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MLIVE — Jackson county, city hire joint human resources director, who had been fired by University of Toledo

March 30, 2011
‎”Dixon…was fired at the University of Toledo after writing a letter about her position on gay rights to the Toledo Free Press. She argued that (homosexuals) are not civil rights victims because they have the ability to choose a homosexual lifestyle. ‘I cannot wake up tomorrow and not be a Black woman,’ she wrote. ‘I am genetically and biologically a Black woman and very pleased to be so as my Creator intended.’”

AFA-Michigan welcomes Crystal Dixon to Michigan, congratulates her on her new job, and salutes her principled stand for family, faith, and freedom! Her firing by the University of Toledo for having dared publicly oppose homosexual activists’ political agenda is proof that so-called “gay rights” laws and policies are themselves blatantly discriminatory.

Crystal is already coming under fire by homosexual activists in Michigan. Please write a message to the editor of the Jackson newspaper and to Jackson Mayor Karen Dunigan and County Commission Chairman James Shotwell applauding their hiring the best-qualified applicant and respecting her religious free speech rights:

editor@citpat.com; kdunigan@cityofjackson.org; JShotwel@co.jackson.mi.us

http://www.mlive.com/news/jackson/index.ssf/2011/03/jackson_county_city_hire_joint.html
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RECORD-EAGLE — Bullying policy subject of FOIA request

March 29, 2011
‎”The request stems in part from recent school board discussion of (amending) the district’s bullying policy…(to) include specific protection on the basis of sexual orientation… The debate also sparked numerous public comments from both sides of the issue at a recent school board meeting and a letter in opposition from American Family Association of Michigan President Gary Glenn.”

The Record-Eagle failed to report that Bully Police USA, one of the nation’s leading anti-bullying organizations, also opposes bullying policies that segregate students into special “protected class” categories. We’ve challenged the reporter who wrote this article to report the rest of the story.

http://record-eagle.com/local/x10256752/Bullying-policy-subject-of-FOIA-request
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MICHIGAN MESSENGER — Michigan activists trying to push anti-bullying legislation

March 29, 2011
‎”Michigan advocates are continuing their drive to get the state legislature to pass an anti-bullying bill…to specifically list, or enumerate, protected classes (such as ‘sexual orientation’ and ‘gender identity’). In Michigan, the legislature’s conservatives, fueled by activism by Gary Glenn, president of the American Family Association of Michigan, have long opposed legislation including enumeration.”

At our April 7th banquet in Troy, we honored former Senate Majority Floor Leader Alan Cropsey, a long-time champion of traditional family values, including for singlehandedly blocking homosexual activists’ Trojan Horse bullying bill in 2008.

What the Messenger article fails to report:

Kevin Epling’s position has for years been at odds with the very anti-bullying organization he purportedly represents.

Bully Police USA agrees with AFA-Michigan’s opposition to segregating students into special “protected class” categories or otherwise trying to define bullying based on the bully’s thoughts (“animus”) or a bullying victim’s personal characteristics.

Bay Windows, a homosexual advocacy newspaper in Boston, reports that Bully Police USA is “one of the key opponents of enumeration.” The same Bay Windows article reports that “only eight of the 44 states that have laws to address bullying enumerate — or specifically identify — bullying based on sexual orientation and gender identity as prohibited conduct.” (N.J.’s new law, and Arkansas’ revision, would make it only ten out of 44.)

Bully Police USA founder and executive director Brenda High, who founded the group after she lost her son Jared to a bullying-related suicide in 1998, writes on the group’s website:

“There should not be any major emphasis on defining victims. This addition into an anti bullying law will cause several problems for lawmakers… The way a bully’s target or victim acts or physically looks is not the victim’s problem but the bully’s own psychological problem. The bully is the root of the problem. Defining victims will slow the process of lawmaking, dividing political parties who will argue over which victims get special rights over other victims. All children deserve the “special right” not to be bullied. ALL children who are bullied need to be protected.”

http://www.bullypolice.org/grade.html

Brenda High nails it. The reason Michigan does not have a bullying law is precisely because of what she predicts: the demands by Mr. Epling and homosexual activist groups to define bullying based on the personal characteristics of the victim have “slow(ed) the process of lawmaking, dividing political parties who will argue over which victims get special rights over other victims.”

