Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Supreme Court Rules on Prayer

A divided Supreme Court ruled Monday that legislative bodies such as city councils can begin their meetings with prayer, even if it plainly favors a specific religion.

The court ruled 5 to 4 that Christian prayers said before meetings of an Upstate New York town council did not violate the constitutional prohibition against government establishment of religion; the justices cited history and tradition.

“Ceremonial prayer is but a recognition that, since this Nation was founded and until the present day, many Americans deem that their own existence must be understood by precepts far beyond the authority of government,” Justice Anthony M. Kennedy wrote for the court’s conservative majority.

The ruling reflected a Supreme Court that has become more lenient on how government may accommodate religion in civic life without crossing the line into an endorsement of a particular faith. All nine justices endorsed the concept of legislative prayer, with the four dissenters agreeing that the public forum “need not become a religion-free zone,” in the words of Justice Elena Kagan.

But there was sharp disagreement after that, and the majority ruling could encourage public bodies to give more leeway to religious expression in their ceremonial prayers and less deference to the objections of religious minorities.

The court’s five conservatives said legislative prayers need not be stripped of references to a specific religion — the prayers at issue often invoked Jesus Christ and the resurrection — and said those given the opportunity to pray before legislative meetings should be “unfettered” by what government officials find appropriate.

He was joined by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr.

Kagan’s dissent was both narrow — the town could have remedied its problems by finding more religiously diverse prayer-givers, she said — and broad. The First Amendment’s promise, she wrote, is that “every citizen, irrespective of her religion, owns an equal share in her government.”

Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen G. Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor joined her.

The decision split the court along its usual ideological divide and, to a lesser extent, by religion. All members of the majority are Catholic, as is Sotomayor. The other dissenters are Jewish.

The case involved the New York town of Greece, just outside Rochester, where the council regularly opened its meetings with a prayer delivered by someone from the community. The speakers were recruited from local houses of worship, which were overwhelmingly Christian.

In fact, every meeting from 1999 to 2007 opened with a Christian prayer, and even after two of the town’s residents filed a lawsuit, only a handful of non-Christians have delivered the invocation.

A panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit found that “the town’s prayer practice must be viewed as an endorsement of a particular religious viewpoint” because the town had not reached out to a more diverse group of prayer-givers or made clear that the prayers did not represent the town’s beliefs.

The Supreme Court decided 30 years ago that state legislatures may begin sessions with an invocation. But the new case asked whether there might need to be different rules for local council meetings, where citizens often come to ask for favorable official action.

The town residents who objected to the prayer practice, Susan Galloway and Linda Stephens, also argued that the court’s 1983 decision in Marsh v. Chambers authorized only inclusive, nonsectarian prayers to a “generic God.”

Kennedy began by referring to history: The same founders who wrote the First Amendment — with its prohibition on the establishment of a government religion but also protections for religious liberty — provided money for congressional chaplains, he said.

“Legislative prayer has become part of our heritage and tradition, part of our expressive idiom, similar to the Pledge of Allegiance, inaugural prayer, or the recitation of ‘God save the United States and this honorable Court’ at the opening of this Court’s sessions,” he wrote.

And he said there was no evidence that Greece town council members “allocated benefits and burdens based on participation in the prayer.”

The court’s majority split on how to judge whether prayers amount to coercion of nonbelievers.

“The analysis would be different if town board members directed the public to participate in the prayers, singled out dissidents for opprobrium, or indicated that their decisions might be influenced by a person’s acquiescence in the prayer opportunity,” Kennedy wrote in a part of the opinion joined only by Roberts and Alito.

Thomas and Scalia differed. They said that to the extent coercion is relevant to whether there is a violation of the Constitution’s establishment clause, “it is actual legal coercion that counts.” Peer pressure, they said, is not enough.

Thomas, speaking only for himself, again questioned whether the establishment clause even applies to state and local governments. He allowed that as an initial matter, it “probably prohibits Congress from establishing a national religion.”

Kagan said Greece’s policy violates the norm of religious equality — “the breathtakingly generous constitutional idea that our public institutions belong no less to the Buddhist or Hindu than to the Methodist or Episcopalian.”

