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President Obama signed an executive order last week continuing the faith-based
initiatives program created by former President Bush. When the program was
created, I warned that giving taxpayer money to private religious organizations
would eventually lead to political control and manipulation of them. This week
has provided some evidence that this was a justified concern.
The logic behind funding faith-based initiatives seemed reasonable to some.
Private organizations are much more effective in charitable endeavors than
government programs and bureaucracies. Therefore, why not "outsource" some
of the government's welfare-state activities to these worthy organizations?
This appealed to many conservatives, especially after the follow-up executive
order exempting recipients from discriminatory hiring laws, which assured many
that taking federal funds would not jeopardize their control over their own
operations. But beware the government program started under an administration
you like, for it may look a lot different under the one you don't. Exemptions
that Bush gave, Obama can take away.
But now, dependencies on federal money have been set, operations have been
expanded accordingly, and many charities are waiting breathlessly for the administration
to tell them what new conditions they will have to meet. With the stroke of
a pen, religious charities might not be able to take into consideration a job
applicant's faith, sexual orientation or lifestyle if they wish to remain eligible
for that taxpayer money that was so enticing a few years ago. Similarly, if
FOCA (Freedom of Choice Act) is passed, will Catholic Church hospitals be forced
to offer abortion services to retain their federal funding? Can they remain
solvent without it?
This is the major problem with basing a private business model on the receipt
of government funds. This money does not come without control, or the future
possibility of control. We are seeing parallel control grabs in industries
that have recently been the recipients of taxpayer largess. Government officials
are now discussing executive compensation on Wall Street, banking, and in the
auto industry. How much is too much to pay someone? When is a bonus deserved?
But because politicians have bought their way into these industries, these
are now political decisions. It is easy to utilize class envy to whip up public
support for these interventions, but government always slides down the slippery
slope. Politicians are also discussing other aspects of these businesses in
which they are not expert, such as, what should lending standards be? What
sort of cars should we direct the auto industry to make? Once government money
infiltrates a balance sheet, "taxpayers" meaning "politicians" have a say in
how you operate.
Money is the Trojan horse that government uses to infiltrate and infect organizations.
Funding that, on the outset, is designed to strengthen and support, will bureaucratize
and regulate in the end. It is sad to see charities now having reason to focus
on lobbying, regulatory compliance and paper pushing to get and retain money
taken by force, rather than beefing up private, voluntary fundraising activities.
Those tempted to join Washington's ongoing bailout bonanza should instead take
the famed advice of former First Lady Nancy Reagan on the acceptance of harmful
and addictive substances and "Just Say No" to government money. This is the
best protection from government control.
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Dr. Ron Paul
Project Freedom
Congressman Ron Paul of Texas enjoys a national reputation
as the premier advocate for liberty in politics today. Dr. Paul is the leading
spokesman in Washington for limited constitutional government, low taxes, free
markets, and a return to sound monetary policies based on commodity-backed
currency. He is known among both his colleagues in Congress and his constituents
for his consistent voting record in the House of Representatives: Dr. Paul
never votes for legislation unless the proposed measure is expressly authorized
by the Constitution. In the words of former Treasury Secretary William Simon,
Dr. Paul is the "one exception to the Gang of 535" on Capitol Hill.
Copyright © 2006-2009 Dr. Ron Paul
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