Now that the Legislature and governor’s office are held by elected officials who are not beholden to homosexual activists, the chances of finally enacting an anti-bullying bill that simply protects all students from all bullying for all reasons have significantly increased, without segregating students or defining bullying based on what the bully might have been thinking or the victim’s personal or behavioral characteristics. As we’ve said throughout discussion of this issue, AFA-Michigan will not oppose such an all-inclusive anti-bullying law.

Question is, will Epling and homosexual activist groups celebrate such a law as a victory for student safety, or bemoan it as a defeat for the Trojan Horse “sexual orientation” agenda that has blocked adoption of an anti-bullying law for the last seven years?

http://michiganmessenger.com/47746/michigan-activists-trying-to-push-anti-bullying-legislation

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MICHIGAN MESSENGER — House to act Tuesday on domestic partners resolution

March 23, 2011
“The Michigan House of Representatives is prepared to vote on a resolution which would overrule a January decision by the Michigan Civil Service Commission to provide partner benefits to state employees. Republicans say the move will cost $6 to $8 million in increased costs for the state.”

‎”American Family Association of Michigan President Gary Glenn sent a letter to Republican leaders in the state asking them to reject the MCSC decision. But he went a step further and asked them to ask Bill Schuette, the GOP Attorney General, to determine if providing the benefits violated the state’s ‘Marriage Protection Amendment.’

That amendment was passed in 2004 by voters and defines marriage as a union between one man and one woman and disallows the recognition of any other ‘similar’ relationship. The last six words of the amendment — ‘or similar union for any purpose’ — led to a lengthy court battle in the state that ended with the Supreme Court ruling in 2008 that providing same-sex partner benefits violated that provision.”

http://michiganmessenger.com/47558/house-to-act-tuesday-on-domestic-partners-resolution
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DETROIT FREE PRESS — Schuette: EMU’s student’s religious beliefs against homosexuality violated

March 20, 2011

Please e-mail Attorney General Bill Schuette and thank him for his stand against discriminatory “sexual orientation” policies by which Michigan universities persecute and violate the civil and religious free speech rights of Christian students.

E-mail the Attorney General: miag@michigan.gov

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“Eastern Michigan University discriminated against former student Julea Ward when it dismissed her from its counseling program after she said her Christian beliefs prohibited her from counseling a gay client, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette said in a court filing. …Ward sued the university after it dismissed her from its graduate counseling program in 2009 after she refused to work on a gay client’s relationship issues in a clinical program. She said she believes homosexuality is immoral and being gay or lesbian is a choice and thus she could not in good conscience counsel the client.

…’There is a striking difference between EMU’s written standards and EMU’s application of those rules to Julea Ward,’ the brief by Schuette’s office said. ‘Indeed, the evidence suggests that Ward was punished and ultimately dismissed from the program solely for her attempt to exercise disfavored religious beliefs, not for a violation of the code. The attorney general’s brief, filed Friday, also suggests political correctness was at work, suggesting ‘that EMU ‘weeded out’ Ward solely because of her religious views to ensure that only candidates with the ‘right’ beliefs are admitted to the counseling profession.’”

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DETROIT FREE PRESS
Detroit, Michigan
March 15, 2011

Attorney General Bill Schuette: EMU’s student’s
religious beliefs against homosexuality violated

by David Jesse / Detroit Free Press Higher Education Writer

LANSING, Mi. — Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette has waded into a closely watched federal appeals case, siding with an Eastern Michigan University student who claims her dismissal from the university for refusing to counsel gay and lesbian patients violated her religious belief against homosexuality.

Schuette is the latest entrant in a case that has drawn conservative and religious groups, public universities and civil liberties organizations.

“This case really is at the intersection of a lot of values,” said Christopher Lund, an assistant law professor at Wayne State University who specializes in religious liberty issues.

“There’s gay rights versus religious liberty and the rights of individuals versus the rights of the universities to set curriculum. Whenever all those cross, you’ve got a lot of people and organizations that are interested.”

The suit also shows Schuette’s willingness to weigh in on social issues.

“This case signals he will act on questions of constitutionality, such as the case of President Obama’s health care law,” said AG spokesman John Sellek. “This case is also a constitutional issue, where no one should lose their religious freedoms as they work to get an education.”

A case study of religious versus university rights
Eastern Michigan University discriminated against former student Julea Ward when it dismissed her from its counseling program after she said her Christian beliefs prohibited her from counseling a gay client, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette said in a court filing.

That’s not the case at all, EMU said. Ward was dismissed because her refusal to counsel the patient didn’t follow the assigned curriculum and professional ethics guidelines set up the American Counseling Association, the school said.