She said town hall meetings are different from sessions of legislatures or Congress. They are “occasions for ordinary citizens to engage with and petition their government, often on highly individualized matters.” Such meetings require more sensitivity to the prayers offered before a diverse audience, she said.

But in Greece, she wrote, “month in and month out for over a decade, prayers steeped in only one faith, addressed toward members of the public, commenced meetings to discuss local affairs and distribute government benefits.”

She compared it — using the text of some of the prayers offered before the council’s meetings — to the idea of a judge inviting a minister to open a hearing with a prayer about “the saving sacrifice of Jesus Christ” or an election official reciting the Lord’s Prayer before opening the polls.

“I would hold that the government officials responsible for the above practices — that is, for prayer repeatedly invoking a single religion’s beliefs in these settings — crossed a constitutional line,” Kagan wrote. “I have every confidence the Court would agree.”

The decision was not unexpected. The court’s precedent in Marsh — in which the justices said Nebraska had not violated the Constitution by employing a Presbyterian minister for 16 years to lead the legislature in prayer — paved the way.

Still, those who favor a strict separation of church and state said Monday’s decision was an expansion.

“The rule announced by the Court today authorizes elected officials or clergy to give sectarian prayers in the name of Jesus, Hashem, Allah or any other deity before Congress, state legislatures, or local town boards,” the Anti-Defamation League said in a statement. “The religiously divisive implications of this new rule are troubling in any of these contexts, however it is particularly disturbing at the local level.”

But David Cortman, senior counsel for the Alliance Defending Freedom, praised the ruling.

“Opening public meetings with prayer is a cherished freedom that the authors of the Constitution themselves practiced,” he said. “Speech censors should have no power to silence volunteers who pray for their communities just as the Founders did.”

Those divisions were apparent on the court as well.

Alito wrote a concurring opinion just to respond to Kagan. He said he was troubled by her “rhetoric and its highly imaginative hypotheticals.”

He said that if what Kagan perceives as Greece’s constitutional problems could be solved simply with more nonsectarian prayers and greater religious diversity, “the dissent’s objection, in the end, is really quite niggling.”

Kagan responded that if Alito thinks her objection is “really quite niggling,” that “says all there is to say about the difference between our respective views.”


Summary- The Supreme Court decided on Monday that legislative bodies have the right to begin meetings with prayer. Even if the prayer obviously favors one religion. What I found interesting was that all the justices in favor of allowing prayer were catholic, while all but one against it were Jewish. This shows how personal characteristics can play a significant role in the decisions that justices make. The reasoning of the majority was that they are upholding a tradition while also protecting religious freedom. However where the line between religion and government should be drawn is still not 100% clear. And the deserting opinion felt that the line was being crossed.

Monday, April 7, 2014

Defense Department struggles to track its 'revolving door,' IG finds

"Revolving door" statistics within the Department of Defense are not being properly tracked, the agency's watchdog has found.

In 2008, Congress passed laws trying to prevent Pentagon officials who take jobs with government contractors from later influencing the military contracting process in their favor.

The law requires officials going through the "revolving door" to the private sector to get an ethics opinion from a counselor. The opinions and reports about the official were to then to be put into a central database for at least five years.

These records are called "Section 847" records, according to the inspector general's report.

However, the database, known as the After Government Employment Advice Repository, was found to be "incomplete with little or no use by specific DoD organizations with significant contracting activity," according to the report.

The IG found that the "AGEAR database was not complete," and concluded, "DoD may not have fully complied with the intent of this law."

Furthermore, the records were located in "multiple and decentralized locations, not readily available for examination," the report said.

The IG also found that "organizations with substantial contracting activity," such as the Defense Logistics Agency or the National Security Agency, had "limited or no activity" when completing the requirements.

The IG recommended that the Defense Department put a single official in charge of the database.


Summary...

The department of defense's efforts to place a damper on the iron triangle is not being properly executed as the revolving door statistics are not being properly tracked. A few years ago a law was passed to try and prevent lobbyists from the pentagon from influencing military contracting. Those who wanted to become lobbyists had to an ethics opinion from a counseler. These reports are not being taken care of in an organized manner. Some believe that a single individual should be placed in charge of keeping these organized so it'll be taken care of correctly in the future.

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

President Wants NSA to stop

The White House wants the National Security Agency to get out of the business of sweeping up and storing vast amounts of data on Americans' phone calls.

