Tuesday, November 19, 2024

FOUR WAYS TO HELP RELIGIOUS FREEDOM RECOVER FROM BIDEN-HARRIS ATTACKS

National Review

 

Four Ways to Help Religious Freedom Recover from Biden-Harris Attacks

By Andrea Picciotti-Bayer

November 17, 2024 6:30 AM

 

The Biden administration damaged this fundamental right. Here’s how the Trump administration could restore it.

 

After the assaults on religious freedom during the last four years of the Biden-Harris administration, the new Trump administration has a great deal of malicious damage to repair. From attacks on foster parents of faith to attempts to strongarm religious hospitals into procedures at odds with their beliefs, the extent of the obsessive opposition to religious freedom has been relentless.

 

I’m very optimistic that we can recover our first freedom, as it’s often called. But it won’t be easy, because the progressive bureaucracies contemptuous of the consciences of Americans of faith, while they will inevitably lose crucial access to the White House after January 20, are still resourceful and extremely well funded.

 

Here are four steps that the new administration should prepare to tackle in restoring this fundamental right:

 

Bolster medical conscience rights. The Biden administration, under the command of the grimly ideological Xavier Becerra, secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, walked back the federal government’s commitment to protect medical conscience rights for individual providers and health care institutions, especially those who oppose abortion and gender reassignment interventions. The second Trump administration must renew the government’s commitment to preserve (and, where necessary, reinstate) medical conscience rights.

 

Many existing medical conscience laws lack private rights of action for health care providers or institutions who find themselves pressured to violate their consciences. Lawmakers must rectify this. In the meantime, HHS’s Office of Civil Rights (OCR) under the new Trump administration must stand up for doctors, nurses, and hospitals that refuse to kowtow to a fanatical progressive agenda.

 

The first Trump administration was exemplary on this front. OCR had dedicated staff within a Religious Freedom Division. That division must be reopened.

 

Providers and covered institutions must be made aware of their rights under federal law so that health care institutions, doctors, nurses, and technicians are never pressured to work against their conscience. And if their rights of conscience are not respected, the new Trump administration must step in on their behalf.

 

Start enforcing and promoting existing laws. The government’s commitment to religious freedom must be renewed across all federal agencies, starting with our nation’s top law enforcement agency — the Department of Justice.

 

The DOJ, working with the Solicitor General’s office, must stand up for religious freedom in our federal courts — including the Supreme Court. Whether it brings individual cases against state or local actors for violating constitutional or statutory right, or serves as a friend of the court in cases brought by private entities, the federal government must not be silent.

 

The Biden-Harris administration lost few opportunities to genuflect to progressive interest groups at the expense of religious interests. In the cases before the Supreme Court that involved religious freedom and free speech issues, the office of the solicitor general was often absent or appeared in support of those trampling on the rights of religious Americans.

 

And what about the investigation of assaults on religious liberty? The Biden-Harris administration weaponized the Department of Justice to prosecute peaceful protesters in front of abortion clinics even after the Supreme Court dismantled the fiction of Roe v. Wade and a constitutional right to an abortion. At the same time, the DOJ paid virtually no attention to attacks on churches and pro-life pregnancy centers, even though these places are covered by the same law — the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act.

 

Scrap recent rule-making. The third issue is to walk back federal rules, regulations, and guidance finalized during the Biden-Harris administration that advanced progressive policy priorities with little regard for traditional religious belief in opposition. These are particularly pernicious when it comes to imposing gender ideology in the workplace, on vulnerable children in the foster care system,  and as a matter of “health care.” These rules, regulations, and guidance must be erased. Instead of replacing them, the Trump administration can simply point to the Constitution’s great respect for the free exercise of religion — existing federal laws that protect religious liberty, including the check that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act places on the federal government when religious exercise or belief is substantially burdened.

 

Maintain the Supreme Court’s originalist majority. While I do not suggest that any justice should do so, it’s possible that one or more sitting Supreme Court justices will retire in the coming years. During President Trump’s first term, he wisely nominated justices who were committed to an originalist interpretation of the Constitution. Such a perspective provided essential protection for religious liberty, particularly in vindicating the First Amendment’s guarantee of the free exercise of religion. Maintaining such a majority on the Court is crucial.

 

To sum up, we don’t need a larger administrative state; we just need a federal government willing to stand up for religious liberty. For four agonizing years, we have not had one. Plans to repair the damage must begin immediately.