EMU’s position has been upheld by a federal judge. Now Ward, with briefs of support from Schuette and a number of religious rights organizations, has appealed that ruling. Oral arguments are expected to begin later this year. It’s a case that’s being closely watched, not only by religious organizations, but by other universities. Nine Michigan public universities have filed a brief supporting EMU, saying the case is about who controls curriculum — the university or the students.

“Fundamentally, this case raises the question of whether universities have the freedom to determine their own curricula or whether they must fashion their curricular requirements around the religious, political, social, philosophical and ideological beliefs and expressions of each and every students,” said the brief submitted by the University of Michigan, Central Michigan, Grand Valley State, Michigan State, and five other schools.

It was written by Debra Kowich of U-M’s general counsel office, who wrote that a ruling for Ward “could require universities to dilute their curricular requirements to the point that they would not possibly offend any student of any faith” or political view.

But that’s not how Ward sees it. She and her attorneys at the Alliance Defense Fund say the case is about religious discrimination.

Ward sued the university after it dismissed her from its graduate counseling program in 2009 after she refused to work on a gay client’s relationship issues in a clinical program. She said she believes homosexuality is immoral and being gay or lesbian is a choice and thus she could not in good conscience counsel the client.

EMU said it dismissed her because she didn’t follow a code of ethics that requires counselors to set aside their own personal beliefs in order to work with clients.

Judge George Steeh of the U.S. District Court in Detroit ruled for EMU last July, saying the school was within its rights to dismiss Ward for failing to follow its curriculum. The judge wrote that Ward “has distorted the facts in this case to support her position that defendants dismissed her due to her religious beliefs.”

Ward and her attorneys, a legal group that works to uphold the rights of religious college students and faculty, have asked the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals to step in. They did not return calls seeking comment on Monday.

But in their legal brief for Ward, the lawyers wrote that “EMU violated Ms. Ward’s right to the free exercise of religion by acting as arbiters of her religious beliefs.”

Schuette agrees with them.

“There is a striking difference between EMU’s written standards and EMU’s application of those rules to Julea Ward,” the brief by Schuette’s office said. “Indeed, the evidence suggests that Ward was punished and ultimately dismissed from the program solely for her attempt to exercise disfavored religious beliefs, not for a violation of the code.

The attorney general’s brief, filed Friday, also suggests political correctness was at work, suggesting “that EMU ‘weeded out’ Ward solely because of her religious views to ensure that only candidates with the ‘right’ beliefs are admitted to the counseling profession.”

A number of gay rights groups have weighed in as well, including a brief filed jointly by the Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays; Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network, Affirmations and the Ruth Ellis Center in support of EMU, which says counselors, especially school counselors (which Ward wanted to be), must be supportive of students, whatever their own views.

“A school counselor who is unwilling to assist such students, or worse, a counselor who expresses disapproval of a student’s status as LGBT — is both incapable of doing her job and likely to cause significant harm,” the groups’ brief said.

EMU says the case is about its curriculum, and nothing else. “This case has never been about religion or religious discrimination,” EMU spokesman Walter Kraft said in a statement last week. “It is not about homosexuality or sexual orientation. This case is about what is in the best interest of a client who is in need of counseling, and following the curricular requirements of our highly respected and nationally accredited counseling program.”

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Voices in the debate over
EMU student’s dismissal

Julea Ward’s suit against Eastern Michigan University
has attracted many groups interested in the outcome.

Filed legal briefs supporting Ward

• National Association of Scholars
• The American Center for Law and Justice
• Justice and Freedom Fund
• The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty
• Foundation for Moral Law
• Michigan attorney general

Filed legal briefs supporting EMU

• American Counseling Association
• ACLU, ACLU of Michigan
• Affirmations; Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network; Parents, Families, Friends of Lesbians and Gays; Ruth Ellis Center.
• Central Michigan, Grand Valley State, Michigan State, Northern Michigan, Oakland, Saginaw Valley, Wayne State, and Western Michigan universities, University of Michigan
• Americans United for Separation of Church and State

Related Links
PDF: ACA Code of Ethics http://bit.ly/gqhF6a
PDF: Attorney General brief http://bit.ly/hBJWuV
PDF: Universities’ brief http://bit.ly/fMpo6q

http://www.freep.com/article/201103150300/NEWS06/103150369

WISCONSIN STATE JOURNAL — Why Walker won’t back down

March 10, 2011
Gov. Scott Walker: “Keep looking…to
the path Christ is calling you to follow.”

