In The Debate on Religious Freedom, An Analogy

Faith, Freedom of Religion

An analogy:

Special Interest – say, Pork Producers – think there should be FREE pork served daily for school lunches, and think every school – public, private, religious, even Jewish – should be required to provide it for their students, even if it violates their religious beliefs.
They think it’s a really good idea, and want it to be law, and they want the government to enforce it, on everyone.

Special Interest – say, N.O.W. – think there should be FREE paid-for for all birth control (etc.), and think everyone, even Catholic organizations, should be required to provide it for their employees, even if it violates their religious beliefs.
They think it’s a really good idea, and want it to be law, and they want the government to enforce it, on everyone.

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Basic And Nouveau Freedoms

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I don’t argue the right of women to choose their own course.

I support freedom of religion (to profess, to change, or to none) as a basic fundamental right of human beings, and America.

I find it disconcerting that some are so willing to discard this basic human and American right so easily. Especially for nouveau “rights” – FREE healthcare, paid-for health insurance, FREE birth control, sterilization, morning-after pills, for all, paid for by someone else – and enforced by new “authorities” – HHS, ACA – even when the nouveau “rights” are unsoundly couched in sound traditional terms - “civil rights”, “civic responsibility” – and applied to fashionable new wants (all of the above, FREE, for everyone, paid for by someone else) lobbied into fashionable new demands (like it or not, violates your religious beliefs or not), enforced by fashionable new rules (you VILL comply), by fashionable new authorities.

Religious groups have the right to follow their conscience and beliefs and teachings.

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Special Interest and Political Interference

Democrats, Obama, Republicans

“Never interfere with the enemy when he is in the process of destroying himself.” – Napoleon.

Obama shoots himself in the foot with a cannon with his overreach in requiring all organizations to provide birth control, morning-after abortive pills, for free, and regardless of religious beliefs.

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Congressional Republicans hold hearings on birth control, with all men, and refuse to hear from women?

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Which is worse – government over-control of our lives by Democrats, or imperious hearings and abject political stupidity of Republicans?

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More on The Moral Thing

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Robert Creamer today, on the Huffington Post:
“The moral thing to do is to make certain that every woman who wants it has access to birth control.” ..
His opinion of “The moral thing”.
Not everyone’s­.
He lists his reasons and wants HIS moral thing imposed on everyone.
Even if it means the Obama administration & federal government usurps religious freedom and FORCES Catholic hospitals (universities, etc.) to go against their beliefs, morality, teaching.
It is good that Creamer and others are concerned about women and women’s rights.

I’m concerned about the exercise of federal government authority to trample freedom of religion and religious rights of others.
(To enact his/their preferred Thing.)

And, it has turned me now from strongly For Obama’s healthcare­, to strongly Against.
(Now that I see, early-on, how the authority can and will be misused).

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Women’s Rights and Freedom of Religion

Faith, Freedom of Religion

We naturally all see things through our own eyes and beliefs.
Women’s groups see things through how it affects them.
(Women: “They are denying me what I – and many women – want and need.” Provide birth control, “morning-a­fter” pills if needed.)
The Catholic Church believes in life in all aspects.
(The Church: “Pro-life from conception to death is part of our belief and faith.” Do not force us to violate our beliefs.)

Liberals: I have rights, and I want these things provided for me. And, I prefer they be free.
Conservati­ves: I have rights, and I don’t want to pay for everything for everybody. Don’t make me.
Mine: Everyone has a right to believe what they want. The federal government should not violate the rights of a religion by forcing them to violate their conscience and beliefs. Even (especiall­y?) for something someone else wants.
This is over the line. (Women’s groups pushing the federal government to force their wants onto others, and have the government FORCE a religion to violate their beliefs. And violate religious freedom.)

It’s not a women or Catholic or liberal or conservati­ve thing.
It’s an American thing.

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Santorum, the ‘coulda, shoulda, woulda’ candidate ?

Republicans, Santorum, Uncategorized

Good article on Santorum, the primaries, the Republicans here:

http://www.cnn.com/2012/02/08/opinion/stanley-santorum/index.html?hpt=hp_c1

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President Longshot?

Democrats, Faith, Freedom of Religion, Independents, obamacare, Republicans, Santorum, Uncategorized

Obama followed the leftist democrats, and shot himself in the foot with a cannon (HHS “ruling”), using federal government Obamacare to advance agenda of forced birth control, abortion pill, and overriding freedom of religion.
Santorum has won 2 or 3 of the R primary caucuses tonight. I believe the R’s and I’s have seen enough to see clearly. Big swing in the last week.
Rick Santorum may well be our next president.

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Turn Out The Lights … The (Democratic) Party’s Over

Faith, Freedom of Religion, Obama, Uncategorized

Unlike most of my friends, I see and backed the benefit of the federal government using its might and authority to solve the great national problem of healthcare – cost and uninsured.
This latest ploy (HHS “ruling”) lays bare the use of the might and authority of the federal government by leftist democrats to implement their own agenda (birth control, abortion rights, etc.).
Trampling religious liberty, moral conscience­, and individual freedom in the process; and exposing President Obama’s administra­tion and Obamacare as fringe, leftist, over-contr­olling, and over-reach­ing.
Exposing … to the last Independen­t in the room.
I’m out of here. If there’s anyone left, turn off the lights.

