The new administration recently suggested that foreign nationals who utter anti-Semitic comments should be deported.
If foreign nationals can be singled out for their comments such as these (disgusting as they may be), will the next step be to persecute anyone, regardless of their citizenship status, for making such utterances? And does speaking out against the policies of the Israeli government (such as its genocidal attacks in Gaza and unprovoked attacks into the West Bank) suddenly become anti-Semitic?
Religions in America are not suffering intrusions into their liberty. Rather, it is the zealous religious entities that are constantly trying to assert their control through legal attempts that subvert the law and the Constitution . . .
There is a movement underway to “protect” religious freedom, but it appears that only certain religions are susceptible to this protection.
President Trump has signed an Executive Order establishing the White House Faith Office, whose presumptive purpose would include “defending religious liberty.” The office will also be tasked with helping faith-based organizations procure government grants and “root out anti-Christian bias.”
To those who consistently lament the intrusion of government into religious liberties (such as requiring churches to curtail services during the Covid epidemic), how is it possible to so easily assume the very opposite stance in supporting government efforts on behalf of securing funds (provided by the American public through taxes) for religious purposes?
Why is it not evident that, once the government provides funding for religious purposes, that same government will secure the rights to establish criteria for that religion to operate?
And why was the term “anti-Christian” used? If the goal is to curtail anti-religious bias, shouldn’t that goal include all religions, not just the Christian ones?
There seems to be double-speak going on here.
Rachel Laser, President and CEO of Americans United for the Separation of Church and State, commented: “Rather than protecting religious beliefs, this task force will misuse religious freedom to justify bigotry, discrimination, and the subversion of our civil rights laws.” Some of the comments made during the establishment of this office bear out the fears expressed in this statement.
How likely is it that this effort to “protect religious freedom” will be effective in halting the constant attacks on synagogues, which are routinely covered with Nazi graffiti (Philadelphia in October 2024; Minneapolis, December 2024) bombed, or having their gatherers gunned down during services (Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh on October 27, 2018, when 11 worshipers were killed and six wounded).
Though the separation of church and state is not codified within the Constitution, it is a well-established and sacrosanct tenet espoused by Thomas Jefferson in his letter to the Danbury Baptist Association in 1802 and upheld through the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. That separation cannot be maintained when a government agency is purposed to helping religious organizations secure government funding.
The state of Rhode Island was founded because of the absence of the separation of church and state when Roger Williams fled the Massachusetts Bay colony in 1636 because of his espousal of that separation in a state that routinely used governmental largesse in support of the church.
Kelly Shackelford, head of First Liberty Institute, a conservative Christian legal organization, said: “All Americans should be free to exercise their faith without government intrusion in school, in the military, in the workplace, and in the public square.”
How is that freedom from intrusion maintained if the government is funding religious purposes? And does Ms. Shackelford suggest that there is intrusion, government or otherwise, into the religious practices of the public in these institutions? Is she as mortified about all the prayers opening governmental meetings as she purports to be by the intrusion into religious liberties?
Most importantly, is she suggesting that Americans are not free to exercise their faith? If so, how?
Never miss a thing with our FREE weekly newsletter.
Religious freedom must be guaranteed to all religions, or it cannot be guaranteed to any because warranties of freedom are only as strong as the desire to see them applied to everyone.
History is replete with instances in which the refusal to comply with certain religions could be a death sentence, whether it existed in the period of the Inquisition or, today, in Talibanic areas.
Religions in America are not suffering intrusions into their liberty. Rather it is the zealous religious entities that are constantly trying to assert their control through legal attempts that subvert the law and the Constitution, such as claiming tax-free status while engaging in political activities or for-profit activities outside their stated purpose of ministering to their constituents, as Answers in Genesis does through manipulation of the tax codes to secure emoluments of local and state government funding.
The laudatory goal of securing religious freedom is best accomplished by guaranteeing the rights of individuals to worship as they see fit and making sure that government—at all levels—maintains its distance by not extending rights to any religion at the expense of any other, or of none at all.