SECOND-GRADER TRAUMATIZED AFTER BEING HUNG IN SCHOOL BATHROOM IN HORSEPLAY INCIDENT

Fox News

 

Second-grader 'traumatized' after being hung in school bathroom during 'horseplaying' incident: report

Greg Norman By Greg Norman Fox News

Published November 19, 2024 8:30am EST

 

A 7-year-old Maryland student is feeling "traumatized," his mother says, after being found hanging in an elementary school bathroom during an incident that officials say was a result of "horseplaying."

 

The second-grader from C. Paul Barnhart Elementary School in Waldorf is recovering Tuesday after being rushed to a children’s hospital late last week, according to Fox5 DC. His parents told WUSA9 that he suffered bruises to his neck and that "this is not something he’s going to just get over overnight."

 

"He’s traumatized. It’s going to take time," the child’s mother reportedly added.

 

In a letter sent home to parents on Friday, principal Carrie Burke wrote: "This afternoon, two of our students were reportedly horseplaying in a school bathroom when one student’s jacket got caught on a stall door hook."

 

"The student was not able to free themselves and the other student involved was also not able to help them. This student left the bathroom to seek help from staff and reported the incident to administrators," Burke continued. "Administrators responded and were able to assist, but staff called 911 for additional precautionary medical support. Due to privacy reasons, I am not able to share any additional details with you."

 

Charles County Public Schools Superintendent Maria Navarro then announced Monday that "Disciplinary consequences following the Charles County Public Schools Code of Student Conduct are being imposed due to the serious nature of this incident."

 

"As of today, we have gathered additional statements from staff and students and completed a thorough review of school camera footage. Based on our investigation so far, we have no reason to believe this was race-related or there was any intent for anyone to be hurt," she said.

 

The district did not immediately respond Tuesday to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.

 

Charles County Public Schools said over the weekend that "The incident is an active investigation and the school resource officer and police are assisting school administrators with this process."

 

The boy’s mother told Fox5 DC that her son was sent to a children’s hospital on Friday before being discharged Saturday.

 

"We want it to be the last time it happens. I want to bring awareness to every county in the world. Prince George’s, Calvert County, St. Mary’s County, Charles County. I want it all over. We need hall monitors. Somebody needs to monitor the kids... We just need answers," she said to the station.


AH: Sounds like this school could stand to be made safer.


On another note, what does the horse have to say about this?

THE REASON LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE NEVER HAD A TRADITIONAL THANKSGIVING EPISODE

The Real Reason Little House Never Had a Traditional Thanksgiving Episode By Michael John Petty November 18, 2024 Thanksgiving is coming up at the end of November. Around this time of year, TV networks across the nation are known for running marathons of some of your favorite classic television shows, and sometimes that includes Little House on the Prairie. But although there are quite a few Christmas episodes of Little House, you won't find a traditional Thanksgiving episode anywhere you look. Why is that? Well, come with us as we find out. 'Little House on the Prairie' Never Had a Traditional Thanksgiving Episode Across all of Little House's nine seasons, you will never find an episode that's specifically about Thanksgiving. That's not to say that the American holiday isn't mentioned on occasion, or that some episodes don't come close. One such episode is the Season 3 two-parter "Journey in the Spring," where Carrie (Lindsay and Sidney Greenbush) befriends a turkey she names Tom. Though Carrie and Charles (Michael Landon) had picked out the turkey to "have" for supper, Carrie took that as they were inviting the bird to dinner rather than eating it. As such, she begins treating Tom like a pet. Eventually, they take Tom back to the farm they got him from, and no Thanksgiving dinner is had. But that's about as close to a Thanksgiving feast as Little House ever got on the main show. In her book, My Prairie Cookbook: Memories and Frontier Food from My Little House to Yours, series star Melissa Gilbert (who played young Laura Ingalls Wilder) noted that, although Thanksgiving was her favorite holiday, there was a reason the show never did a direct "Turkey Day"-centric hour. "We never did a Thanksgiving episode of Little House because it had been declared a national holiday only a few years before the show takes place," Gilbert explained. This checks out. According to the United States National Archives, President George Washington once marked Thursday, November 26, 1789, as the first "Day of Publick Thanksgivin," but it wasn't until 1863 (about a decade before Little House starts) that President Abraham Lincoln declared Thanksgiving a national holiday. Even then, it wasn't until 1941 that the official "fourth Thursday of November" date was set. 'The Little House Years' Was a Heartfelt Thanksgiving-Themed Tribute to the Show But that doesn't mean that the series didn't just ignore our nation's national day of thanks. Thanksgiving was still around for the majority of Little House, even if the series never did an episode about the holiday (which perhaps isn't surprising, since they stopped doing annual Christmas episodes after the third season). Instead, Little House went a step further in celebrating Thanksgiving with their three-hour special (with commercials) titled The Little House Years. This special (one of many the show aired back in its day), aired on NBC on November 15, 1979, in the middle of the show's sixth season. It was essentially a clip show as the Ingalls family gathers together for a Thanksgiving dinner, reflecting on all the things and people they're thankful for. While The Little House Years is unashamedly a clip show, it was done tastefully well. The Thanksgiving setting, with each member of the family thanking God for their blessings and history together, is actually the perfect time to reflect on Little House as a whole. After all, the characters themselves are reminiscing about what they're thankful for, and so inserting the material in to fill in their mental gaps just feels right. Of all the ways to do a clip show, book-ending it with a traditional Thanksgiving dinner is perhaps one of the more novel concepts. Longtime fans of the show will undoubtedly feel at home in this holiday special, even if it just serves as a retrospective on the series' greatest hits. Since we'll likely never see the show return or be rebooted, it's a great reminder of how thankful we really are for Little House on the Prairie after 50 years. 

