was irrecoverable and the issue was now settled.

PA:Press Association

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Justice Secretary Liz Truss backs freedom of the press in wake of Brexit court case criticism - The Sun

Auckland Council frees up 29 new overnight spots for freedom camping – Waikato Times

Freedom campers across Auckland are now freerthan ever,as dozens of new overnight sites become available to them.

In a two-month pilotstarting this week, 29 locations from Wellsford in the northto Pukekohe in the south have been highlighted as safe havensfor tourists in campervans and tents to stay overnight.

Auckland Council said thescheme was aneffort tocombatincreasing tensions between freedom campers and locals in Auckland, after abumper tourism season.

The"dispersalprogramme" hopes to see freedom camping visitors spread out over the multitude of new locations across the city, rather than crowd into thefew well-known hot spots.

"If we can encourage campers into new areas, we hope to reduce overcrowding and spread the tourism dollar to other local board economies, while also introducing visitors to some of the lesser-known but lovely corners of our city," Councillor Linda Cooper, chairwoman of the council's regulatory committee, said.

Campers bring an estimated $1.2 million a month into Auckland's economy over summer, and Cooper estimated 320 freedom camping vehicles per day are either travelling on the region's roads or parked in public places.

"We want to be welcoming hosts to our visitors.However, the influx of freedom campers intohot spotareas - particularly in northeastern coastal and inner city locations - is creating problems.

"Overcrowding, parking and access difficulties, and increasing rubbish at popular destinations is frustrating local communities and other park users."

She said the sites includedparking lots, pre-existing freedom camping spots, parks, and reservesand wereselected following extensive consultation with local boards.

At the outer edges of Auckland, the Franklin and Rodney local boards put forward seven and eight sites respectivelyfor thepilot scheme, and the Hibiscus and Bays Local Board chose five sites.

Other sites are based in the Howick, Maungakiekie-Tmaki, Upper Harbour andPanmure,Puketapapaand Albert-Eden Local Boards.

Throughout the trial, council officers will ensure the sites are kept well-maintained and tidy, with clearaccesswaysfor the public to traverse and park, Cooper said.

The issue lies in travellers overloading amenities at the few well-known spots,causing strife for the local residents, Auckland Council's manager of social policy and bylaws,Michael Sinclair, said.

"They have been known to overload the rubbish bins, which are only designed for day-to-day use, not camping use.

"And they may go into a public toilet, that's got one or two basins designed for casual use and end up doing their whole ablutionsthere, which is notsonice for the people who use it all the time."

Sinclair said freedom campers have also been known to overwhelm parking areas to places such as beachs, so locals can't get a spot.

He said the new spots have been considered based on availability ofrubbish and bathroom facilities, and where inadequate, extraport-a-loos will be brought in and rubbish collected more frequently.

Auckland Council operates 44campgroundsin regional parks throughout Auckland and there are also threeholiday parks.

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Auckland Council frees up 29 new overnight spots for freedom camping - Waikato Times

How much does the Johnson Amendment curtail church freedom? – The Conversation US

First Baptist Church Pastor John Crowder leads an open-air Sunday service four days after a deadly fertilizer plant explosion in the town of West, near Waco, Texas, on April 21, 2013.

On National Prayer Breakfast day in early February, President Donald Trump repeated a pledge he had made several times on the campaign trail that echoed the 2016 Republican Party Platform:

I will get rid of, and totally destroy, the Johnson Amendment and allow our representatives of faith to speak freely and without fear of retribution.

He was talking about a small part of the tax code that requires organizations that are both tax-exempt and able to receive tax-deductible contributions to stay away from political campaigns.

Often called the Johnson Amendment, this law covers churches, mosques and synagogues, as well as other charitable, religious, educational and scientific organizations.

Almost 90 percent of Protestant pastors and 80 percent of parishioners agree that churches should stay out of politics. But the truth is many moral issues are deeply political.

Im the author of Nonprofit Law: the Life Cycle of a Nonprofit and a professor in the School of Public Policy at UMass Amherst. From my perspective, a bigger question is how far are pastors and other leaders of houses of worship muzzled under the current law?

Heres a detailed look at what pastors and other leaders of houses of worship can and cannot say under the Johnson Amendment.

First, lets look at what the Johnson Amendment prohibits.

Tax-exempt churches and their staff cannot endorse or oppose political candidates, even indirectly. So, if a church wishes to retain its tax-exempt status and be able to accept tax-deductible donations, pastors are required to refrain from supporting any candidate.

That means the church cannot make political donations, invite one candidate to speak or use its facilities without the others, or compare a candidates positions to the churchs.

In fact, anything that suggests the church prefers a candidate or party can, at least theoretically, endanger the churchs tax exemption.

And yet, churches and their leaders can speak out in a variety of ways that could reflect their religious views.

For example, pastors can bring their religious knowledge to the moral issues of the day and discuss public policy issues, such as abortion, poverty and homosexuality from the pulpit. As the Supreme Court has said,

Adherents of particular faiths and individual churches frequently take strong positions on public issues . Of course, churches as much as secular bodies and private citizens have that right.

So, houses of worship can also conduct educational meetings; they can inform candidates of their positions on issues, and criticize or praise the actions of an elected official.

Thus, even though President Trump has already filed for reelection, churches can speak out on his policies as long as they do not indicate their preference for the 2020 election.

Pastors are also free to endorse candidates if they do so as private citizens: that is, not speak from the actual building of the church, making clear their independence from their church role. In 2016 Robert Jeffress, the pastor of a Dallas megachurch, endorsed Donald Trump, and Pastor Cynthia Hale prayed for Hillary Clinton to become president.

In fact, approximately 44 percent of Protestant pastors acknowledged endorsing candidates in their own capacity in 2016.

Another way in which pastors can engage with citizens is through voter education. What this means is that churches can encourage voter registration, drive people to the polls, and prepare nonpartisan voters guides and forums.

For example, the United Church of Christ has an Our Faith, Our Vote campaign to encourage participation in the electoral process.

In addition, the law says that churches can lobby their legislators, provided that lobbying is not a substantial part of their activities. Neither Congress nor the IRS has explained exactly what substantial means in the context of a church.

The Catholic Church, Mormon Church and Church of Scientology have all been in the news recently for lobbying.

Religious leaders can also speak for or against a judicial nominee and express an opinion on a ballot measure, referendum or constitutional amendment.

Neither judges nor measures are candidates for public office, and therefore they are not covered by the Johnson Amendment.

Religious houses comply with the law as long as they invite all major candidates to speak, even if only one candidate appears, as long as the candidates are invited to events with approximately the same attendance. For example, Senator Ted Cruz announced his 2016 candidacy for president at Liberty University, a Christian university, which critics claimed violated the Johnson Amendment. But Bernie Sanders also spoke there.

A church can also invite a candidate in a capacity other than being a candidate. Thus, the United Church of Christ did not violate the Johnson Amendment when it invited Barack Obama to speak about his faith journey.

The Johnson Amendment does not prevent churches from speaking out politically if they are willing to forego their tax exemption. Mike Huckabee is among the leaders who has suggested they take this route.

Indeed, the law clearly states that if a church violates the Johnson Amendment, it can lose its tax exemption and it can be forced to pay an excise tax on its political expenditures. But this almost never happens. The IRS does not disclose its investigations or its settlements with taxpayers, so we do not know exactly what they are investigating unless the taxpayer makes a public announcement or there is a court case.

As far as we know, however, only one church has ever lost its exemption for violating the Johnson Amendment. In 2000 the D.C. Circuit affirmed an IRS decision to revoke the tax-exempt status of the Church of Pierce Creek after it published full-page ads in two major newspapers opposing presidential candidate Bill Clinton.

We know that the IRS attempted to impose a tax on a Catholic organization in 2004 that had criticized presidential candidate John Kerry and attempted to investigate a Christian organization that endorsed Michele Bachmann for president in 2009, but it changed its mind in the first situation and a court prevented the second on procedural grounds.

Since then, no other investigation has become public, even though some churches are blatantly challenging the restriction. Every year since 2009, a Sunday in October is labeled Pulpit Freedom Sunday, and pastors around the country endorse candidates from the pulpit. According to its organizers, over 4,100 pastors have joined the movement since that date.

