Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Put Not Thy Trust In Politics
Put Not Thy Trust In Politics
Apr 19, 2025 6:20 AM

The “Christendom Show” really is over in America my friends. It’s a wrap. The culture of American politics is not simply made of up deists, agnostics, and atheists but men and women who are decidedly anti-Christian. To be anti-Christian is not to be merely apathetic or ambivalent toward Christian participation in societal life. Being anti-Christian is to pursue whatever arbitrary measures necessary to ensure that Christians are purged from receiving the same political liberties as other groups. For example, New York State forecasts, yet again, what will likely happen in more and more states in ing years as state legislators rejected a measure that would allow tax payers to receive tax credits for financially supporting parochial education.

New York’s Education Investment Tax Credit would have provided a state tax credit for:

1. Classroom Supplies–Reimburse teachers up to $100 for their out-of-pocket expenses for classroom supplies.

2. Classroom Projects–Increase donations for teacher-selected classroom projects through DonorsChoose and similar nonprofit organizations.

3. Arts, Music, and Sports–Increase donations to nonprofits to provide arts, music, history, athletics, and other instruction in classrooms.

4. Scholarships–Increase donations for nonprofit scholarship organizations to provide scholarships to students attending pre-K through 12th grade, including public and private schools.

According to the bill’s supporters, “the proposed $300 million in tax credits, at least half would be set aside to increase donations to public schools and their teachers.”

Religious leaders, including Timothy Cardinal Dolan Archbishop of New York, met with officials in New York’s State Assembly to garner support. Republican leaders pledged their support with the expectation that the measure would pass. It didn’t. The measure failed because opponents alleged that the bill was a de facto voucher system that would pull money away from public education. The teacher’s union of the state of New York lobbied against it and, according to the New York Daily News, Senate GOP Leader Dean Skelos Scott Reif, the spokesman for GOP state senator Dean Skelos said, “No one worked harder than Senator Skelos to make the Education Investment Tax Credit part of the budget, but we couldn’t get all of the parties to agree.”

With one of the most powerful labor unions in the state lobbying against such a measure there should have been no expectation that the bill would pass since most politicians care about one thing: staying in office. Public schools do not want petition and they will use politics to protect their interests at all costs. I’m certain that the education lobby will generously reward those who voted against the bill.

While there is a need to pay attention to events at the national level this story reminds us that state and local politics are where the some of the most insidious threats to religious liberty will emerge in ing years. This story also reminds us that if Christians put their faith and trust in politicians they will be let down time and time again. Politics regularly does not deliver on what it promises.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
7 Figures: Prevalence of Violence Against Children
The UNICEF report Hidden in Plain Sight, which draws on the pilation of data on violence against children, reveals the disturbing prevalence of physical, sexual, and emotional abuse of children around the globe. According to the report the effects of violence on children are often lasting and have inter-generational repercussions. Findings reveal that exposed children are more likely to e unemployed, live in poverty, and be violent towards others. The authors of the report note that the data is derived...
Helping No One By Being Socially Aware And Active
If you were told by your doctor to lose weight, you’d likely do what most people do: exercise more and eat healthier food. Jason Scott Jones and John Zmirak have a better plan in mind: Step 1: Start a fitness blog, collecting the best arguments you can find against obesity. Step 2: Comb the Bible, Pope Francis’ Tweets, and the work of your fellow bloggers, for the choicest quotes on the deadly sin of Gluttony. Then post them in ments...
Video: Sirico Discusses Multiculturalism on Cavuto
Acton Institute President Rev. Robert A. Sirico made an appearance on Thursday afternoon on Fox News Channel’s Your World with Neal Cavuto. Recently, Cavuto has been addressing the topic of multiculturalism in recent shows, featuring guests like Nigel Farage, leader of the UK Independence Party in Great Britian, and Alveda King, niece of Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., both of whom share deep concerns about the impact of multicultural philosophy and policy on our cultural cohesion. Yesterday, Neil Cavuto asked...
Notes on the Question of Inequality
French economist Thomas Piketty This summer’s issue of The City, which includes an article by myself on Orthodoxy and ordered liberty, opens with a symposium of five articles on “The Question of Inequality.” These include two articles on Pope Francis, two on French economist Thomas Piketty’s recent bookCapital in the Twenty-First Century, and one on the Bible. Having recently written a two part article on the subject for the Library of Law & Liberty (here and here), I took copious...
Kill The Girls, Traffick The Girls
India’s culture, like many others, prefers boys. Not only do they carry on the family name, they don’t cost the family a dowry. (Dowries are officially outlawed in India, but the practice continues.) There is a cottage industry in India of ultrasound machines: if it’s a boy, celebrate! If it’s a girl….the response is often abortion, and “try again.” Like China, India is now suffering the consequences of gendercide. There are not enough brides for the young men of India....
Are You an Athlete or a Spectator?
Today at Ethika Politika, I caution against the sort of scapegoating that justifies ideologies at the expense of human effort: Do you support capitalism? Socialism? Distributism? Something else? Wonderful. What does that look like among the mess of market forms that actually constitute the economy you participate in every day? Rather than criticizing those policies that fall short of your saintly ideal or align too closely with your Hitler, what ones constitute a first step in the right direction for...
Let’s Bring Back the Ignominy of Being a ‘Deadbeat Dad’
“Deadbeat Dads”—absent fathers who don’t provide financial support for their children—are one of the most significant factors contributing to child poverty in America. So why do some single women have children outside of marriage when they know they will receive little to no support from the child’s father? A new study from the University of Georgia and Boston College attempts to answer that question. The authors created an economic model to simulate a scenario in which every absent father was...
Are Fast Food Strikers Just Political Agitators?
According to Thomas McCraw, who is the author of American Business, 1920-2000: How it Worked, “More people in the U.S. workforce were getting their first job at McDonald’s than at any other employer, including the Army.” By the end of this 80 year period, McDonald’s employer turn over rate was just over 200 percent per year. It was a temporary job, primarily for students. This factor has changed somewhat. I remember in an ethics class in seminary we had to...
Stay At Home Mom? Yeah, You Don’t Count
I loved being a stay at home mom. Sure, it was tedious some days and there were times when I was a bit weary of mac and cheese, but overall, I loved it. I enjoyed watching my kids grow, learning with them, enjoying leisurely days of bug watching, sidewalk chalk and cartoons. Imagine my surprise when I found out that being a stay at home mom doesn’t count as work. Not real work: you know, the kind of work where...
Celebrating Grandparents as Caregivers
For the first three years of my life, I lived with and was primarily raised by my grandparents. While I was always grateful for the experience, I never realized until I was a parent myself of the depths of their sacrifice, and the burden and stress raising an infant put on them. Like many other seniors, they didn’t get the credit or recognition they deserved for being caregivers. This role of grandparents is often overlooked, despite the fact that in...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved