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KUNTZMAN: Supreme Court wrong to force government to fund churches
New York Daily News | - |
The
Supreme Court's ruling Monday to force the state of Missouri to pay to
refurbish a church playground is not only wrongheaded, but jeopardizes
the most important American principle: the separation of church and
state.
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KUNTZMAN: Supreme Court wrong to force government to fund churches
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The Supreme Court’s ruling Monday to force the state of Missouri to pay to refurbish a church playground is not only wrongheaded, but jeopardizes the most important American principle: the separation of church and state.
Conservatives and their pro-religion enablers are crowing over the 7-2 decision, arguing that it affirms the First Amendment’s protection of religious expression.
But it actually does the opposite: it picks every taxpayer’s pocket and hands the cash to the church. The ruling doesn’t merely affirm the right of religious expression — it underwrites it with your (and, more important, my) money.
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The facts in the case — Trinity Lutheran Church v. Comer — are not in dispute: In 2012, Trinity Lutheran Church Child Learning Center wanted to replace its gravel playground floor with a safer rubberized mat — and filed to have the renovation work funded under the state’s Scrap Tire Program.
But the program specifically exempted money from “any applicant owned or controlled by a church, sect or other religious entity.”
The church challenged the law in federal court and was at first denied — but won on Monday in the Supreme Court, with Chief Justice Roberts willfully misrepresenting the issue. In his majority opinion, he said that the Missouri ban on funding churches presented Trinity Lutheran with a choice: “It may participate in an otherwise available benefit program or remain a religious institution.”
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That’s not the choice at all, especially when you phrase it another way: “Trinity Lutheran may participate in teaching impressionable kids that evolution does not exist, that God created the Earth, that Adam and Eve sinned and tainted us all forever, that Jesus is God’s only son, born to a virgin, and other complete malarky, or it can take advantage of a secular program that is funded by everyone for the benefit of everyone, whether he or she is a Believer or not.”
The only two consistently reasonable members of the Court today — Sonia Sotomayor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg — were justifiably livid in their repudiation of Roberts and his black-robbed Crusaders.
They alone know that it’s not the job of the public — let alone the public coffers — to ensure children’s “spiritual” growth.
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“This case is about nothing less than the relationship between religious institutions and the civil government — that is, between church and state,” the dissenters wrote. “The Court today profoundly changes that relationship by holding that the Constitution requires the government to provide public funds directly to a church.”
That’s not our law. That’s not our values.
So get your hands off my money, Jesus.
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