In 2016, a Pew Research survey found that 14 percent of those who attended religious services in the spring and early summer heard statements opposing or endorsing presidential candidates.

It is unclear what happens next, but here are some possibilities.

One, the situation could remain as it is, with the law on the books that most churches follow, but some blatantly disregard without losing their tax exemption because of lax enforcement. Two, the IRS could challenge a church that disregards the Johnson Amendment, and the courts could decide its fate. Three, President Trump could direct the IRS to refrain from enforcing the Johnson Amendment. Four, Congress could pass the Free Speech Fairness Act of 2017, which was introduced in Congress on Feb. 1.

That act would allow churches and other nonprofits to endorse or oppose a candidate if the statement is made during the ordinary course of business and its cost is insignificant. It is unclear what it means, but I read it as allowing pastors to speak from the pulpit.

Lastly, Congress could enact legislation that would repeal the Johnson Amendment entirely, a change that is likely to have far-reaching consequences for churches and the entire nonprofit sector.

We will have to wait to see what happens, of course.

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How much does the Johnson Amendment curtail church freedom? - The Conversation US

Religious Freedom Is a Progressive Value – AlterNet

American flag and old church steeple reflect separation of church and state Photo Credit: Bobkeenan Photography

To read press coverage about it, one might think that religious freedom is a concern only for religious and political conservatives, and not one of the most liberatory ideas in history. One would also think religious freedom and civil rights are at odds with one another. Indeed, U.S. history is filled with examples of such competing claims, as resistance to everything from African American civil rights to marriage equality have been cast as matters of religious freedom. But stepping back from the heat of our political moment, there is a different, more fully accurate, story to be told, one I think that as progressives, we need to know and be able to tell.

Religious freedom is a powerful ideathe stuff from which revolutions are sometimes made. It includes the right of individual conscienceto believe or not believe as we choose, without undue influence from government or powerful religious institutions, and to practice our beliefs free from the same constraints. Its no surprise that the first part of the First Amendment guarantees freedom of belief. The right to believe differently from the rich and powerful is a prerequisite for free speech and a free press. Grounding our politics, journalism, and scholarship in a clear understanding of what it means and where it came from could serve as both an inoculation and an answer to the distorted, self-serving claims of the Christian Right.

It was religious freedom that allowed for Quakers, evangelicals and Unitarians to lead the way in opposition to slavery in the 19th Century. Religious freedom also allowed Catholics and mainline Protestants to guide society in creating child labor laws early in the 20th Century, and later made it possible for religious groups and leaders to help forge wide and evolving coalitions to advance African American Civil Rights and womens equality, to oppose the Vietnam war, and eventually fight for LGBTQ civil and religious rights.

Such coalitions arent always easy. When North Carolina Disciples of Christ minister Rev. Dr. William Barber, a leader in the progressive Moral Mondays movement, was asked about squaring religious freedom and marriage equality, he looked to the lessons of history and the wisdom of his own religious tradition. Working within a coalition that had long included LGBTQ advocates, Barber noted that the Christian Right was trying to divide our ranks by casting doubt either among the LGBTQ community or among the African American community about whether our moral movement truly represented them.

In the last century the NAACP had faced a similar challenge over the question of restrictions on interracial marriage. They ultimately opposed the bans, he wrote, as a matter of upholding the moral and constitutional principle of equal protection under the law. Faced with yet another fear-based tactic today, Barber wrote, our movements response had to be the same. He found his response in the First Amendment, which guarantees the right of churches, synagogues, and mosques to discern for themselves what God says about marriage, free from governmental attempts to enforce its preferred religious doctrines.

The Revolutionary era Virginians who created our approach to religious freedom, understood religious freedom to be synonymous with the idea of the right of individual conscience. James Madison wrote that when the Virginia Convention of 1776 issued the Virginia Declaration of Rights (three weeks before the Declaration of Independence), the delegates removed any language about religious toleration and declared instead the freedom of conscience to be a natural and absolute right. Madison was joined in supporting the rights of conscience by evangelical Presbyterians and Baptists who also insisted on a separation of church and state for fear that mixing would corrupt both.

Invoking the words of the Founders may seem hokey or sound archaic to some. But they knew that the freedom they were seeking to establish was fragile, and likely to be opposed in the future. Understanding the thru-line that connects the struggles for religious freedom at the founding of the country to todays helps us fight to defend the principle from redefinition and cooptation.

Such an understanding helped the United States Commission on Civil Rights in 2016 when it issued a major report on issues involving religious exemptions from the law. "Religious liberty was never intended to give one religion dominion over other religions or a veto power over the civil rights and civil liberties of others," said Commission Chair Martin R. Castro, who also further denounced the use of religious liberty as a "code word" for "Christian supremacy."

The Commission found that overly broad religious exemptions from federal labor and civil rights laws undermine the purposes of these laws and urged that courts, legislatures, or executive agencies narrowly tailor any exemptions to address the need without diminishing the efficacy of the law.

Religious freedom advocates of the colonial era faced powerful entrenched interests who actively suppressed religious deviance and dissent that might upset their privileges. In the Virginia colony attendance was required at the Sunday services of the Church of England, and failure to attend was the most prosecuted crime in the colony for many years. Members of church vestries were also empowered to report religious crimes like heresy and blasphemy to local grand juries. Unsurprisingly, the wealthy planters and business owners who comprised the Anglican vestries were able to limit access to this pipeline to political power. Dissenters from these theocratic dictates were dealt with harshly. In the years running up to the Revolution, Baptists and other religious dissidents in Virginia were victims of vigilante violence. Men on horseback would often ride through crowds gathered to witness a baptism, historian John Ragosta reports. Preachers were horsewhipped and dunked in rivers and ponds in a rude parody of their baptism ritual Black attendees at meetings whether free or slave were subject to particularly savage beatings.

This was the context in which Jefferson drafted the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom in 1777, which took nearly a decade to become law. The statute effectively disestablished the Anglican Church as the state church of Virginia, curtailing its extraordinary powers and privileges. It also decreed that citizens are free to believe as they will and that this shall in no wise diminish, enlarge, or affect their civil capacities. The statute was the first in history to self-impose complete religious freedom and equality, and historians as well as Supreme Court justices widely regard it as the root of how the framers of the Constitution (and later the First Amendment) approached matters of religion and government.

The principle of religious equality under the law was a profoundly progressive stance against the advantages enjoyed and enforced by the ruling political and economic elites of the 18th Century. Then, for example, as John Ragosta writes in Religious Freedom: Jeffersons Legacy, Americas Creed, Marriages had to be consecrated by an Anglican minister, making children of dissenters who failed to marry within the Church of England (or pay the local Anglican priest for his cooperation) subject to claims of bastardy, with potentially serious legal consequences.

Such abuses may seem like a relic of the past, but in recent years some Christians have tried to outlaw the religious marriages of others. In 2012 Christian Right advocates in North Carolina sought to build on existing laws limiting marriages to heterosexual couples by amending the state constitution, using language that would effectively criminalize the performance of marriage ceremonies without a license. This meant that clergy from varied religious traditions, from Judaism to Christianity to Buddhism, would be breaking the law if they solemnized religious marriage ceremonies for same-sex couples. And the motive was explicitly religious. State Senator Wesley Meredith, for example, cited the Bible in explaining, We need to regulate marriage because I believe that marriage is between a man and woman.

This issue was part of the 2014 case General Synod of the United Church of Christ vs. Resinger, wherein a federal judge declared that laws that deny same-sex couples the right to marry in the state, prohibit recognition of legal same-sex marriages from elsewhere in the United States, or threatens clergy or other officiants who solemnize the union of same-sex couples with civil or criminal penalties were unconstitutional. It was an historic victory for a progressive version of religious liberty but one soundly rooted in the history of religious freedom. Clergy could now perform same-sex marriage ceremonies without fear of prosecution," said Heather Kimmel, an attorney for the UCC.

Jefferson and his contemporaries saw religious freedom as the key to disentangling ancient, mutually reinforcing relationships between the economic and political interests of aristocrats and the institutional imperatives of the church: what Jefferson called an unholy alliance of kings, nobles, and priestsmeaning clergy of any religionthat divided people in order to rule them. His Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom was intended to put down the aristocracy of the clergy and restored to the citizens the freedom of the mind.

A quarter-millennium later, we are still struggling to defend religious freedom against erosion and assaults by powerful religious institutions and their agents inside and outside of government. Aspiring clerical aristocrats debase the idea of religious freedom when they use it as tool to seek exemptions from the generally applicable laws of the United Statesparticularly those that prohibit discrimination.

Religious freedom and civil rights are complementary values and legal principles necessary to sustain and advance equality for all. Like Rev. Barber, we must not fall for the ancient tactic of allowing the kings, nobles and priests of our time to divide and set us against one another.

We have come a long way since the revolutionaries who founded our country introduced one of the most powerfully democratic ideas in the history of the world. The struggle for religious freedom may never be complete, but it remains among our highest aspirations. And yet the kinds of forces that struggled both for and against religious freedom in the 18th Century are similar to those camps today. We are the rightful heirs of the constitutional legacy of religious freedom; the way is clear for us to find our voices and to reclaim our role.

This article will appear in the Winter issue of The Public Eye magazine.

Frederick Clarkson is a senior fellow at Political Research Associates and a member of the Public Eye editorial board. He is the editor of Dispatches from the Religious Left: The Future of Faith and Politics in America, and the author of Eternal Hostility: The Struggle Between Theocracy and Democracy.

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Religious Freedom Is a Progressive Value - AlterNet

11 Times Barack Obama Abused Press Freedom – Breitbart News

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Perhaps the mainstream media Brahmins have short memories or selective memories. Because when President Barack Obama took direct aim at the media and press freedom, few complained. And when they did, the media soon went back to giving him fawning coverage.

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Here are 11 moments Obama abused the press:

1. Campaign plane hijacking journalists. In 2008, the Obama campaign flew 25 members of the media to Chicago without telling them then-Sen. Obama was not, in fact, on board. CNN reported: [T]he press was essentially held hostage with no candidate and no choice but to fly to Chicago on a chartered plane.

2. Closing White House events to all but the official photographer. Obama barred the media from events including, ironically, an award ceremony where he was recognized for transparency and often restricted photographers access, only releasing images taken bythe official White House photographer.

3. Trying to shut out Fox News. The Obama administration targeted Fox News for isolation and marginalization, arguing that it was not a legitimate news organization but the research arm or the communications arm of the Republican Party. That served as a warning to other potentially critical outlets.

4. Stonewalling FOIA requests. The Obama administration set a record for failing to provide information requested by the press and the public under the Freedom of Information Act. The low point was Hillary Clintons email scandal, where tens of thousands of emails were hidden on a private server and deleted.

5. Prosecuting journalists and their sources. The Obama administration pursued Fox News reporter James Rosens private emails then misled Congress about it. CNNs Jake Tapper to his credit pointed out that Obama had used the Espionage Act against leakers more than all of his predecessors combined.

6. Wiretapping the Associated Press.After the Obama administrations snooping on the AP was exposed in 2013, a senior NBC correspondent excused President Obamaon the grounds that he would not have been nasty enough to alienate one of the presidents most important constituencies, the press.

7. Refusing to hold press conferences.For long stretches of his presidency, Obama refused to hold press conferencesat all, going 10 months without a formal press conference in a critical stretch from 2009 to 2010. He heeled the lowest average annual number of press conferences of any president since Ronald Reagan.

8. Filibustering at press conferences. When Obama did, finally, hold press conference, he often limited the number of questions by delivering long, rambling, often condescending answers. He wastes reporters time by refraining from answering questions with any candor, Jack Shafer complainedin Politico in 2016.

9. Attacking tough questions. When a Major Garrett of CBS actually asked a tough question about why the administration seemed not to be trying hard to free Americans held by Iran, includingWashington Post journalist Jason Rezaian Obama scolded him: Major, thats nonsense, and you should know better.

10. Appearing on fringe outlets. While media elitesgripe about conservative journalists being given a chance, Obama often restricted his appearances to fringe media:Inside Edition; Funny or Dies Between Two Ferns (which was then nominated for an Emmy); YouTube stars; anda radio show called Pimp with a Limp.

11. Iran deal echo chamber.The Obama administrationcreated fake news to support the Iran deal, setting up what it later boasted was an echo chamber of experts who would comment in the media to support the White House narrative on the negotiations. Meanwhile, key details were hidden from the public.

Through it all, President Obama regarded himself as a champion of press freedom, having run the most transparent administration ever.

Many mainstream media journalists ignoredthe Obama administrations abuses. A fewspoke out against them. But mostof them continued to paint him in glowing terms, regardless.

Joel B. Pollak is Senior Editor-at-Large at Breitbart News. He was named one of the most influential people in news media in 2016. His new book, How Trump Won: The Inside Story of a Revolution, is available from Regnery. Follow him on Twitter at @joelpollak.

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11 Times Barack Obama Abused Press Freedom - Breitbart News

Religious freedom topic of local talk as Congregation Beth Israel wraps up lecture series – The Daily Progress

Corporations religious rights and President Donald Trumps executive order on immigration were among the topics of a recent lecture at Congregation Beth Israel in Charlottesville.

About 60 people attended the third and final talk in the Legal Issues and Ethics speaker series Sunday. In this installment, Micah Schwartzman, the Edward F. Howrey Professor of Law at the University of Virginia, spoke on Religious Freedom in the Supreme Court.

Schwartzman attended UVa for his undergraduate studies and for law school. He holds a doctorate in politics from Oxford and clerked for Judge Paul V. Niemeyer of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit.

Schwartzmans lecture contained four sections: corporate religious freedom in relation to providing contraception; religious exceptions to serving LGBTQ customers; Trumps executive orders on immigration and travel for citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries; and the nomination of Neil Gorsuch for the U.S. Supreme Court.

The government shall not substantially burden you unless it has a compelling governmental interest, Schwartzman said of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993. The government has to have a really powerful reason and the policy it adopts that burdens your practice has to be what courts call the least restrictive means.

The professor then dove into the Hobby Lobby case, which stems from the contraception mandate of the Affordable Care Act. Overarching questions in the case, he said, include the extent of corporations human-like rights and the ramifications for future cases.

Hobby Lobby, a for-profit craft store chain, argued it should not have to pay for employees contraception because doing so would violate the family-owned companys religious beliefs. Hobby Lobby asserted that because corporations are people under the law, the company has the right of religious freedom.

There has been a big debate in this country about whether corporations are people, Schwartzman said. I have to tell you that this debate was lost a long, long time ago, probably in the late 19th century. Corporations are persons for all kinds of purposes The question that were really interested in is, can they have these particular rights: rights to freedom of speech, rights to freedom of religion The Supreme Court said that not only do they count as persons, they count as the kinds of persons that can exercise religious freedom.

Next, Schwartzman discussed corporate religious freedom in the context of gay marriage. In recent years, some businesses across the country have denied service to gay customers, refused to staff gay weddings and fired transgender employees.

Schwartzman said the issue is a natural extension of the Hobby Lobby decision. Hobby Lobbys progeny were a series of cases involving gay marriage and the rights of gay, lesbian and transgender people, he said.

Attendees at Sundays talk expressed concern over the presidents controversial executive orders. After the orders were signed, Schwartzman spoke to members of a Charlottesville mosque who expressed confusion and concern about whether their dual-citizen members would be able to visit family abroad.

Schwartzman argued that the orders violate the Establishment Clause of the U.S. Constitution, among other statutes.

The Establishment Clause, if it means anything, says that the government cant treat some religious groups better than others its not allowed to play favorites to engage in preferential treatment between people of different faiths , he said. This order discriminates amongst people in religious crowds. That seems to be [quite clearly] a violation of the Establishment Clause.

Finally, Schwartzman discussed Trumps Supreme Court nominee. He spoke about Gorsuchs educational and legal background, which includes an opinion in the Hobby Lobby case.

