The
promoters of Faith-based action appear to be divided: Don Eberly, deputy
director of the of White House Office of Faith-based and Community Initiatives
told the Washington Post March 11 that the Administration is delaying its plan
to funnel taxpayer dollars to religious charities. The White House, however, and
Eberly’s boss, Don DiIulio say that the plan is steaming ahead.
Clearly,
the plan has been running into problems, and not just with constitutionalists
concerned about the shrinking gap between church and state. Eberly’s comments
came after religious conservatives including evangelicals Pat Roberston and
Jerry Falwell expressed alarm about just who might get funding (The Nation of
Islam? The Church of Scientology? The Hare Krishnas? Heaven forbid.) Other
church groups are dubious about the possible strings attached to government
cash.
But
while the Bush team engages in in-house quibbles, the other side has been quiet,
or worse. Liberals like Ellen Goodman and even civil liberties lawyer David Cole
(writing in the New York Times) have argued that the needs are so great that
religious outfits should be "given a chance." Two days after the news of a
possible delay in implementing the White House initiative, Connecticut Senator
and religious Jew, Joseph Lieberman declared his support for the plan, and it’s
director. "I love John DiIulio" he told the press.
Now is
no time to quibble or stay quiet – progressives should unite to kill the Bush
plan stone dead. Looking for a reason? The program is not only a gift to those
keen on privatizing public jobs and a strike against the secular state, it could
also end up subsidizing the violent fringe of the religious Right. There’s
certainly no way to ensure that it won’t.
Jerry
Reiter is a former TV reporter turned Christian Coalition activist and Operation
Rescue insider, who now works for the Council for Secular Inquiry. Asked about
the faith based initiative, Reiter, who wrote a book on his experiences in the
violent fringe of the anti-abortion movement ("Live from the Gates of Hell")
says that from his experience, it’s as easy as pie for religious extremists to
set up front groups that look like charities. In fact, they do it all the time.
Could contributions for charitable work end up in the hands of terrorists?
"Sure," says Reiter. In fact, he watched it happen.
Legitimate-looking social service front groups are a good way to raise
unregulated cash says Reiter. They’re called "para-church ministries" and
they’ve been a staple of the religious scene for years. Reiter says he collected
thousands of dollars at weekly Christian Coalition rallies for local causes,
dollars which "could have gone anywhere, there were no records being kept."
Meanwhile, Operation Rescue (the militant antiabortion group that pioneered
blocking access to abortion clinic doors) ran its campaign from the Buffalo
Christian Coalition’s basement where he worked, and he believes, OR ran on the
Christian Coalition’s collection-cash. At the national level, Operation Rescue
also ran an adoption service, which they supported from charitable donations.
Did OR raise money for its adoption service that actually went to the blockade
movement. There’s no way of knowing Reiter says, but he believes it’s likely.
Flip Benham, director of OR’s latest incarnation, Save America, said this
January that the group "had to get out of all that" and no longer runs any
adoption-related service. OR was successfully sued for conspiracy to commit
domestic terrorism in 1998.
John
Burt, a former Ku Klux Klansman turned anti-abortion radical ran "Our Father’s
House," a home for unwed mothers which Reiter visited in Pensacola, Florida.
Burt, who led the blockade movement in Pensacola, would get his clients onto
welfare, "then he’d send out solicitations" for money to care for the unwed
mothers and their "rescued" kids, says Reiter. IN a bucket in the pantry, Burt
at one point kept a 20-week old aborted fetus, in formaldehyde (for use as a
"counseling tool" he once told a journalist.) It was at Our Father’s House that
Michael Griffin, a volunteer, was shown his first video of aborted babies. After
he was convicted in 1993 of murdering Dr. David Gunn outside a nearby Pensacola
women’s clinic, Griffin claimed he’d been brainwashed there at the home by Burt.
Tracking
government work that’s sub-contracted out is infamously tough. Remember the
Pentagon spending scandals? Given George W’s fondness for, and the favors he
owes the Religious Right, if they end up going for the White House Initiative,
there’s little reason to believe the Bush administration would be likely to
scrutinize them very closely. Even if some enterprising accountant tried to stop
taxes from going where they shouldn’t, could he or she do it? It’s unlikely,
says Reiter, given the way groups are set up. With separate boards and budgets,
"there’s really no way to keep track unless you know the people and know that
they’re part of a collaborative network."
Indeed,
among those who praised GW’s Faith-based initiative this January, was Reiter’s
former pastor, the man who first introduced him to the Christian Coalition,
Operation Rescue and the anti-abortion underground: Rob Schenck. "President Bush
is to be commended in the highest possible way for [the White House] effort,"
Schenck told CBS "Good Morning" January 25. "Religiously based social programs
typically have the highest success rates, lowest costs and most personally
interested staff."
In a
press release, Schenck, who attended the National Prayer Breakfast to commend
the Bush plan (along with among others, Katherine Harris, the Florida Secretary
of State,) described himself as an evangelical minister, and former Executive
Director of Teen Challenge, a church-sponsored rehabilitation program for
troubled youth and a favorite charity of George W. Bush. With his twin brother,
Paul, Rob Schenck founded Operation Serve, something he calls "a humanitarian
relief agency that deploys medical and dental volunteers to serve the poor, and
Hearts for the Homeless, a mobile advocacy program for indigent women, children
and men."
What
Schenck left out of his resume was the fact that it was he and Paul who first
invited Operation Rescue to Buffalo to picket Dr. Barnett Slepian a doctor who
performed abortions. For years, they marched outside his home and his office
with threatening picket signs, calling the doctor, who was Jewish "Pig." There,
six years later, Slepian was killed. His murderer is still on the loose. At the
’92 Democratic Convention, Rob was detained by the Secret Service and arrested
for rushing President Clinton with a dead fetus in his hands, screaming about
abortion.
Today,
the brothers say that killing is a sin. They left Operation Rescue after serving
a prison sentence for lying in federal court and Rob went on to work for Teen
Challenge, New York. Teen Challenge chair, John Castellani, was there at Shrub’s
side as he signed the White House Office on Faith Based Action and Community
Initiatives into effect.
The
Faith-Based Initiative should raise hackles, says Reiter, and not just among
secular constitutionalists, or the those concerned about government interference
with the Church. Anyone who pays taxes should worry. Not least because cash for
counselling by the likes of the Schenks may not suit any social agenda except
the advance of supremacist views, he says, but also, he says, because "Even if
in the main, the money goes to good causes, there is a clear and present danger
that some of it will go to groups closely affiliated with, if not controlled by
terrorists."
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