Tag Archives: religious

"A Father’s Rights" is based upon a real life story.

“A Father’s Rights” is based upon a real life story. It depicts the situation of an unwed father and his child’s struggle with the legal system predominant in American society today. “A Father’s Rights” is hard hitting, factual, and potentially embarrassing to some in high places. It is meant to expose the system that treats children differently across this country and the world: a system that needs to change. We should all be looking at and working for one thing, getting equal rights for our children. It should not matter if a child is born out of wedlock. It's not the child’s fault, and that child should have the same rights as a child from a happily married couple. Stop the fighting over who gets custody and what he/she receives for the privilege of raising that child. The system that all of us face as parents, and/or grandparents is broken. No matter if you are mother, father, or grandparent, we all must acknowledge this basic fact. Thousands of emails have been received over the past year about this project asking for help, or parents telling their own horror stories with the system. One major problem is that fathers, mothers, and grandparents all seem to be fighting for their own rights. We should all be able to come together and fight for our children's rights. The right to be treated equally, no matter if their parents are married, were married, or never married. If that goal is obtained, then a lot of the problems in the system will go away. This movie was made to bring attention to and educate the public about a corrupt system that is not taking care of the future: making sure children are well taken care of. Based on a true story and filmed in Dickson, TN. Starring: Robbie Davis, Christian Pitre, Ed Bruce, Jay Davis, Karen Carlson, Deborah Allen and Mark Collie. http://www.a-fathers-rights-movie.com/story.html added by: MotherForTruth

ASU denies claims made by student | The Augusta Chronicle

Augusta State University officials said it's not a graduate student's religious beliefs, but her refusal to work toward being able to counsel homosexual clients that is threatening her standing in the school's counseling program, according to court documents filed Monday. The filing states that Jennifer Keeton must demonstrate her ability to counsel all clients, including the homosexual and transgender population, in order to graduate. The response is the school's first legal answer since Keeton filed a lawsuit July 21 alleging that she was facing expulsion from the counseling program based on her religious beliefs and her refusal to complete “a thought-reform remediation plan.” In an e-mail cited in the suit, ASU assistant professor Dr. Paulette Schenck told Keeton “the faculty did not expect (her) to change (her) personal beliefs and values.” “(T)he unethical part (was) applying your own personal beliefs and values on other people and not truly accepting that others can have different beliefs and values that are equally valid as your own.” Keeton is a graduate student in ASU's K-12 school counseling program, which requires students to adhere to a neutral code of ethics. The university's response explains that ASU professors asked Keeton to complete a remediation plan after she wrote in a term paper regarding the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender, or GLBT, community that “it would be hard (for her) to work with this population.” Keeton also told fellow student Justin C. Earnest that she would tell gay clients “their behavior is morally wrong and then help the client change that behavior,” according to an affidavit by Earnest included in the school's filing. The remediation plan required Keeton to attend counseling workshops, read counseling journals regarding the GLBT community, increase her exposure to the gay population and write reflections on what she was learning. The university's legal filings did not directly address Keeton's contention that she was told to attend a gay pride parade as part of the remediation plan. Members of ASU's faculty also were concerned with Keeton's support of conversion therapy for homosexuals, which the American Counseling Association's ethics committee has concluded “may harm clients.” In her lawsuit, Keeton said the remediation plan “subjects her to aggressive ideological instruction” and asks that she “change her beliefs.” Keeton said she would like to continue her education in the counseling program without fear that the school “will punish her for her religious views” and her “unwillingness to change or abandon those views.” But university officials said if they exempted Keeton from counseling homosexual clients, they would also have to exempt those opposed to war from counseling soldiers. “The same curriculum would require an atheist student counselor to competently counsel a deeply religious client,” the filing said. “A staunch feminist student counselor is required to competently counsel clients from male dominated cultures … the common thread being that all counselors are required to keep separate their own belief system from the counseling relationship.” The suit also points to a U.S. District Court judge's recent opinion in a similar case, Ward v. Wilbanks. In the July 2010 ruling, a judge upheld Eastern Michigan University's decision to dismiss a student who refused to counsel a homosexual student or participate in a remediation plan. University officials said that if the court moves forward with Keeton's case it could affect the school's accreditation and other students' degrees. What's Next? Jennifer Keeton has asked the federal court to force the college to drop its requirement that she complete the remediation plan. The U.S. District Court in Augusta scheduled a hearing on her request for a preliminary injunction at 9 a.m. Wednesday. added by: toyotabedzrock