“The governor gave a hint at how he looks at the world, and his place in it, in a speech he gave to the Christian Businessmen’s Committee in 2009. …Walker summed up his approach to life as ‘trust and obey’ God.

Walker, the son of a Baptist minister, relayed to the crowd two anecdotes that he credits with giving him political perspective. One involved the story of Jesus and Peter. In the story, Peter walked on water with Jesus’ help, until he lost faith and sank into the water.

The other story involved two sailors, one of whom made the mistake of watching the waves break against the boat. Seeing his colleague was getting seasick, the other sailor advised the man to ignore the water and focus at a point on the horizon. That, he said, would help him ride out the storm.

‘Keep looking out at the horizon, to the path Christ is calling you to follow,’ Walker told the crowd. ‘Don’t focus on the waves, and choppy water.’”

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WISCONSIN STATE JOURNAL
Madison, Wisconsin
March 9, 2011

Why Walker won’t back down
by Clay Barbour / The State Journal

The crowds are angry, the polls unfavorable, but Gov. Scott Walker has so far refused to compromise on key pieces of his controversial budget repair bill.

Such resolve would be impressive in a politician with the resume of a Tommy Thompson or Russ Feingold, but it’s a little shocking for a governor with just eight weeks under his belt.

Except, when it comes to Walker, it isn’t.

“Anyone who thinks he will change his mind has another thing coming,” said Milwaukee County Supervisor Joe Sanfelippo, a Walker ally during his tenure as county executive. “He ignores the polls and the protests and does what he thinks is right. And I can tell you, he will not give in.”

It has been nearly a month since the governor unveiled his plan to strip most collective bargaining rights from public employees. In that time, daily protests — some up to 70,000 people — have rung through Capitol Square, and a handful of polls has come out showing dwindling support for Walker’s stance.

The state’s 14 Democratic senators remain holed up in Illinois, locked in a stalemate with the Senate Republicans, who who need the presence of at least one member of the minority party before they can bring the bill up for a vote.

But so far the governor has shown no signs of wavering. On Tuesday, Walker released e-mails showing he is willing to tweak some elements of his bill — such as removing limits on wage negotiations and restoring some items that could be subject to collective bargaining. But the governor remains committed to the bulk of the legislation, which sweeps away decades of collective bargaining rights for public employees.

In a recent interview, when asked about the angry crowds and negative poll numbers, Walker argued the protesters made up just a fraction of the state’s population and said he doesn’t pay attention to polls.

“Polls are nice, if they are on your side,” he said. “But in the end, you’ve got to govern based upon what you think is the right thing.”

Resolve; many of those who have worked with, or against Walker, agree he has it.

The governor gave a hint at how he looks at the world, and his place in it, in a speech he gave to the Christian Businessmen’s Committee in 2009. Talking about his first, unsuccessful run for governor, Walker summed up his approach to life as “trust and obey” God.

Walker, the son of a Baptist minister, relayed to the crowd two anecdotes that he credits with giving him political perspective.

One involved the story of Jesus and Peter. In the story, Peter walked on water with Jesus’ help, until he lost faith and sank into the water.

The other story involved two sailors, one of whom made the mistake of watching the waves break against the boat. Seeing his colleague was getting seasick, the other sailor advised the man to ignore the water and focus at a point on the horizon. That, he said, would help him ride out the storm.

“Keep looking out at the horizon, to the path Christ is calling you to follow,” Walker told the crowd. “Don’t focus on the waves, and choppy water.”

For eight years as Milwaukee County executive, Walker kept the end goal in sight, seeking to reduce the size of government in an office traditionally held by liberals.

During his time there, he cut the government workforce by 20 percent, eliminated the waiting list for long-term care for seniors, and used his veto more than 100 times to cut $44 million in proposed spending.

Each of his nine consecutive budgets held the property tax levy to the previous year’s level. But his opponents criticized Walker for proposing unrealistic budgets that had to be fixed. They called him a one trick pony who only cut and never created.

But according to Milwaukee County Board Spokesman Harold Mester, even Walker’s opponents respected him and knew he would not back down.

“What you’re seeing in Madison now, is basically a repeat of what happened here in Milwaukee for years,” Mester said. “I can tell you this: The chairman (Lee Holloway) does not see Walker backing down on this. (Walker) never did at the county level.”

http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/local/govt-and-politics/article_538e7d70-49eb-11e0-ae00-001cc4c03286.html
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