Bush Administration wants to shield faith-based initiative


Violating church-state separation AND the uniform rule of law at the same time

Sometimes I swear the government goes out of it's way to prove my points for me. Like this one.

In a closely watched church-state separation case, a Bush administration lawyer urged the Supreme Court yesterday to shield the president's "faith-based initiative" from legal challenges in court.

U.S. Solicitor General Paul Clement said taxpayers who believe the White House is unconstitutionally promoting religion should not be accorded legal standing to sue in court. It would be too "intrusive on the executive branch" to permit lawsuits contesting the way the president and his advisers conduct their affairs, he said.

The Administration is not even claiming national security on this one. They want to be shielded because it is "too intrusive."

Excuse me? The whole issue is imposing religion by government fiat and they want to be shielded?

Granting exceptions to law just undermines the uniform rule of law. If it's good enough to apply to the citizens, it is certainly good enough to apply to government officials.

— NeoWayland

Posted: Mon - March 5, 2007 at 05:05 AM  Tag


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