The Obama administration this week is expected to propose that Congress overhaul the electronic surveillance program by having phone companies hold onto the call records as they do now, according to a government official briefed on the proposal. The New York Times first reported the details of the proposal Monday night. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to discuss the plan.

The White House proposal would end the government's practice of sweeping up the phone records of millions of Americans and holding onto those records for five years so the numbers can be searched for national security purposes. Instead, the White House is expected to propose that the phone records be kept for 18 months, as the phone companies are already required to do by federal regulation, and that it be able to preserve its ability to see certain records in specific circumstances approved by a judge.

According to a senior administration official, the president will present "a sound approach to ensuring the government no longer collects or holds this data, but still ensures that the government has access to the information it needs to meet the national security needs his team has identified." The administration official spoke late Monday on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to publicly discuss the proposal before it was officially announced.

The president's plan, however, relies on Congress to pass legislation — something that has so far seemed unlikely.

Details of the government's secret phone records collection program were disclosed last year by former NSA systems analyst Edward Snowden. Privacy advocates were outraged to learn that the government was holding onto phone records of innocent Americans for up to five years. Obama promised to make changes to the program in an effort to win back public support.

In January, President Barack Obama tasked his administration with coming up with an alternative to the current counterterrorism program and suggested that the phone companies option was the most likely. However, he also said that option posed problems.

"This will not be simple," Obama said. An independent review panel suggested that the practice of the government collecting the phone records be replaced by a third party or the phone companies holding the records, and the government would access them as needed.

"Both of these options pose difficult problems," Obama said in January. "Relying solely on the records of multiple providers, for example, could require companies to alter their procedures in ways that raise new privacy concerns.

And the phone companies have been against this option, as well.

In several meetings with White House staff since December, phone company executives came out strongly opposed to proposals that would shift the custody of the records from the NSA to the telecoms. The executives said they would only accept such changes to the NSA program if they were legally required and if that requirement was spelled out in legislation.

The companies are concerned about the costs of retaining the records and potential liability, such as being sued by individuals whose phone data was provided to intelligence or law enforcement agencies, these people said. The discussions with the White House ceased earlier this year. Industry officials said they had not been in contact with the administration as new options were being considered. The executives have continued to discuss the issue with lawmakers, however.

The administration's proposed changes won't happen right away. The government plans to continue its bulk collection program for at least three months, the Times said.

But it's unlikely that Congress would pass legislation in the next three months, as the NSA surveillance has proved to be a divisive issue, even within political parties.

The chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Dianne Feinstein, has advocated for the program to continue to operate as it does. The California Democrat said she would be open to other options if they met national security and privacy needs.

It is unclear whether the White House proposal will meet those needs.

Leaders of the House intelligence committee are expected to introduce legislation Tuesday that would call for a similar option to the Obama administration's.

Under the administration's pending legislative proposal, officials would have to obtain phone records by getting individual orders from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, the Times report said. The new court orders would require companies to provide those records swiftly and to make available continuing data related to the order when new calls are placed or received.

Summary- the president wants congress to pass legislature to stop the NSA from collecting data from phone calls

President Wants NSA to stop

The White House wants the National Security Agency to get out of the business of sweeping up and storing vast amounts of data on Americans' phone calls.

The Obama administration this week is expected to propose that Congress overhaul the electronic surveillance program by having phone companies hold onto the call records as they do now, according to a government official briefed on the proposal. The New York Times first reported the details of the proposal Monday night. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to discuss the plan.

The White House proposal would end the government's practice of sweeping up the phone records of millions of Americans and holding onto those records for five years so the numbers can be searched for national security purposes. Instead, the White House is expected to propose that the phone records be kept for 18 months, as the phone companies are already required to do by federal regulation, and that it be able to preserve its ability to see certain records in specific circumstances approved by a judge.

According to a senior administration official, the president will present "a sound approach to ensuring the government no longer collects or holds this data, but still ensures that the government has access to the information it needs to meet the national security needs his team has identified." The administration official spoke late Monday on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to publicly discuss the proposal before it was officially announced.

The president's plan, however, relies on Congress to pass legislation — something that has so far seemed unlikely.