This is a very conventional, high-prestige nomination, Schwartzman said. Gorsuch is extremely well-educated. In fact, many people thought that he wouldnt be the pick because he is too well educated Hes a very conservative judge, hes congenial. People who know him like him, including his opponents.

Tom Gutherz, senior rabbi of Congregation Beth Israel, invited Schwartzman to speak.

We, as a congregation, are fortunate to have many distinguished UVa law faculty among our members, including some who can share their expertise with the larger community and help to advance the conversations we are having among ourselves about some of the issues facing us today as a community and as a nation, Gutherz said in an interview before Sundays talk. The question of how the concept of religious freedom is being shaped by recent court decisions is one of these issues, and Micah Schwartzman is an expert in this field.

Gutherz said Congregation Beth Israel was pleased with the lecture series and hopes to continue such events in the future.

Weve got a few more lectures in the works for the coming months, on diverse topics, he said. Well do another round of Legal Issues next year.

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Religious freedom topic of local talk as Congregation Beth Israel wraps up lecture series - The Daily Progress

‘Freedom! Victory!’ 500 African migrants celebrate after breaking through EU border fence (VIDEO) – RT

Hundreds of migrants are being given food and first aid by Spanish authorities and charities after storming and climbing over a six-meter barbed-wire fence to enter Ceuta, Spains enclave in North Africa, bordering Morocco.

Early on Friday morning, Ruptly news agency captured footage groups of ebullient males of apparent sub-Saharan origin, hugging and dancing, and encouraging fellow migrants stuck on the other side of the barrier. Many wrapped themselves in Spanish and EU flags, and chanted Freedom! Victory! and Viva Espaa!

Hours earlier, the same men used shears and clubs in a mass raid on the reinforced border fence. Local media reports suggest that the breach was organized well in advance, and occurred at four different points. As many as 300 were pushed back, but border guards were overwhelmed by the sheer numbers, and police said that security cameras showed up to 600 men entering Ceuta, though emergency services put the number at 500. Eleven officers were injured, and three had to be taken to the medical emergency ward in serious condition. No one has been arrested.

As the sun rose over the enclave, which is home to about 80,000 people, most of the migrants camped in a group by the roadside, where the Red Cross said it was treating 400 men, many of whom suffered gashes and cuts during the storm. Twenty-five have been transferred to Ceutas hospital.

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All newcomers will be housed by CETI, a 512-capacity temporary migrant center, which was already home to 620 people who had mostly arrived in the city without documents, either by climbing over the fence, hiding inside a vehicle, or swimming into the port.

The migrants will now be given regular meals, a bed, counselling, and Spanish lessons, as they file their applications for asylum. Many will be relocated to other similar centers on the mainland.

This is the third such attack since December, when the multiple entry-point tactic was first used by migrants. On January 1, 1,100 people attempted to breach the walls, overfilling CETI, which had to borrow army tents to accommodate the newcomers.

Spains State Security Secretary promised to develop a new protocol against the evidently successful tactic, but Frontex, the European border service, said that overall, only 1,000 people breached Ceuta, and Melilla, another enclave, in 2016, the lowest number in several years.

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'Freedom! Victory!' 500 African migrants celebrate after breaking through EU border fence (VIDEO) - RT

One year later, what happened to ‘Freedom 251’, world’s cheapest smartphone? – The New Indian Express

'Freedom 251' phone. (File photo)

NEW DELHI: If you are among those who pre-booked the world's cheapest smartphone at Rs 251 (less than $4) and are yet to hear from its Noida-based makers, you are not alone. It has been a year since the company promised to deliver"nearly 200,000 Freedom 251 handsets". But nothing has materialised so far. So what exactly happened?

After announcing that it has delivered 5,000 Freedom 251 smartphones in July, Ringing Bells Pvt Ltd said it would deliver 65,000 more to those who had booked the device in cash on delivery (COD) mode.

After that, no new numbers have been shared and it appears the initial hype has fizzled out. The company has since forayed into making TVs and other smartphones, burying the Freedom 251 dream.

Also Read:Makers of 'Freedom 251' phone summoned in cheque bounce case

Was this the biggest tech disappointment of 2016, despite Freedom 251 making national and global headlines throughout the year?

"I think we could have called it the biggest disappointment only if there had been great expectations attached to it. Every educated person, or those having fair understanding of technology, doubted it. Some may have booked one just out of curiosity but that never meant they took it seriously," Faisal Kawoosa, Principal Analyst (Telecoms) at CyberMedia Research (CMR), a market research firm, told IANS.

The company in mid-February, 2016, had planned to deliver 2.5 million handsets before June 30, the same year. Ringing Bells received mammoth -- over 70 million -- registrations before its payment gateway crashed.

"I wouldn't call it biggest tech disappointment. But yes, it could be looked at as one of the biggest cheats in the digital age," Kawoosa added.

Also Read:We are still in business, claims 'Freedom 251' phone manufacturer

When reached, a Ringing Bells spokesperson told IANS that the company is working on improving its reach through distributor networks but did not say a word about Freedom 251's disappearance.

"Last six months have been phenomenal as we have reached 200 cities with a distributor network of 230. In this period, we have been able to widen our product base, including high-end mobiles and televisions. This year (2016), we sold 150,000 products and expect to get a 25 per cent increase in the coming months," the spokesperson said, declining to be named and without mentioning Freedom 251.

In an earlier interview with IANS, Ringing Bells CEO Mohit Goel said if the government was willing to dole out Rs 50,000 crore (about $7.5 billion), he can ensure that 750 million of our population would become part of digital India by owning a smartphone at Rs 251.

"The government can make the phone -- under our Freedom brand -- from some other vendor. I have no objection to it. To make such phone for every Indian citizen, the government needs to allocate funds from its Digital India initiative," Goel had said.

According to Parv Sharma, Research Associate at New Delhi-based Counterpoint Research, Freedom 251 raised false hopes in the people about owning a cheap smartphone.

"A massive shift in India is happening from feature phones to smartphones but that shift brings with itself a level of expectation -- expectation of consuming content, of watching videos and listening to music for a longer time and, hence, there is a need for better hardware features," Sharma told IANS.

To accommodate these features, the industry has reached a certain price point which is currently $50-$60, but packing something similar in a $4 device is not possible as of now.

"Thus, Freedom 251 failed to meet the demands of the consumers and had to cancel the pre-orders and refund the money to consumers," Sharma pointed out.

The world's cheapest phone made a splash across the globe, with almost every big media house writing about the "miracle device".

"But rather than improving our country's image, the long delay has tarnished our image globally. It is also a setback for the government which is pushing the 'Digital India' and 'Make in India' initiatives," noted Vishal Tripathi, Research Director at global market consultancy firm Gartner, adding that the government must ensure the veracity of such tall claims.

But according to Kawoosa, if the government starts imposing stricter controls over propositions like Freedom 251, that could mean disrupting the enabling start-up ecosystem and environment.

"In the end, the government support has to be positive to promote innovations and it will be very challenging to decide beforehand whether the innovation would be a success or failure. So one has to give a fair chance to all," Kawoosa told IANS.

"But yes, some basic-level evaluation needs to be put in place to check the business viability of such propositions, especially when it has the potential to affect everyone's lives," Kawoosa explained.

"The government should be highly concerned about the companies which do not give realistic promises and must not support such companies. We have various laws in our country to protect consumers from Ponzi companies," Sharma added.

Doubts were initially raised over Ringing Bells' handset after some experts said no smartphone could be manufactured for less than Rs 2,000.

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One year later, what happened to 'Freedom 251', world's cheapest smartphone? - The New Indian Express

Freedom boys outlast Hickory for NWC tourney title – Morganton News Herald

Tensions were understandably high Friday night at Freedom in a Northwestern 3A/4A Conference boys basketball tournament title game pitting a pair of teams in the top six in the state poll who had claimed every championship in the current league alignment since 2013-14.

Oddly given their recent success which includes a combined 16 state playoff wins and three regional berths over the last three years this was the first time in that span that the Patriots met Hickory for the NWC tourney title, making the bragging rights between the rivals worth that much more.

