Correspondence

Correspondence Reporting on Faith John J. DiIulio Jr.'s "The New York Times versus Religion" (Oct. 23) contained some significant factual errors in its descriptions of my four-part series, "In...

...But the series was not even remotely about that initiative, or federal faith-based funding in general...
...So none of the series dealt with federal funding issues, which DiIulio identified as half of my "story line...
...While not mentioned in my series, previous rulings by the U.S...
...23) contained some significant factual errors in its descriptions of my four-part series, "In God's Name," published in the New York Times beginning October 8. Dilulio's essay focused largely on his complaint that I did not accurately or fairly address the issues surrounding federal funding for religious groups that provide social services under the federal Faith-Based and Community Initiative...
...And the religious exemption in the 1964 act simply allowed religious employers to practice faith-based discrimination in hiring, as I also explained...
...Derek Davis in a companion piece to the final story on October 11...
...Nor did the presidential executive orders he mentioned expand, or even affect, the ministerial exception, as he stated...
...John Stossel New York, N.Y...
...Instead, the second article focused on just two topics: the "ministerial exception" and a landmark federal appeals court opinion in 2002 that expanded a religious exemption under federal labor laws...
...Those legislative actions were mentioned only in thumbnail fashion in a graphic that ran the previous day...
...DiIulio also mistakenly described the ministerial exception...
...And the second article in the series, "Where Faith Abides, Employees Have Few Rights," did not focus at all on "13 'workplace' provisions" adopted by Congress, as DiIulio reported...
...Neither it nor the more expansive exemption adopted in 1972 had anything at all to say about "private funds and worship services" or about "public funds and social services," as DiIulio reported...
...As I explained in my second article, it is a longstanding judicial doctrine that dates back at least 100 years...
...Most of those were incidental references...
...And FEMA, too, will now pay to rebuild religious schools damaged by natural disasters...
...There is nothing inconsistent about condemning gambling while also condemning a "mother-hen" government that foolishly moves to criminalize it...
...Court doctrine can be modified only by judicial action, not by executive order...
...Diana B. Henriques Senior Writer New York Times New York, N.Y...
...These developments, of course, are just two more examples of the trend toward greater governmental accommodation of religious groups— which was, in fact, the "story line" of my series...
...attorney general's office have been reversed to allow such funding...
...Will Power The Scrapbook was unfair to George Will ("We Don't Need No Stinkin' Soulcraft," Oct...
...the rest were in a quotation from Dr...
...It was not established under the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as he reported...
...Out of almost 18,000 words, only three paragraphs, totaling 139 words, mentioned those topics at all...
...But perhaps DiIulio and your readers will be heartened to know that his concern that venerable houses of worship "must go begging" for historic preservation funds is also incorrect...
...Both are judicial doctrines, not legislation...

Vol. 12 • November 2006 • No. 9


 
Developed by
Kanda Sofware
  Kanda Software, Inc.