Little House on the Prairie is available for streaming on Prime Video in the U.S. 


AH: Gilbert's answer doesn't seem valid as historical accuracy never mattered on that show.

SEVEN WAYS TO REVERSE PREDIABETES

Fox News

 

Warning sign of type 2 diabetes: 7 ways to reverse prediabetes

Taking action immediately could prolong your life, experts say

By Melissa Rudy Fox News

Published November 15, 2024 8:00am EST

 

Approximately 38.4 million Americans had been diagnosed with diabetes as of 2021 — but about three times that many are in danger of developing the disease, even if they don’t know it.

 

Nearly 98 million U.S. adults had prediabetes as of 2021, according to the American Diabetes Association (ADA).

 

Prediabetes is almost always a precursor to type 2 diabetes, which is the most common type — but that outcome isn't inevitable, experts say. If you’ve been diagnosed with prediabetes, there are steps you can take to get back on a healthy track.

 

What is prediabetes?

 

Prediabetes is a condition that occurs when blood sugar levels are above normal but not quite yet a diagnosable disease, according to Marjorie Nolan Cohn, a registered dietitian and clinical director of Berry Street, a nutrition therapy provider in New York City.

 

"Think of prediabetes as your major warning sign that a formal diabetes diagnosis is down the pike," she told Fox News Digital.

 

"Taking action immediately is necessary for prevention and can literally prolong your life."

 

What causes prediabetes?

 

There are several factors that can nudge someone more toward the prediabetes range, according to Dr. Akhil Shenoy, a Texas endocrinologist and medical advisor at Aeroflow Diabetes, a provider of diabetes management supplies.

 

Some of those include a family history of type 2 diabetes and a personal history of gestational diabetes, Shenoy told Fox News Digital.

 

People with excess body weight, sedentary lifestyles, a smoking habit and poor sleep are also at a higher risk.

 

Eating a diet high in red or processed meats, low vegetables and high sugars also contributes to prediabetes and diabetes, Shenoy said.

 

Nearly 98 million U.S. adults had prediabetes as of 2021, according to the American Diabetes Association.

 

"Even skipping a meal contributes to the development of prediabetes, especially in those with multiple risk factors, because of imbalanced blood sugar and insulin levels," Cohn added.

 

Certain ethnicities tend to be more susceptible, with Asian, Hispanic and Black American adults more likely to have prediabetes compared to White Americans, the experts noted.

 

How is prediabetes diagnosed?

 

Prediabetes is diagnosed by a blood test that measures blood sugar levels over time, according to Cohn.

 

"Hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) is a marker that assesses average blood sugar levels for the past two to three months," she told Fox News Digital.

 

"This gives a broad view into your blood sugar."

 

Additional lab testing includes a fasting blood sugar test, Cohn noted, which provides a snapshot of your blood sugar at a certain date and time.

 

"In this fasting test, you have not eaten or drank since the night before," she said.

 

"With both a hemoglobin A1c and fasting blood sugar test, your doctor can diagnose you with prediabetes."

 

7 ways to reverse prediabetes

 

While a diagnosis of prediabetes can be scary, Cohn emphasized that it doesn’t always have to lead to type 2 diabetes.

 

"By taking action now, you can prevent diabetes from developing," she said.

 

Cohn and Chenoy recommended several ways to reverse prediabetes.