In the end, the home team won for a fourth straight time in the head-to-head series as Freedom staved off a pair of Red Tornadoes rallies from double digits behind in a 75-68 victory.

In its eighth straight win since a loss at Hickory, No. 1 seed Freedom (24-2) led 13-3 barely three minutes into the game on the strength of two buckets by Tobias Kanipe in the post (both assisted by Jakari Dula) and 3-pointers from Dula, Alex Lineberger and Fletcher Abee.

But the No. 3 seed Tornadoes surged to an 18-17 advantage late in the opening period, and the rest of the half featured four more lead changes with three ties, including one at 33-all at halftime.

In similar fashion to his first-round performance Tuesday, Lineberger lifted the team on his shoulders early in the second half. He scored the first four points of the third period as part of an initial 9-0 scoring run, then decided to test his range.

Lineberger pulled up from about 25 feet for a bomb that made it 45-35 and about two minutes later, drilled one from at least 30 feet out while standing on the volleyball stripe near midcourt to prompt a Hickory timeout at 50-38.

Where exactly was Lineberger shooting the latter 3 from?

From the parking lot, Dula said, laughing. I knew he was shooting. He hit the first one (from a few feet closer), and I was like, Coach, hes pulling. And he hit it. But I knew he was going to. He can hit them from out there.

Some spotty Freedom foul shooting allowed Hickory to climb back within 58-55 with 3:40 left, and the margin was just 70-68 with 34 seconds to play until Abee made 5 of 6 at the stripe to secure the win.

It was the third time in the last six seasons that FHS has won both its league regular-season and tourney crowns.

I thought we made a lot of tough plays tonight, Freedom coach Casey Rogers said. Everyone knows how much we value toughness. We rebounded it very well defensively, one of the real keys when you play them. I think that was a program-type win.

Kanipe was named all-tournament after leading Freedom and tying a career-high with 20 points (13 in first half) as well as tying Lineberger for top honors with eight rebounds. He has scored in double figures in eight of the last nine games and elevated his play after teammate Aidan Pearson was lost for the season due to injury.

I think winning tournament was more important (than regular season). It might have been harder, Kanipe said. It came down to us making stops and rebounding.

I took (the increased role this year) as, Ive got to step up and do what I need to do to help this team win, practice harder, play my best, and thats what I did.

Dula (18 points, four assists) was named tourney MVP, and Abee (15 points, five steals) was named all-tourney as well. Lineberger added 18 points with two assists and two steals and fellow senior Cam Edmonson grabbed six rebounds (five in second half).

This is my last year, Lineberger said. I know for us as seniors, well do what it takes for us to grind it out and go get (a state title).

As they aim that direction, FHS figures to have the advantage as a high seed of staying at home for several games if they keep winning. And the Patriots havent lost at home this season.

Hopefully that trend continues, Rogers added. Well take this weekend, come in and have a good prep, find out who weve got (in the first round) and be ready to go Tuesday.

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Freedom boys outlast Hickory for NWC tourney title - Morganton News Herald

Reversing the decline in America’s economic freedom – Circleville Herald

Economic freedom has been on the rise in many countries around the globe. So why has it been declining here in the United States?

The Heritage Foundations 2017 Index of Economic Freedom is out, with its country-by-country assessments, and it shows the U.S. rating has dwindled to its lowest level in the indexs 23-year history. The Washington-first, big-government policies of the past eight years have essentially wiped out a decade of progress.

This decline affects all of us. Economic freedom transcends the market. Its a vital element in creating a society that values and advances opportunity and personal progress.

A true free market is more than just an arrangement of voluntary economic relationships. Its a proven source of dynamic growth and upward social mobility. Its principles are written into our national DNA:?empowerment of the individual, equality before the law and open competition.

Ironically, the rising levels of economic freedom we observe around the world are thanks in large part to the historical record of the United States in promoting and defending freedom. Yet the recent record of the U.S. in the index? ?the undeniable trail of declining economic freedom? ?is a serious cause for alarm.

So what is the source of this downward trend? The U.S. is lagging because of deteriorations in certain key policy areas. Increased tax and regulatory burdens, aggravated by favoritism toward entrenched interests, have undercut Americas historically dynamic entrepreneurial growth. Theyve confined the U.S. economy to the rank of only mostly free.

There is no doubt that Americas dwindling economic freedom has a human toll. Families, businesses and community organizations across America? ?what the 18th-century philosopher Edmund Burke dubbed the little platoons of society? ?have been squeezed by the governments assault on our economic freedom.

Despite the ongoing recovery, the economic damage has been extensive. Its legacy includes subpar growth, mediocre business investment and fewer job prospects? particularly for the poor and less skilled.

This is the current status of the nation, and there is no use in denying it. However, it is critical that we understand that the economic reality America confronts is neither a statement of fate nor a forecast. The future is open to recovery. Crafting a better economic future will necessitate a return to the ideas that helped animate our founding: limited government, individual liberty with responsibility, and free enterprise.

Success depends, however, on understanding that economic and cultural factors are inextricably interwoven. Policies that advance economic freedom expand opportunities for workers in all walks of life. The culture of family and community also surely affects the extent to which individuals take advantage of their opportunities. As the late William E. Simon, a former Treasury secretary and a staunch advocate of liberty, once noted:

(T)he true concept of economic freedom must be understood to be far deeper and richer than the mere absence of restraint, or the license to do as one pleases. The only defensible kind of economic freedom is freedom coupled with a sense of moral responsibility to ones community and country, to the values that bind us.

Fortunately, the greater calling for conservative solutions on many policy fronts in recent years points to new hope for revitalizing Americas economic freedom. That work will surely entail the rise of a new generation of leaders willing to relearn the crucial linkage among economic freedom, personal responsibility, opportunity and empowerment.

Analyzing economic trends is a critical first step toward inspiring the resolve to get America back on track and reinvigorate the free-market dynamism that ensures opportunity for all but favoritism to none. Now is the time to rebuild and deploy Americas principled policy toolkit. The 2017 Index of Economic Freedom serves that goal.

2017 The Heritage Foundation

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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Reversing the decline in America's economic freedom - Circleville Herald

Hidden History: Connecticut Freedom Trail – WTNH Connecticut News (press release)

(WTNH) For slaves seeking freedom, it was a race against time.

Canada ended slavery in 1833 so Canada was kind of like the promised land for a fugitive, said Todd Levine, the Connecticut Freedom Trail.

The home of Uriel Tuttle in Torrington was a welcome safe haven on that journey of the Underground Railroad. The house was built around 1800. Tuttle opened his doors to escaped slaves and was dedicated to the abolitionist cause. At that time, helping slaves was illegal.

It became very dangerous for a family to become an underground railroad station, said Levine.

You could face up to six months in jail and up to $1,000 fine, which was a fortune back then. Hiding away runaway slaves wasnt always as covert and secretive as many people may think.

Another misconception is things like hidden tunnels, secret compartmentsthey do exist in some places, but generally the way the traveling slaves got to safe houses was traveling by night either by foot, wagon, horse or boat, said Levine.

They would likely walk right through the front door and then hide in the attic during the day.

Fugitive slaves were generally young men alone, not families. Generally, one single guy trying to make his way, said Levine.

Some slaves fought for their freedom in a different way hand to hand combat. Slaves on the ship, Amistad, used this technique.

South Africans were kidnapped and taken from their home and sold into slavery. They were on their way to a Cuban plantation when they rose up and took control of their vessel and tried to make their way back home, said Levine.

The ship ended up in New London, but the trial made it all the way to the Supreme Court, with many heroes stepping up along the way.

John Quincy Adams, former president, who came out of retirement to argue successfully that all men are created equal, said Levine.

Other heroes like Samuel and Catherine Deming who lived in Farmington in a house that is now part of Miss Porters School, were a beacon of hope for the Mendis and all slaves seeking freedom.

For the Underground Railroad, Farmington became Grand Central Station, said Levine.

After the Mendi slaves won their freedom, the Demings provided a place to stay.

What Deming did was building dormitories for them on his land in one of his buildings so that the Mendis could have a place to stay and learn, said Levine.

Other residents of Farmington rose up in support as well.

