男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
WORLD> America
Obama creates faith-based office with wide mission
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-02-06 09:16

WASHINGTON -- Declaring that "there is a force for good greater than government," US President Barack Obama on Thursday established a White House office of faith-based initiatives with a broader mission than the one overseen by his Republican predecessor. Obama said the new office, which he created by executive order, would reach out to organizations that provide help "no matter their religious or political beliefs."


US President Barack Obama speaks at the Energy Department in Washington, Thursday, February 5, 2009. [Agencies] 

Related readings:
 Obama's health cover for all starts with kids
 Christian right challenges Obama's Justice picks
 Obama ordering energy-efficient standards
 Fidel Castro attacks Obama economic plans
 Obama signs kids' health insurance bill

Obama said the office would work with nonprofit organizations "both secular and faith-based" and would help them determine how to make a bigger impact in their cities, learn their obligations under the law and cut through government red tape.

In a time of economic crisis, the president said, it was important for the government to help distressed Americans but added that "the change that Americans are looking for will not come from government alone."

Obama said the top priority of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships will be "making community groups an integral part of our economic recovery and poverty a burden fewer have to bear when recovery is complete."

To lead the office, Obama appointed Joshua DuBois, a 26-year-old Pentecostal minister who headed religious outreach for Obama's Senate office and his presidential campaign. He also named 25 religious and secular leaders to a new advisory board.

"The big picture is that Obama believes faith-based and smaller secular neighborhood organizations can play a role in American renewal. They can work with the federal government to address big problems," DuBois said in an interview with The Associated Press. "We're also going to make sure we have a keener eye toward the separation of church and state."

Obama said the office would also work to reach out overseas "to foster interfaith dialogue with leaders and scholars around the world."

Obama's order expanded and redefined a similar office established by formoer US President George W. Bush. Focused primarily on faith-based initiatives, the Bush office sparked constitutional questions about whether the separation of church and state would be preserved, particularly if groups receiving tax dollars sought to hire on the basis of religion.

Groups that were critical of the Bush faith-based office -- including the American Civil Liberties Union, Americans United for Separation of Church and State, and People For the American Way -- issued statements Thursday expressing disappointment in the Obama version. All said that by failing to repeal Bush policies, the White House will allow participating religious groups to continue discrimination in hiring.

The ACLU also charged that the new advisory council amounted to "a president giving his favored clergy a governmental stamp of approval."

Before signing the order at the White House, Obama told the annual National Prayer Breakfast that the program would not show favoritism to any religious group and would adhere to a strict separation of church and state.

Addressing the gathering of lawmakers, dignitaries and world leaders, Obama spoke of how faith has often been a divisive tool, responsible for war and prejudice. But, he said, "there is no religion whose central tenet is hate."

"There is no god who condones taking the life of an innocent human being," he said, and all religions teach people to love and care for one another. That is the common ground underlying the faith-based office, he said.

Obama's advisers want to be certain tax dollars sent to the faith-based social service groups are used for secular purposes, such as feeding the hungry or housing the homeless, and not for religious evangelism. The administration doesn't want to be perceived as managing the groups yet seeks transparency and accountability.

Obama pledged during the campaign to allow taxpayer-funded religious institutions to hire and fire based on religion -- but only for the activities run on private funding.

"There is no one-size-fits-all answer to this hiring problem," said Ira C. Lupu, a professor at the George Washington University School of Law. "It might be at the end of the day, faith-based hiring is going to be allowed in some government-funded programs and not in others."

Obama on Thursday asked White House lawyers and the Justice Department to write a policy that would address the question of hiring.

"There is a pretty clear lack of legal clarity and data in this area. This mechanism allows us to explore those areas on a case-by-case basis and find out exactly where things are," DuBois said.

Lupu said Bush-era faith-based regulations were ambiguous and sought to limit faith-based groups as little as possible. Obama's order, on the other hand, emphasizes oversight of how taxpayers dollars are spent, making sure they don't go to religious purposes, he said.

"He's signaling, 'We are going to take more seriously than the Bush people did the constitutional concerns about what it is the government may or may not directly support with government money,'" he said.

主站蜘蛛池模板: 伽师县| 十堰市| 衡阳县| 新乡市| 肃宁县| 晋城| 哈巴河县| 曲阳县| 绥中县| 勐海县| 沛县| 广元市| 泽普县| 新民市| 连城县| 璧山县| 曲松县| 乐都县| 石渠县| 米泉市| 亳州市| 逊克县| 库车县| 简阳市| 桦南县| 建平县| 涞水县| 松原市| 彰武县| 莎车县| 黄大仙区| 定襄县| 库车县| 元氏县| 石柱| 浦江县| 盐城市| 满洲里市| 龙州县| 舒城县| 漳浦县| 横山县| 隆化县| 奉节县| 迁安市| 衡东县| 恩施市| 云龙县| 九龙县| 平原县| 灵台县| 富民县| 闽侯县| 乐亭县| 万山特区| 大田县| 工布江达县| 莫力| 九江县| 平远县| 马龙县| 仪征市| 宜州市| 雷波县| 岳普湖县| 杨浦区| 安庆市| 杭锦旗| 中宁县| 慈利县| 崇义县| 长白| 宣城市| 南木林县| 偃师市| 甘洛县| 平泉县| 北票市| 乌海市| 苏尼特右旗| 汉源县| 甘南县|