Why The Prop 8 Ruling Scares Religious Conservatives

(RNS) When U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker struck down California's Proposition 8 on Wednesday (Aug. 4), he said voters' motivation for outlawing gay marriage was clear. “The evidence shows conclusively that moral and religious views form the only basis for a belief that same-sex couples are different from opposite-sex couples,” Walker wrote in his sweeping, 136-page decision. “These interests do not provide a rational basis for supporting Proposition 8.” Religion, in Walker's reasoning, amounts to a “private moral view,” which should not infringe upon the constitutional rights of others. While some legal scholars say Walker's decision lands on firm legal ground–a law must advance a secular purpose to pass constitutional muster–some religious leaders accuse the judge of trying to scrub faith from the public square. “Judge Walker claimed to read the minds of California's voters, arguing that the majority voted for Proposition 8 based on religious opposition to homosexuality, which he then rejected as an illegitimate state interest,” R. Albert Mohler, president of a leading Southern Baptist seminary in Kentucky, wrote in an online column. “In essence, this establishes secularism as the only acceptable basis for moral judgment on the part of voters,” Mohler said. On Thursday, Prop 8's supporters filed an appeal of Walker's decision. Jim Campbell, an attorney with the Alliance Defense Fund, a conservative Christian law firm involved in the litigation, said the religious freedom argument will play an important role as the case moves up the federal judicial ladder–including, potentially, the Supreme Court. “At bottom, our strategy here is, and has always been, that in this country we should respect the rights of the people when they do what they have always done: vote based on their religious and moral convictions,” Campbell said. Abolitionists, anti-abortion activists, and civil rights activists have all been motivated by personal faith, Campbell argued. “To be blunt, we felt (Walker's decision) was an all-out attack on religion.” Walker did note, however, that no religion will be forced to perform same-sex weddings. Howard Friedman, an emeritus law professor at Ohio's University of Toledo, said Walker is not attacking religion per se; he is just not giving religious expression any special consideration. “He's basically saying that a private moral view isn't a rational basis for legislation,” said Friedman, who writes the popular “Religion Clause” blog. “Case law goes both ways on that. There are certainly some cases that say a merely moral view isn't enough to support legislation; on the other hand, there are some cases that talk about laws being a moral view on society.” Walker's reasoning relies, in part, on a 1996 Supreme Court decision that struck down an anti-gay law in Colorado, Friedman said. That decision, written by Justice Anthony Kennedy–who's considered a key swing vote on the high court–invalidated laws grounded in “animosity toward the class of persons affected.” Walker devotes several pages in his ruling to identifying religion as a prime source of anti-gay animus, listing examples from the Vatican and the Southern Baptist Convention, and noting that 84 percent of weekly churchgoers voted in favor of Prop 8, according to a CNN exit poll. As if to prove Walker's point, Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony released a statement on Wednesday that said, “Those of us who supported Prop 8 and worked for its passage did so for one reason: We truly believe that marriage was instituted by God for the specific purpose of carrying out God's plan for the world and human society. Period.” Still, some religious leaders take issue with Walker's conclusion that “religious beliefs that gay and lesbian relationships are sinful or inferior to heterosexual relationships harm gays and lesbians.” “If religion is considered the chief obstacle to gay and lesbian political progress, then it would seem to follow that the state has an obligation to remove that obstacle,” said R.R. Reno, a senior editor at First Things, a Catholic journal based in New York. “That's not going to happen, because the First Amendment protects religious expression,” but it could lead to a sidelining of faith in political debate, Reno said. Sister Mary Ann Walsh, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, says Walker is wrong on the law and the church's theology. The Roman Catholic Church holds that homosexuality is not sinful in itself, but that homosexual acts are. “Freedom of religion and freedom of speech allow us to speak without his deeming us harmful,” Walsh said. “Our teaching is our teaching.” added by: TimALoftis

Are The View Producers Muzzling Conservative Elisabeth Hasselbeck While Allowing Joy Behar Free Rein?