Details of the government's secret phone records collection program were disclosed last year by former NSA systems analyst Edward Snowden. Privacy advocates were outraged to learn that the government was holding onto phone records of innocent Americans for up to five years. Obama promised to make changes to the program in an effort to win back public support.

In January, President Barack Obama tasked his administration with coming up with an alternative to the current counterterrorism program and suggested that the phone companies option was the most likely. However, he also said that option posed problems.

"This will not be simple," Obama said. An independent review panel suggested that the practice of the government collecting the phone records be replaced by a third party or the phone companies holding the records, and the government would access them as needed.

"Both of these options pose difficult problems," Obama said in January. "Relying solely on the records of multiple providers, for example, could require companies to alter their procedures in ways that raise new privacy concerns.

And the phone companies have been against this option, as well.

In several meetings with White House staff since December, phone company executives came out strongly opposed to proposals that would shift the custody of the records from the NSA to the telecoms. The executives said they would only accept such changes to the NSA program if they were legally required and if that requirement was spelled out in legislation.

The companies are concerned about the costs of retaining the records and potential liability, such as being sued by individuals whose phone data was provided to intelligence or law enforcement agencies, these people said. The discussions with the White House ceased earlier this year. Industry officials said they had not been in contact with the administration as new options were being considered. The executives have continued to discuss the issue with lawmakers, however.

The administration's proposed changes won't happen right away. The government plans to continue its bulk collection program for at least three months, the Times said.

But it's unlikely that Congress would pass legislation in the next three months, as the NSA surveillance has proved to be a divisive issue, even within political parties.

The chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Dianne Feinstein, has advocated for the program to continue to operate as it does. The California Democrat said she would be open to other options if they met national security and privacy needs.

It is unclear whether the White House proposal will meet those needs.

Leaders of the House intelligence committee are expected to introduce legislation Tuesday that would call for a similar option to the Obama administration's.

Under the administration's pending legislative proposal, officials would have to obtain phone records by getting individual orders from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, the Times report said. The new court orders would require companies to provide those records swiftly and to make available continuing data related to the order when new calls are placed or received.

Summary- the president wants congress to pass legislature to stop the NSA from collecting data from phone calls

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Gerrymandering

March 3, 2014

Elections that will shape the future of North Carolina took place last Friday, and no one voted.

They weren’t official elections, but they will have the same effect. Friday was the filing deadline for candidates. In nearly one-third of the General Assembly’s races, only one candidate filed and in effect became the winner. After primaries, 78 seats – or 46 percent of the legislature – will have only one major party candidate in the general election. In 2012, there were 67 uncontested races.

What makes the number of uncontested races remarkable is that it has occurred during a period of intense debate over state government policies and laws passed by the Republican-led General Assembly.

More than 900 people were willing to be arrested to express their opposition during Moral Monday protests at the legislature. Many Republican and independent voters pushed back, saying Republican lawmakers and Republican Gov. Pat McCrory were taking North Carolina in the right direction. But when the time came to direct those strong feelings into standing for election, many chose not to bother.

The reason isn’t a lack of will. It’s an acceptance of reality. The redistricting process that follows the census every 10 years has become so partisan that many districts are heavily stacked toward one party. Because Republicans took over the General Assembly in the 2010 election, they got to redraw the legislative and congressional district lines in a way that favors Republican candidates.

Democrats did the same when they were in power. This time, though, the Republicans were especially brazen about making the lines partisan. Improvements in mapping technology have made the work even more precise and effective.

When they were out of power, Republicans called for changing the redistricting process to a nonpartisan one. But now that their handiwork has helped create veto-proof majorities in the state House and Senate and helped to flip the state’s congressional delegation from 7-6 Democratic to 9-4 Republican, redistricting reform has slipped off the Republicans’ wish list. Indeed, some Republicans sound content with the practice of politicians choosing their voters.

Rep. David Lewis, R-Harnett, one of the authors of the lopsided Republican map, told WRAL that the withering of the democratic process in filling nearly half of the state’s legislative seats reflects the contentment of voters. “Many of the constituents in our state are pleased with the representation they have and don’t feel the need to file to replace their current member of the House or Senate,” he said.

But Lewis knows well that the rise in uncontested races is hardly an expression of contentment. He’s a defendant in a lawsuit brought by voters and civil and voting rights groups seeking to have the maps thrown out. The maps were upheld by a three-judge panel, but the case has been appealed to the state Supreme Court.