The whole town of Farmington came together including the municipality, in order to send these guys back home, said Levine.

Along the Freedom Trail to Norwich was the birthplace of David Ruggles. He was a free black man who is said to have helped over 600 slaves.

We do know a little bit about some of the folks he helped to rescue from slavery. One of them was Frederick Douglass, said Dale Plummer, City of Norwich Historian.

What we have learned is that folks in this community and others across the state really took a stand. Doing so back then was considered controversial.

Some very powerful people in the anti-slavery movement came from Connecticut, said Plummer.

They took courageous action toward protecting freedom and human dignity.

These are the stories of the freedom trail. These are the stories of overcoming impossible odds to gain their freedom, said Levine.

Click here for information on the number of Underground Railroad sites all around the state.

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Hidden History: Connecticut Freedom Trail - WTNH Connecticut News (press release)

Passivity and Freedom – First Things (blog)

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Ingolf Dalferth thinks we are Creatures of Possibility. By that, he means that we are creatures in the making whose actual becoming depends on possibilities beyond our control that occur in our lives as opportunities and chances that we can neglect and miss or take up and use (ix). We are free to choose and act, and we can determine the mode of our choosing and the way of our acting in moral terms. Yet this freedom depends on conditions that are beyond our control: we can choose and act and determine ourselves only against the backdrop of a basic passivity that characterizes our life and cannot be replaced or undone by anything we can do (x).

This is a fundamental reality of human life: Most of what we are we do not owe to ourselves. Our existence (Dasein), our particular way of existence (Sosein), and our truthful existence (Wahrsein) are all molded by passivity: There is so much that happens to us and so little that we make happen. Before I can act as a self, I must become a self, and while I cannot be a self without acting, I cannot become a self by acting. Before we can even us the nominative I, we first experience the dative and the accusative - we are objects and recipients. In short, A primal passivity precedes all our activity. Before we can give, we must be a given, and before we can act, we must be an actuality (xi-xii).

Action isn't a movement from passivity or activity; every action is in the middle voice. What he calls contrastive or horizontal passivity has a passive side and an active side, a capacity to be affected by others (receptivity) and a capacity to affect others (activity), and the two are polar opposites that allow for different degrees of mixture. But this middle-voiced action is the product of deep or vertical passivity, in which we are entirely passive (xii). Dalferth emphasizes the prior activity of the creator and the deep passivity of the creature that precedes everything creatures do and can do as creatures. There is no created freedom of creatures that is not embedded in and dependent on a prior and one-sided creative freedom of the creator that corresponds to a deep passivity in the creature (xiii, fn 5).

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Passivity and Freedom - First Things (blog)

Over Democrats’ objections, Senate OKs ‘religious freedom’ bill – wtvr.com

RICHMOND, Va. Democratic officials and the American Civil Liberties Union blasted Republican senators after they passed a religious freedom bill that would protect people who refuse to marry same-gender couples.

HB 2025, sponsored by Del. Nicholas Freitas, R-Culpeper, cleared the Senate on Thursday on a party-line vote of 21-19. The bill protects organizations and their employees who refuse to participate in the solemnization of marriage based on a sincerely held religious belief.

Freitas said the legislation was a response to Democratic Gov. Terry McAuliffes executive order that prohibits state contractors from discriminating based on sexual orientation.

This is simply about preventing the government from punishing a religious organization because it doesnt fit with a current governor or anyone elses interpretation of social standards, Freitas said when introducing the bill in committee.

The bill would protect a religious organization from losing a state contract or its tax-exempt status because of the groups beliefs regarding marriage. It also would protect individuals from losing state employment, grants or acceptance into a public university if they refuse to participate in the marriage of a same-sex couple.

Democrats, who unanimously voted against the measure, contended it would sanction discrimination against gay and lesbian couples. On Tuesday, Lt. Gov. Ralph Northam celebrated the third anniversary of a federal court ruling in the Bostic v. Rainey case legalizing same-sex marriage.

On Thursday, Northam, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for governor, criticized the Senate for approving HB 2025.

We cannot go backwards. We need to continue to be open and welcoming to all, no matter who you are or who you love, Northam said in a press release.

Claire Gastanaga, executive director of the ACLU of Virginia, urged her groups supporters to oppose HB 2025 and SB 1324, an identical bill that passed the Senate last week and is now before the House Committee on General Laws.

If these bills are signed into law, same-sex couples could be denied services at church-run facilities, hotels or resorts affiliated with religious organizations, or at hospitals owned by religious groups, even if the services are funded by taxpayers, Gastanaga said.

Del. Marcus Simon, D-Falls Church, argued on the House floor that HB 2025 is unnecessary because the Religious Freedom Restoration Act already makes it illegal for public bodies to discriminate against faith-based organizations on the basis of their religious beliefs.

A similar bill was introduced last year and failed in part because of the argument articulated by Simon.

However, Republicans said they fear that McAuliffes executive order could lead to discrimination against faith-based organizations that object to same-sex marriage.

We had the governors executive order, which I believe does just that, or at least creates a mechanism where that can be accomplished, Freitas said.

Democrats expressed concerns over the bills potential economic consequences. North Carolina experienced economic losses after its government passed a similar law last year.

At the beginning of the legislative session, McAuliffe vowed to veto any bill he considered discriminatory. Northam said the governor would veto HB 2025.

At his news conference Tuesday, Northam vowed to protect gay and lesbian Virginians from discrimination.

Just before the holidays, I completed a seven-city tour that ended in Salem, Virginia, where I was pleased to welcome the NCAA soccer tournament, Northam said. That championship was relocated from North Carolina after the state passed anti-LGBT legislation, as was the NBA All-Star game and major businesses. As long as Im here, as long as Gov. McAuliffe and Attorney General (Mark) Herring are here, Virginia will be inclusive. We will not be like North Carolina.

Carol Schall, one of the plaintiffs in the Bostic v. Rainey case, also spoke at the news conference. She discussed HB 1395, which would have repealed language in state law that bans same-sex marriage. Even though the language is no longer valid, the bill, sponsored by Del. Mark Sickles, D-Fairfax County, died in a House committee.

Names matter. Names like mom and wife make all the difference in the world, Schall said. In past years such as this year, Del. Sickles proposed to repeal outdated constitutional amendment encoding discrimination in our great Constitution.

Sickles called for a full House vote on the issue. He also discussed HJ 538, his proposal to repeal a constitutional amendment adopted by voters adopted in 2006 that defines marriage as being between one man and one woman. Sickles resolution died in a House committee on an unrecorded vote.

Constitutional amendments require approval in two legislative sessions before they can be presented to voters on a November ballot.

If this constitutional were passed and it passed again next winter, by the time it got to the voters in November of 18, 1.2 million people in our state will have come of age, Sickles said. They want to speak to this. They do not want the people of the 2006 cultural and societal milieu to speak forever.

By Julie Rothey with Capital News Service

CNS reporter Tyler Hammel contributed to this report.

Capital News Service is a flagship program of VCUs Robertson School of Media and Culture. Students participating in the program provide state government coverage for Virginias community newspapers and other media outlets, under the supervision of Associate Professor Jeff South.

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Over Democrats' objections, Senate OKs 'religious freedom' bill - wtvr.com

Detroit’s Freedom House may have to close – Michigan Radio

Detroit's Freedom House has lost its federal funding for the first time in more than 20 years. And it may have to shut down or substantially reduce its services.

Freedom House provides transitional housing and comprehensive services under one roof to asylum seekers who are fleeing persecution, rape and torture in their home countries.

Executive Director Deborah Drennansaid the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development denied Freedom House's grant application in December, and Freedom House has appealed the decision.

She said the amount requested, around $392,000, represents about 60% of Freedom House's total budget.

"The decision came to us as quite a shock with only three months notice," said Brennan.

Brennan said HUD has shifted priorities from transitional housing to permanent housing, but that shouldn't have counted against Freedom House's application.

"We meet HUD's criteria in outcomes," said Brennan. "Freedom House this past year had 94% of our residents who exited into permanent, stable housing without subsidies."

Drennan said the possibility of Freedom House's closing is causing great stress to its residents.