 

Take walks after meals and snacks

Engage in at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise per week

Drink water instead of soda

Eat healthy meals that contain a balance of lean proteins, healthy fats and complex carbohydrates, limiting saturated fats

If overweight or obese, produce a calorie deficit to lose at least 5% of body weight

If you smoke, quit

See a doctor or specialist as needed

 

"If, despite these measures, blood sugar levels remain elevated, medications may be prescribed to further reduce the risk of developing type 2 diabetes," Chenoy advised.

 

Cohn also recommends seeing a registered dietitian who can help with establishing habits to support healthy blood sugar levels.

 

"At this stage, lifestyle and dietary changes are shown to be most effective for the majority of individuals with prediabetes," she added.

VIRGINIA MOTHER DECLARES VICTORY AFTER SCHOOL SYSTEM QUIETLY REMOVES X-RATED LGBT NOVEL IN COMIC BOOK FORM

Fox News

 

Virginia mother declares 'victory' after school system quietly removes 'X-rated' LGBTQ graphic novel

'Queer: A Graphic Novel' was allegedly removed for using 'outdated terminology'

By Nikolas Lanum Fox News

Published November 14, 2024 6:00am EST

 

A Virginia mother who publicly spoke out against the inclusion of an "adult-themed" LGBTQ graphic novel in Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) is declaring "victory" after the book was quietly removed from school libraries.

 

In emails obtained by Fox News Digital, FCPS told Stacy Langton, a mother of six, that "Queer: A Graphic History" by Meg-John Barker was removed by librarians "due to outdated terminology that is no longer used in the LGBTQ+ community."

 

The school system told Langton the book was retired from most of their schools in June 2023 – after she had expressed concern about the book during school board meetings. Langton only learned about the decision in October 2024 correspondence with FCPS – and was surprised this information was not previously passed on to her and other parents.

 

"It's not appropriate for minor children at all. It's an adult-themed book. It shouldn't be in any school library. I think they didn't want me to know that they took it out because it's a win for me, you know? I mean, let's call it what it is. It's a victory," Langton told Fox News Digital, describing debate about age-appropriate books as a "political football."

 

The FCPS Assistant Superintendent of the Instructional Services Department, Noel Klimenko, emailed Langton that her school board remarks likely prompted librarians to pull the book for review.

 

"As a nonfiction book on an evolving topic, it is critical that the book contains current information. It is within the responsibilities of the librarian to make these decisions. I did not direct any school to remove the book," she said.

 

Klimenko noted that librarians determined other books in their collections provide more accurate, up-to-date information on LGBTQ sources that were "superior sources of information" on the topic.

 

She also revealed that the book was retired during a process known as weeding, wherein librarians commonly remove items to maintain a relevant, current and appealing collection.

 

Klimenko also pushed back after Langton snapped a recent picture of the book in Fairfax High School's library – suggesting that its presence was part of a display created by the Gay Student Alliance club to promote LGBTQ history month.

 

"This text is part of a large display in a locked cabinet that our clubs are allowed to sign up for and promote awareness, club activities, and inclusion," she added.

 

Langton initially brought the book to the attention of school board members on May 11, 2023, when she printed out one of the graphic novel's most shocking images – a naked man and woman engaging in a sexual position where the traditional gender roles are reversed.

 

"There are many images, probably about half a dozen, that are completely X-rated depictions of sex acts," Langton told Fox News Digital. "The worst one I printed out onto a board and I showed it at the meeting at the podium. I showed it to the board. And I remember thinking as I was looking at them their eyes were really wide. I think they were shocked at the nature of this material in particular. It was quite bad."

 

Barker's publisher did not return Fox News Digital's request for comment.

 

Langton said she will continue to fight to get other adult-themed books, such as "Gender Queer" by Maia Kobabe, out of Fairfax schools.

 

"Gender Queer" has reportedly been banned in more libraries in states than any other book. The author, Maia Kobabe, has defended the book's sexually explicit images, describing them as "tame."

 

"I honestly think the book is a lot less explicit than it could be," Kobabe told "Morning Edition."

 

FCPS did not return Fox News Digital's request for comment.


AH: The Horton translation of Kobabe's words: "Shut up or I'll put out something that's even lewder."


Folks, high school kids wouldn't even be allowed into a movie that contained those kind of images.

Monday, November 18, 2024

THOUGHT CRIME IS NOW A REALITY IN THE UK

National Review

 

‘Thought Crime’ Is Now a Reality in the U.K.

By Elyssa Koren

October 25, 2024 6:30 AM

 

Praying silently in front of an abortion facility can now put you at legal risk in the United Kingdom — and even stricter rules are on the way.