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Obamacare and Freedom of Religion

Faith, Freedom of Religion, Obama, Uncategorized

My opinion on how the government is trampling on religious liberty, moral conscience­, individual freedom:
It has enacted a bill to cover a major life and economic sector (warranted­, in my opinion; not in that of many), still a marginal, questionab­le exercise of government authority.
The extension of that exercise into the promotion of a major life (pro-choic­e vs pro-life) question, but especially the extension of that exercise to promoting a secular agenda (birth control, including morning-af­ter abortive pills) over the religious principles and beliefs of a major religious faith violates a principle of our country (freedom of religion) far more basic to our country’s beliefs and foundation than the political posturing and beliefs of liberals and conservati­ves.
An atrocity, really.
I’m embarrasse­d I’ve staunchly defended President Obama and Obamacare. They can do what they want, but this abuse of federal power (HHS “ruling”) is the red-alert warning alarm that the conservati­ves (and you just don’t know how much I hate to admit this) were right all along … This (federal healthcare­) really was a bad idea.

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A Veterans Day Letter

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PaintingDear Children and Grandchildren,

It’s Veterans Day. I want to share some of what I know about Papa Guz’s time of service.

While stateside, he and Mama Guz went for a while to Kansas;  another time he was in Georgia, and got to go to the 1942 Masters Golf Tournament. I still have the program.

He was in an Army Air Force unit whose mission was to fly glider planes behind enemy lines. He served in N. Africa, Sicily and Italy.   While in N Africa, he befriended a priest in the order of the “White Fathers”. The priest (“A. Weber”) was an artist, and he painted Papa Guz in uniform – a large one on canvas, and a smaller one on wood, both of which I still have.  Father Weber also painted the Stations of the Cross on wooden ovals. Papa Guz liked these; in his later years, I put these onto the wall leading up the stairs at home at Westover. I still have those also, along with several photos, letters, orders, etc at home.

Sixteen or so years ago, I went with Papa Guz to a reunion of his old WW II unit in Williamsburg, Va. He had lost touch with them, and they with him. They seemed really, genuinely glad to see one other again.   In the unit’s scrapbook the men had kept and updated, there was an old photo of Papa Guz and beside it, they had written, “Our beloved First Sergeant”. (Wow. “Our beloved First Sergeant.”)

I saw a photo in the unit scrapbook of Joe Louis – in a ring, sparring with some of their unit’s soldiers. They told me Papa Guz had sparred with Joe Louis – in fact he had been the first one to put on the gloves to spar with him. I asked why Dad was first, and they said, “Oh, John Guzi was a big guy!” (Would have given anything to see a photo of them.)  This night, Dad had gone back to our room early to rest because by that age he had a heart condition. I went back to the room and asked him about it.
“The guys said you sparred with Joe Louis.”
“Yeah.” (Like: no big deal. Just, “Yeah.”)
“Well, did you hit him?”
“Yeah, I hit him – but he didn’t go down.”

Later Papa Guz told me he knew he had an advantage, because if Joe Louis knocked him out, it would be bad for morale.

One of their guys told me about getting to Italy, and the first sergeant (Dad) taking him with him on an assignment. He thought, “Uh-Oh, what’d I do?” He came to find out the first sergeant was taking him to get him some furniture for him. He said he never forgot that.

One of the officers told me that Papa Guz’s unit was a good unit; there was never any discipline trouble with that unit. (Maybe some of those stories Papa Guz used to tell at family gatherings – highlights: taking on several guys….. another one about disciplining with a bull whip … – maybe they weren’t tall tales after all.)

One of the men – his mess sergeant, now from Memphis  - said he once snuck up behind Guzi and jokingly “washed his face with watermelon”. He said Papa Guz jumped up and chased him. The guy ran a while then tried to stop to dodge him. He said Dad tackled him, hard. He said he woke up in the hospital. (The mess sergeant’s story, not mine.)

Much more to know about Papa Guz, his fellow soldiers, his generation. Much you probably already know. Much more probably worth knowing. The men (and women) Tom Brokaw called The Greatest Generation. How they faced, fought and won the terrific, horrific, struggle of World War II. How they came back and went to work, never talked much about the war, and with modesty built the country and infrastructure and society for the life and freedoms we all enjoy but sometimes take for granted.

I am mindful also of Bob Slaughter, my Little League coach, who I would see on the bus I rode home from grade school, riding quietly in the back of the bus, who taught us how to play baseball, as The Raleigh Court Lions, together and well, winning the city championship when I was 12.

Turns out, Mr. Slaughter was one of the soldiers who went ashore at Normandy on D-Day. During a subsequent anniversary of D-Day, he visited with his compatriots to celebrate with them and grateful American and French countrymen and remember the ones who died there. Walked with President Clinton on Normandy Beach. Was interviewed by ABC for his remembrances. Has been part of several documentaries on the History Channel and other network channels.   Just worked at his job and quietly sat on the back of the bus and taught a bunch of kids how to play baseball together.

Mr. Slaughter also was the driving force in helping create the National D-Day Memorial (http://www.dday.org/) in Bedford, Va. ( In Bedford, because Bedford lost more young men on D-Day per capita than any other town in America.)

Driving force, with the help of others, to put something in place to honor the D-Day soldiers while there were still some living to be honored.  They served, fought, won, then worked and built and coached and taught and raised.

Then, and since, lots of men and women have given a lot, lots of times, for us. Like many of us, I haven’t spent the time paying tribute to them on Veterans Day like I should.

But I know what many have done, and given, and just wanted to share a small tribute to them with you today.

Love,
Dad

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