On June 15, 2010, View co-host Elisabeth Hasselbeck declined to fight with lefist comedienne Kathy Griffin, who was appearing on that day’s show. This despite the fact that the entertainer had previously had previously slammed the conservative as a “f—ing Survivor reject.” Hasselbeck demurred, “It’s cool, we’re cool.” The host remained quiet, even as Griffin taunted her by mocking, “Bring it.”  Yet, on July 15, 2010, liberal Joy Behar showed no such restraint with conservative radio star Laura Ingraham. The two got into a heated discussion over whether wearing a burqa in society is acceptable. Behar lectured, “Then all religions subjugate women.” Earlier, Behar responded to a Ingraham joke by proclaiming, “I don’t want anybody to think you know me.” A transcript of the two exchanges can be found below: July 14, 2010 JOY BEHAR: You know what? I think it’s so wrong to do that to people. People really want their religious freedom, whether their Muslim, Jewish or Christian. And they should be allowed to wear a cross, and a star, and a burqa if they have to. LAURA INGRAHAM: But that’s different from covering your whole face, Joy. BEHAR: Why, why? That’s what they do! INGRAHAM: Why does grandma have to undo her walker at the TSA line at the airport but someone could go through fully covered up with just slits for their eyes? That’s the point of subjugation. You’re for women. BEHAR: I’m not sure they should go through security that way. They’re talking about people just walking around. INGRAHAM: Public places. Yes, yes. Public places. We go into airports. BEHAR: But they’re also saying it’s against women, that is subjugates women. INGRAHAM: It is subjugating to women. BEHAR: Then all religions subjugate women. INGRAHAM: Oh, that’s a crock. That is ridiculous. BEHAR: Are you kidding me? INGRAHAM: Lump every religion together and every facet of every religion together. I’m sorry, I wear a cross. This does not subjugate, okay? This is liberating. BEHAR: No women priests are allowed in the priesthood, for example. (Applause) INGRAHAM: Okay, notice how this has become an indictment for the Catholic Church. Why are you clapping for that? BEHAR: Wait a second. In a Jewish synagogue, the women, in orthodox, have to sit upstairs, they’re not allowed on the floor with the men. They have to wear a schriedel (sc?) to cover their heads. I mean, every religion has something. June 15, 2010 ELISABETH HASSELBECK: You’ve said things about people here that are a) untrue and b) not so funny. So do you ever feel weird like then coming here and saying, sitting here, you know, promoting things. KATHY GRIFFIN: Actually this moment is what I live for so bring it. HASSELBECK: I know. I know. (Applause) HASSELBECK: Sadly, I have a debate in my head whether feeding your curious fire there. GRIFFIN: This is how I write my act. HASSELBECK: It’s cool, we’re cool. GRIFFIN: I’m cool if you’re cool. I think it’s all for a joke. HASSELBECK: It’s all cool. GRIFFIN: Is there anything else you’d like to say, Elisabeth? Because this is just getting good.

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Are The View Producers Muzzling Conservative Elisabeth Hasselbeck While Allowing Joy Behar Free Rein?

Katy Perry and Anna Kournikova do TV Together of the Day

Katy Perry and Anna Kournikova were guests on the same TV show….. Katy Perry showed up in a latex outfit trying to be sexy because she’s a fucking pig, but the nice thing about her is that she’s got pretty great tits and no matter how hard I hate her, I can appreciate tits…..She spoke about her religious upbringing, playing with balls and other boring shit… Kournikova showed up with an American accent, spoke about girls in the locker room, neglected to talk about being a mail order bride with a gay husband… This shit is edited hard, which is nice, cuz we don’t have to listen to their conversation…but we can try to look up their skirts…

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Katy Perry and Anna Kournikova do TV Together of the Day

MRC’s Bozell: Comedy Central’s ‘JC’ Has No Advertiser Support

Of the more than 300 corporate sponsors who have sponsored Comedy Central in the past, not a single one has indicated their intention to buy advertising time on the planned “JC” program should it ever be set to go to broadcast. That’s the victorious announcement today from Citizens Against Religious Bigotry (CARB), a group co-founded by NewsBusters publisher Brent Bozell and a handful of other social conservative activists. “The sponsors understand what the programming department at Comedy Central does not: Religious bigotry is bad business,” Bozell noted in a statement. “With literally zero advertiser support for this program, the only reason Comedy Central would put it on their broadcast schedule is in an effort to offend Christianity and Christians. There is no valid business reason for airing ‘JC,'” the Media Research Center founder argued.  Full the full press release, click here . For a complete listing of member organizations, and advertisers that were petitioned, visit www.CitizensAgainstReligiousBigotry.org .