It’s important for democracy that the plaintiffs prevail in the redistricting suit. But it’s even more important that the General Assembly move to end redistricting as a political process. Iowa, for one, has nonpartisan legislative staff members draw its lines. The results are more districts where members of both major parties have a reasonable chance to win and that makes for a better reflection of the voters’ will.

Bob Phillips, executive director of Common Cause North Carolina, is leading his group’s push for nonpartisan redistricting. The current system, he said, disenfranchises voters and reduces lawmakers’ need to be responsive to a more diverse electorate.

Taking politics out of the redistricting process is essential to bringing true politics – the art of compromise – back to the legislative process. Otherwise, voters are locked out, lawmakers are locked in and polarization rules.


Summary- Primary elections were held in North Carolina and it shows just how much of an effect gerrymandering has on the democratic process. Only a handful out of the 78 seats available were contested. Incumbents are becoming and issue and some people are beginning to make efforts to change this and help save the democratic process in the state. I see this as a good thing becuase gerrymandering is something that I believe needs to be stopped because it presents the true voice of the people from being heard. Parties are too interested in they're own affairs and not enough on the people's.


Read more here: http://www.newsobserver.com/2014/03/03/3671179/gerrymandering-drains-democracy.html#storylink=cpy

Monday, February 17, 2014

Debt Ceiling Raised

RANCHO MIRAGE, California (Reuters) - President Barack Obama signed legislation on Saturday that raises the U.S. debt limit through March 2015, taking the politically volatile issue off the table with congressional elections coming up this November.

Without an increase in the statutory debt limit, the U.S. government would have soon defaulted on some of its obligations and would have had to shut down some programs, an historic event that would have caused severe market turmoil.

On a long holiday weekend in a desert resort area in southern California, Obama put his signature on the legislation without fanfare, while behind closed doors at the Sunnylands retreat.

It was a quiet end to the latest chapter in what has been one of the more challenging aspects of his presidency, as he and his fellow Democrats have repeatedly sparred with Republicans over increasing the country's borrowing authority.

Extending the debt ceiling to March 2015 means the issue may not get caught up in election-year politics.

Congress had given final approval to the increase after final action in the Senate on Wednesday, but only over the objections of Texas Republican Ted Cruz, a favorite of the conservative Tea Party movement. It appeared at first there would not be enough Republicans to join the Democratic majority and advance the bill.

But a decision by Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell and No. 2 Senate Republican John Cornyn, who are both up for re-election this year, to vote to advance the measure ensured that it would survive.

The House of Representatives, where Republicans hold a majority, passed the measure in a close vote on Tuesday after Republicans dropped the confrontational tactics they had used in similar votes over the past three years.

The advance of the measure has brought relief to financial markets. Investors were becoming increasingly jittery ahead of February 27, the date by which the U.S. Treasury had been warning its borrowing authority would be exhausted, putting federal payments at risk.

(Reporting by Steve Holland, editing by G Crosse)


After reading this I realized that the avoid economic disaster we need to continue raising the debt ceiling. Before I thought that if we didn't raise the debt ceiling it would solve the problem of government spending. Now I see that that is not the case. I feel the efforts of the republicans to hinder this piece of legistlature is irresponsible especially since they understand the repercussions of their actions. Is seems as though they are doing whatever they can to appeal to their following without regard for what's best for the country.

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Utah files opening argument in gay marriage case

 

Utah files opening argument in gay marriage case

Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2014 - 8:46 a.m.

SALT LAKE CITY—Utah filed its opening argument with an appeals court in defense of the state's gay marriage ban, which a federal judge overturned in late December.

The Salt Lake Tribune reports (http://bit.ly/MreA0E ) that the brief was filed with the Denver-based 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals at 11:30 p.m. Monday, 30 minutes before the deadline. Attorneys for three same-sex couples challenging Utah's ban must respond by Feb. 25.

Among the state's arguments are that its laws are focused on the welfare of children versus the "emotional interests of adults." The state says kids ideally are raised by their biological mother and father.

More than 1,000 gay couples married in Utah before the U.S. Supreme Court granted the state an emergency stay last month.

Oral arguments are scheduled for April 10.