"Human life is at stake here," said Drennan. "People who don't have access to legal aid or housing, they become at risk for homelessness. They become at risk for being victims of human trafficking."

Drennansaid if asylum seekers are homeless, it is more likely they may be deported back to the countries they fled where they likely will be persecuted or even killed.

Freedom House has been helping asylum seekers since 1983. In the 1980s many of its residents were from El Salvador. Now the vast majority are from sub-Saharan Africa.

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Detroit's Freedom House may have to close - Michigan Radio

Freedom of Association Takes Another Hit – Cato Institute (blog)

To see how little is left of one of our most important rights, the freedom of association, look no further than to todays unanimous decision by the Washington State Supreme Court upholding a lower courts ruling that florist Baronelle Stutzman was guilty of violating the Washington Law Against Discrimination (WLAD) when she declined, on religious grounds, to provide floral arrangements for one of her regular customers same-sex wedding. The lower court had found Stutzman personally liable and had awarded the plaintiffs permanent injunctive relief, actual monetary damages, attorneys fees, and costs.

This breathtaking part of the Supreme Courts conclusion is worth quoting in full:

We also hold that the WLAD may be enforced against Stutzman because it does not infringe any constitutional protection. As applied in this case, the WLAD does not compel speech or association. And assuming that it substantially burdens Stutzmans religious free exercise, the WLAD does not violate her right to religious free exercise under either the First Amendment or article I, section 11 because it is a neutral, generally applicable law that serves our state governments compelling interest in eradicating discrimination in public accommodations.

We have here yet another striking example of how modern state statutory anti-discrimination law has come to trump a host of federal constitutional rights, including speech, association, and religious free exercise. Its not too much to say that the Constitutions Faustian accommodation of slavery is today consuming the Constitution itself.

Consider simply the freedom of association right. That liberty in a free society ensures the right of private parties to associate, as against third parties, and the right not to associate as wellthat is, the right to discriminate for any reason, good or bad, or no reason at all. The exceptions at common law were for monopolies and common carriers. And if you held your business as open to the public you generally had to honor that, though you still could negotiate over services.

Slavery, of course, was a flat-out violation of freedom of associationindeed, it was the very essence of forced association. But Jim Crow was little better since it amounted to forced dis-association. It was finally ended, legally, by the 1964 Civil Rights Act. But that Act prohibited not simply public but private discrimination as well in a range of contexts and on a range of grounds, both of which have expanded over the years. The prohibition of private discrimination was probably necessary at the time to break the back of institutionalized racism in the South, but its legacy has brought us to todays decision, where florists, bakers, caterers, and even religious organizations can be forced to participate in events that offend their religious beliefs.

Courts havent yet compelled pastors to officiate at ceremonies that are inconsistent with their beliefs, but we have heard calls for eliminating the tax-exempt status of their institutions. Such is the wrath of the crowd that wants our every act to be circumscribed by lawtheir law, of course. And theyre prepared, as here, to force their association on unwilling parties even when there are plenty of other businesses anxious to serve them. As I concluded a Wall Street Journal piece on this subject a while ago:

No one enjoys the sting of discrimination or rejection. But neither does anyone like to be forced into uncomfortable situations, especially those that offend deeply held religious beliefs. In the end, who here is forcing whom? A society that cannot tolerate differing viewsand respect the live-and-let-live principlewill not long be free.

Amen.

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Freedom of Association Takes Another Hit - Cato Institute (blog)

Rand Paul Joins Freedom Caucus to Kick Off Conservative Obamacare Replacement Drive – Breitbart News

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This is a big, big day for conservative Republicans, said Paul, who was flanked by members of the House Freedom Caucus.

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The senator, who has been a physician and eye surgeon for more than two decades, said that for the last six years, Republicans have promised voters that they would repeal and replace Obamacare.

In 2010, Republicans won the House of Representatives; and in 2014, Republicans won the Senate; and in 2016, Republicans won the White Houseall based on that promise to unwind President Barack Obamas landmark health care reform legislation, he said.We owe this to the conservatives across the country to repealto completely repeal Obamacare.

Former South Carolina governor Rep. Mark Sanford (R.-S.C.)said he was proud to offer the House companion bill to the 180-page Obamacare replacement bill written by Paul.

I have long admired his stance toward liberty and individual freedom, and to maximizing both, Sanford said.I particularly like the way hes taken his real life experience as a physician and applied them to bring liberty to ultimately patients and citizens alike across this country in terms of what comes next in health care.

Paul said it is true that there are problems caused by Obamacare, but there were real problems in the healthcare industry before Obamacare that still need to be addressed.

We are concerned about how to provide the most insurance at the least amount of cost, and that is what our replacement bill does, he said.

For Paul the three top improvements in the bill are that it legalizes the sale of inexpensive insurance, expands the Health Savings Accounts which allow individuals to set aside money in tax-protected accounts for medical expenses, and allows Americans to band together in health insurance associations to create large pools of buyers for the purposes of driving down costs, he said.

The 11 million people buying insurance in the individual markets would be empowered with the opportunity to join one of these associations, he said.

Chairman of the House Freedom Caucus Rep. Mark Meadows (R.-N.C.) told reporters that the HFC fully supports the Paul-Sanford bill along with immediate repeal along the same lines as the 2015 Obamacare repeal bill that passed the House and Senate in 2015.

Meadows said that the 2015 repeal, which was completed through the same budget reconciliation process the current repeal is now going through along with the Paul-Sanford bill withits two-year transition period will bring about the repeal and replace of Obamacare, freeing Congress to tackle other projects and problems.

Because the repeal bill is part of the fiscal year 2017 budget, Congress cannot begin work on the fiscal year 2018 budget with 2017 unresolved, he said.

It would be our preference to have a vote on this replacement within days of our repeal vote, he said.

In January, while Obama was still in office, both houses of Congress voted to begin the repeal process with the next step of having relevant committees produce pieces of each chambers version. Bills using the budget track are privileged and do not need a 60-vote majority to end debate. Republicans hold a 52-to-48 majority in the Senate, making it unlikely to pass repeal through the regular order track.

The disadvantage to the budget track is that it is restricted to the taxes, penalties, and subsidies in the PPACA legislation. This means there are going to be three steps to unwind Obamacare. After repealing the financial underpinnings of the legislation, Congress would still need to address the rules, regulations, and administrative infrastructure left untouched by the budget bill. Finally, Congress needs to decide if there will be a replacement program or will it just allow the healthcare system into freefall.

Meadows said that another replacement proposed by Sen. Bill Cassidy (R.-La.) and Sen. Susan Collins (R.-Maine) is not a serious replacement because it leaves too much of the PPACA intact.

The North Carolina congressman said he welcomes all bills and all ideas, but Capitol Hill conservatives cannot support Cassidy-Collins.

The speculation on what a replacement will look like has created an unnecessary climate of anxiety in this discussion, he said.I commend Senator Paul and Representative Sanford for releasing a plan so that we can move toward debating the issues at hand and ultimately keeping our promises to the people.

The former HFC Rep. Jim Jordan (R.-Ohio) said he is not worried about the political backlash from repealing Obamacare, because Republicans campaigned against it for the last three election cycles and won.

Americans expect Republicans to repeal Obamacare, he said. Everything they were told about this law turned out to be false.

The House Freedom Caucus has two official positions on Obamacare, he said. The first is what is in process now, the repeal through the budget reconciliation track, just as Congress passed it in 2015. Second, pass a replacement bill that empowers patients and doctors not Washington.

Sanford said the Affordable Care Act was well-intended, but it created some of its own problems.

It had the government deciding what was essential, whether you or your family members thought the same, he said. It had the government setting up non-insurance insurance, which worked against all the math.

A major fault in the Obamacare legislation is its failure to decouple health insurance from employment, he said.This coupling is a legacy of the wage and price controls from World War II, which were then codified in 1948.

During the war, employers were under pressure to pay higher wages for workers without pushing the workers into a higher tax bracket nor violating wage caps. Kaiser Shipyards, which built the Liberty Ships, got around these hurdles by offering subsidized health insurance, which functioned as tax-free income for the workers. Kaiser Permanente is a direct descendent of this innovation, which along with the Health Maintenance Organization, or HMO, became the routine practice in America.