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MRC’s Bozell: Comedy Central’s ‘JC’ Has No Advertiser Support

Newsweek’s Clift Mocks GOP Women’s Pro-Life Views as ‘So Yesterday’

Newsweek’s Eleanor Clift, on this weekend’s syndicated The McLaughlin Group, slighted conservative pro-life women everywhere when she applied California Republican Senate candidate Carly Fiorina’s “so yesterday” description of Democratic Senator Barbara Boxer’s hairstyle to women who hold anti-abortion views in the Republican Party. Clift, in a segment about the primary victories of both Fiorina and GOP gubernatorial candidate Meg Whitman began actually crediting Sarah Palin as “Saint Sarah” for the wins as she claimed that the former Alaskan Governor is “emboldening conservative women” and “reshaping the religious right” but then went on to question if pro-life women candidates could win statewide races in California because their views would be seen as “so yesterday.” Incidentally, The Washington Times’ Monica Crowley had to correct Clift as she pointed out her liberal spin wasn’t even entirely accurate as Whitman is, in fact, “pro choice.” The following exchanges were aired on the June 12 edition of The McLaughlin Group: JOHN MCLAUGHLIN: Question: How do you account for the amount of successful women candidates in Tuesday’s political primaries? Eleanor Clift? ELEANOR CLIFT, NEWSWEEK: Well I think conservative Republican women were really the stars this week, and I credit, in part, Saint Sarah. She’s on the cover of Newsweek this coming week. She’s credited with empowering and emboldening conservative women and maybe reshaping the religious right. And I think that looks good in primaries. I don’t know how it will play in the, in the fall when you have a broader electorate. I think the two women in California are genuine business women. They spent enormous amounts of money. Whitman spent, I think $80 million, which works out to about $80 per vote, and they are gonna position themselves as outsiders and business women who are running against classical political insiders. But Carly Fiorina, who’s running for the Senate, got a rocky start when she was caught on an open mic making fun of Barbara Boxer’s hair saying it’s oh, “so yesterday.” And these two Republican women are also social conservatives in a state that’s very pro-choice. So maybe those issues will be cast as “so yesterday.” … MONICA CROWLEY, WASHINGTON TIMES: First of all I need to correct something that Eleanor said. Meg, Meg Whitman is not a social conservative. She is pro choice.

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Newsweek’s Clift Mocks GOP Women’s Pro-Life Views as ‘So Yesterday’

Newsweek Takes Another Shot at Palin on Cover: ‘Saint Sarah’; Palin Responds, Answers Breast Implant Charge

Not this again. There is obviously not enough going on in the world for Newsweek magazine this week because once again Sarah Palin is on the cover. Palin, the former governor of Alaska and the 2008 Republican vice-presidential nominee was also on the cover of Newsweek back in November 2009 , in running shorts. This time she is featured as “Saint Sarah: What’s Palin’s appeal to conservative Christian women says about feminism and the future of the religious right” in Newsweek’s June 21 issue. Palin is depicted with halo on the cover for the story written by Lisa Miller , which attempts to rationalize Palin’s convictions about the issue of abortion and her Christian faith. However, Palin didn’t think too highly of Newsweek’s gesture. She responded on Fox News’ June 11 broadcast of “On the Record with Greta van Sustren.” “Haven’t seen it, but if the title and what I hear about the content is any indication of where Newsweek is going, it is no wonder Newsweek is doing so poorly,” Palin said. “People are not reading that stuff. It is not relevant. It’s not interesting stuff that they are making up and writing and that’s why they are going down.” Video Below Fold Another incredible charge that has surfaced in left-wing media outlets as of late was that Palin had gotten breast implants . Palin responded to host Greta van Sustren, but not without first taking a few shots at those who propagated the rumor. “Well, first Greta, you know why we love you?” Palin said. “Because you’re not afraid to ask the questions and I got to respect you for asking that question because I know that Boob-gate is all over the Internet right now because there are a lot of, I guess bored idle bloggers and reporters with nothing else to talk about. And I think some of those folks, too – they need to perhaps grab a shovel, go down to the Gulf, volunteer to help cleanup and save a whale or something instead of reporting on such stupid things like that.” And as for the implants? She cleared that up with very implicit answer. “No, I have not had implants,” she said. “I can’t believe we are even talking this. I think a report like that is about as real and truthful as those reports that Todd and I are divorcing or that I bought a place in the Hamptons or that Trigg is not my own child. And we still put up with that kind of garbage, too – even the mainstream media, Greta. It is amazing.”

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Newsweek Takes Another Shot at Palin on Cover: ‘Saint Sarah’; Palin Responds, Answers Breast Implant Charge

Lady Gaga’s ‘Alejandro’: Video’s Religious Imagery Gets Mixed Reactions From Fans

‘Absolutely AMAZING video. So long as you leave behind all your prejudices …,’ one MTVNews.com commenter wrote. By Kara Warner Lady Gaga in “Alejandro” Photo: Interscope Records Ever since the premiere of Lady Gaga’s controversial video for “Alejandro,” news outlets and fans alike have been furiously debating the pros and cons , Gaga-as-Madonna imagery, and most of all, the religious symbolism and blasphemy. “Alejandro” director Steven Klein told MTV News via e-mail that the religious symbolism is not meant to denote anything negative. “[It] represents the character’s battle between the dark forces of this world and the spiritual salvation of the Soul,” Klein wrote. “Thus at the end of the film, she chooses to be a nun, and the reason her mouth and eyes disappear is because she is withdrawing her senses from the world of evil and going inward towards prayer and contemplation.” Klein added that the scene in which Gaga ingests the rosary beads is meant to represent “the desire to take in the holy.” The reaction to his statement by MTV News commenters — who are by and large overwhelmingly positive supporters of anything Gaga does — has been mixed. Most praise the Lady for always pushing the envelope but found the religious elements of the video confusing and, in a few cases, too over-the-top. Bill wrote, “Absolutely AMAZING video. So long as you leave behind all your prejudices and allow yourself to be immersed in the artistry and statements made, it should be easy to see why Gaga is at the top of the game. Absolutely brilliant work. Kudos to all involved in the production of this video!” Drayke said the video was “a bit long, but overall I absolutely loved it. Both for its messages (some clear, some vague and open to much interpretation), its artsy ’20s feel, and the fact that for ONCE it’s the men who are paraded around like sexual objects (the heels are a perfect touch lol.) It’s sure to piss a lot of people off, but not just for the sake of it. The video challenges people’s notions about what is offensive and what’s just free expression and for that I think it’s a rare, important video. Good job Gaga!” According to commenter Nick, “The biggest issue with this music video is its use of arcane and confusing visual elements,” he wrote. “Even though they are of a religious nature, it’s not so much that she is using them blasphemously, but rather the video doesn’t configure an argument about [how] the symbols should be perceived. Bottom line is that Gaga and Klein should have done better editing and constructed a better narrative so the idea that Gaga becomes pious and is fighting good and evil is as easy to understand [as], oh, let’s say the Pussywagon.” Kyle wrote that while he “loves the Gaga,” her videos and her crossing lines, he had problems with the religious and overly homosexual parts of the video: “The biggest problem was it tried way too hard to ‘make a point.’ I was watching LKL [‘Larry King Live’] and she said this was a dedication to the gay community. Please tell how having stereotypical gay guys and her dry humping one of them is standing up for the gay community. Secondly, the religious thing is too much. I almost got sick when I saw her swallow the rosary and I’m not even practicing anything. Slow down Gaga. Truth is, she hasn’t even put out her sophomore album. What’s the first video going to be, blurred out sex? I like her music and I just don’t want to see her fizzle out, because she put it all out there without a natural progression.” Derek Vickers took issue with his fellow commenters’ narrow-mindedness: “People need to open their minds and look past the obvious ‘sexuality’ in the video. I don’t doubt that she is trying to push limits and get people talking, but that’s not all she is doing! If you actually watch the video with a little openness, you’ll actually see what she and the video’s director are trying to relay. It’s an over-the-top representation of the battle that most all religious people go through on a daily basis. Who cares if it’s ‘over the top.’ It’s music, and it’s supposed to be artistic and eccentric. I really admire that she completely understands what it means to be an entertainer. She’s the only one in a long time to totally embody music and art as one.” Do you think the imagery in Lady Gaga’s “Alejandro” video goes too far? Let us know in the comments. Related Videos Has Lady Gaga Gone Too Far With Her ‘Alejandro’ Video? Related Photos The Fashions Of Lady Gaga’s ‘Alejandro’ Related Artists Lady Gaga

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Lady Gaga’s ‘Alejandro’: Video’s Religious Imagery Gets Mixed Reactions From Fans

Christian coalition complains Comedy Central’s ‘JC’ offensive

A Christian coalition is complaining Comedy Central's “JC”, a proposed animated series about Jesus Christ living in modern-day New York, is offensive and discriminatory towards Christians. The only problem is that the Coalition Against Religious Bigotry has yet to see a pilot or script, since “JC” is still in development, and might not even find its way on to the cable channel. The Coalition Against Religious Bigotry (CARB) includes right-wing theocrats Brent Bozell (president, Media Research Center), Tony Perkins (president, Family Research Council), Michael Medved (talk radio host), Bill Donohue (president, Catholic League) and Tim Winter (president, Parents Television Council). http://www.examiner.com/x-10853-Portland-Humanist-Examiner~y2010m6d3-Christian-c… added by: unimatrix0