The problem with this model, which Congress encouraged with tax deductions for company-based health plans, was that when a worker changed jobs, they changed insurance companies, and if the worker had a pre-existing condition, they either were locked into their current job or had to go without coverage for the pre-existing condition at the new job and its plan.

Sanford said individuals buying insurance through an association would be freed from job-lock and would be able to continue insurance with the same insurance company that covered a condition acquired with that company.

Given all the lessons learned from Obamacare, right now it the moment to fix the health care crisis, he said.

It is an inflection point, he said. This is about: Where do we go next?

Watch Wednesdays press conference with Sen. Rand Paul (R.-Ky.) andmembers of the House Freedom Caucus:

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Rand Paul Joins Freedom Caucus to Kick Off Conservative Obamacare Replacement Drive - Breitbart News

Poland drops in Economic Freedom Index – thenews.pl

PR dla Zagranicy

Roberto Galea 16.02.2017 13:52

Poland has dropped to 45th spot in this years Index of Economic Freedom, measuring the ease of conducting business worldwide.

Last year the country came 39th globally in the ranking issued by The Heritage Foundation and The Wall Street Journal.

Among its European peers, Poland dropped to 21st place, down from the previous years 18th.

According to the Warsaw Enterprise Institute, the Polish partner of the report, Polands economic freedom levels which are one point lower than they were a year ago are in large part a result of the growth dynamics of other countries, which have allowed them to overtake Poland.

The average level of global economic freedom has increased by 0.2 points in this year's index, reaching a record level of 60.9 points. The average for Europe was 68.0 points.

In terms of points, Polands position this year is higher than the global average and above the European average, Tomasz Wrblewski, the president of the Warsaw Enterprise Institute, said on Wednesday during the presentation of the index.

In relation to 2013, when the methodology changed, we grew by a total of 2.3 points. Since 2008, every few years Poland experienced minor hiccups on the road to full freedom. This was the case in 2009 and 2012, Wrblewski added.

High resilience

The authors of the report wrote: Polands economy has demonstrated a fairly high degree of macroeconomic resilience. Structural reforms that have included trade liberalisation, implementation of a competitively low corporate tax rate, and modernization of the regulatory environment have facilitated the transition to a market-oriented economy.

A comparatively high budget deficit is still a barrier to the economic freedom of Poland, the report added.

Fiscal consolidation and prudent management of public finance are ongoing concerns. The government needs to further reduce the budget deficit and curb the growth of public debt. In 2016, an additional tax on financial-services companies was imposed to help finance increased social spending. Continued reform, particularly in strengthening the independence of the judiciary and eradicating corruption, is needed to ensure greater economic dynamism.

At the top of the ranking were Hong Kong, Switzerland and New Zealand. (rg/pk)

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Poland drops in Economic Freedom Index - thenews.pl

Rubin: Detroit’s Freedom House may close – The Detroit News

Deborah Drennan, Executive Director, Freedom House, speaks of the center on Tuesday February 14, 2017 and it's mission to help clients from around the world.(Photo: Max Ortiz / The Detroit News)Buy Photo

The first knock came two Sundays ago at Freedom House, and the second on Tuesday night. The desperate refugees standing on the porch heard something no one ever had before:

Sorry. Theres no money to help you.

Freedom House has been helping the helpless since 1983 asylum-seekers whove been beaten or tortured or raped or threatened in their home countries, or knew they were next in line.

Now Freedom House itself is in jeopardy. A change in priorities in recent years at the Department of Housing and Urban Development will cut more than half of the one-of-a-kind shelters annual budget as of March 31.

Pending an appeal to HUD, said executive director Deborah Drennan and pending an increasingly urgent appeal for help locally Freedom House will have to start shedding staff and eliminating some of the services that make it a one-stop portal to the American way.

Worst case, said Drennan, no funds come in and we have to close. Corollary to the worst case: The job is farmed out piecemeal to less specific and encompassing agencies, and the moral and social compass of the city of Detroit shifts.

In a contentious time for anything related to immigration and refugees, the 42 current residents of the former convent in Southwest Detroit are increasingly wary, she said. In halting English, a West African resident names and nations are blurred for the sake of security said hes worried about his future, where six months ago when he arrived he was only hopeful.

But the threat to Freedom House stems from the previous administration, not the current one, and from the nature of its mission.

Founded by Roman Catholic activists, Freedom House first assisted Central Americans who had fled death squads during El Salvadors civil war. Now most in search of asylum come from sub-Saharan Africa or the Middle East.

Unlike refugees hoping to emigrate to the U.S., asylum seekers have already obtained visas. Having found their way to the big brick residence near the Ambassador Bridge, they are offered room and board, legal help, counseling, language classes, job training and anything else that smooths the path to asylum status, productivity and potential citizenship.

Freedom House, represented here by Deborah Drennan, has been helping asylum-seekers since 1983.(Photo: Max Ortiz / The Detroit News)

Ultimately, Drennan said, 86 percent of them are granted political asylum and 93 percent of them wind up in permanent independent housing. But by definition, Freedom House is transitional and transitional housing, said executive director Tasha Gray of the Homeless Action Network of Detroit (HAND), is not a priority nationwide.

HAND is the supervising agency in Detroit, Hamtramck and Highland Park for Continuum of Care funds from HUD. In short, it helps coordinate the local efforts that help the homeless, and manages a single, comprehensive collection of grant applications that most recently requested $24.6 million for 53 projects.

In its campaign to end homelessness, Gray said, HUD favors the approaches that are the most statistically successful permanent supportive housing for the disabled or mentally ill, and swift re-housing for those whose homelessness is caused by a hardship or calamity.

The priorities to HUD are families, youth, and chronic homeless individuals, she said. I would say asylum seekers are not fitting in those categories.

Freedom House requested $390,841, similar to what its been awarded before and substantial in a budget of about $750,000.

Along with three other pitches for transitional programs, including one from COTS for victims of domestic abuse, it was rejected.

Freedom House appealed the decision, and if theres a ray of hope, its that no word has come back from HUD. Appeals from the other three local agencies, Gray said, were swiftly denied.

Cass Community Social Services of Detroit had four projects approved, but lost out on its safe haven program for the chronic mentally ill. Numbers dont always tell the full story, said executive director Faith Fowler, either for her effort or for Freedom House.

Its in the right area with good, compassionate people. Its a good program, Fowler said. Theyve been doing good work with a shoestring budget for a long time.

Drennan, 61, set out to be a nun and wound up building a career in hands-on nonprofits. Shes in her 11th year in a building with resident-crafted artworks of maps and peace signs.

In the past decade, said program director T.J. Rogers, Freedom House has helped 1,394 people from 74 countries. All of them come with a story and none of the stories are joyous.

When youre tortured, Drennan said, thats a very intimate thing to share. Can you imagine?

But the residents tend to bond, and sometimes Drennan likes to stop halfway down the stairs and just listen to the happiness the laughter, the songs, the shrieks of the 2-year-old twins who arent even the youngest residents this month.

Many of the residents hold college degrees or even doctorates, she said; the educated are often the greatest threats to repressive governments. Some have left Freedom House and become nurses. Others are now employers.

Drennan has seen fresh scars and heard the midnight wails from internal ones. She has helped people who knew about Freedom House before they left Cameroon or Chad, and had others referred by strangers at distant airports who had compassion and Google.

One woman was simply dropped at the door by a Metro Airport custodian whod seen her sitting at a boarding gate in the late hours, sipping water from her plastic bottle. He wouldnt give his name or take money.

Im just doing what anybody would do, he said and what Drennan hopes to keep doing, as long as she can keep the doors open.

Freedom House accepts donations at freedomhousedetroit.org. The woman residents call Mom Deb has been conferring with city council members and spreading the word as best she can.

To this point, the collection plate holds about $16,000. Theres a long way to go, she conceded, but shes surrounded by people who came a long way already.

nrubin@detroitnews.com

Twitter: @nealrubin_dn

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Rubin: Detroit's Freedom House may close - The Detroit News