 

The criminal conviction of Adam Smith-Connor, the Englishman found guilty of silent prayer on the public street near an abortion facility, marks a watershed moment for fundamental freedoms in the United Kingdom. With the criminalization of Smith-Connor’s innermost thoughts, the country has unceremoniously ushered in a new era of “thought-crime” prosecution under the guise of protecting access to abortion.

 

And on October 31, England and Wales are set to roll out “buffer zones” similar to that under which Smith-Connor was prosecuted for all abortion facilities, prompting well-founded fears that countless other prayers and thoughts soon could be the subject of criminal sanction.

 

Smith-Connor, a military veteran and father of two, was convicted on October 16 for praying silently about abortion, in his mind, for three minutes, on the street near a Bournemouth, England, abortion facility.

 

Since October 2022, Bournemouth has had in place a “buffer zone” ordinance, creating a zone of censorship in which “expressions of approval or disapproval” about abortion are banned on several streets. The ordinance lists prayer, the recitation of scripture, genuflecting, sprinkling holy water, and crossing oneself as prohibited activities. Smith-Connor’s conviction confirms that prayer in the silence of one’s mind is understood as a violation of the zone insofar as someone entering the abortion facility could have perceived it.

 

On November 24, 2022, Smith-Connor stood still and silent on the public street by the abortion facility for a few minutes before being approached by “community safety accredited officers.” He had his back to the facility to be mindful of the privacy of those entering or leaving. Video footage shows the council officers asking what he was doing. Smith-Connor informed them that he was “praying for my son, who is deceased.”

 

Twenty-two years ago, Smith-Connor had driven his ex-girlfriend to a facility and paid for her to have an abortion. Further, he had assisted with abortions as part of his army medical training. It was this background that informed his desire to pray, in silence, near the facility, and he was cautious to in no way breach the zone by way of showing “approval or disapproval” about abortion.

 

Upon learning that Smith-Connor was praying for his late son, the council officer tasked with patroling the “buffer zone,” responded, “I’m sorry for your loss. But ultimately, I have to go along with the guidelines of the Public Space Protection Order, to say that we are in the belief that therefore you are in breach of clause 4a, which says about prayer, and also acts of disapproval. . . .”

 

What followed was nearly a two-year legal ordeal, culminating in three full days of trial this September. Smith-Connor’s prayer might have been one of the most expensive three minutes of silence in history. This hardworking family man has now been saddled with a criminal record and ordered to pay £9,000 for the costs of his prosecution. Further, the local council spent over £110,000 of taxpayer money on his prosecution, hiring top lawyers — a vastly disproportionate and unusual spend for a case at a magistrates’ court.

 

Even though he was engaged only in silent thought, the judge ruled that Smith-Connor’s presence within the “buffer zone” could have had a “detrimental effect” on those attending or working at the clinic. Leaning on the fact that his hands were clasped, and that he said his head might have been “slightly bowed,” she concluded that members of the public may have been able to perceive that he was praying — thus rendering his silent prayer worthy of a guilty verdict.

 

The case marks the first known thought conviction in modern British history. Freedom of thought is a fundamental human right, enshrined in international law without restriction. The judge may have relied on a perception of Smith-Connor as having his “hands clasped,” but the root of the matter is that this innocent man is now a convicted criminal for the simple act of raising his thoughts to God.

 

Moreover, if, for example, Smith-Connor had prayed for world peace or for an ill family member while standing in the same zone, he would not have been found guilty. His verdict was based on the content of his thoughts (abortion), which the judge deemed to be unacceptable in the place in which he stood (the “buffer zone”).

 

Few could have imagined, even a decade ago, that Britain would have come so far with regard to the suppression of basic human rights. The rights to hold religious beliefs in public and in private, and the right to think freely without the interference of the state, belong to every person. Yet these “buffer zones” have been drafted so vaguely so as to allow for the insidious creep into the criminalization of thought.

 

In August, in a victory against censorship, Isabel Vaughan-Spruce, the Christian charitable volunteer who was arrested twice for praying silently in a similar zone in Birmingham, England, received a payout of £13,000 from police in acknowledgement of her unjust treatment. Juxtaposed against Smith-Connor’s conviction, this shows the enormous inconsistency surrounding abortion-facility censorship zones, highly dependent on individual interpretation. Such ambiguity does not bode well for the future of U.K. citizens with the national rollout of these zones.

 

As the country introduces national censorship zones, it is incumbent on the government to clarify, as a baseline, that the new law does not target silent thought. The preservation of freedom of thought is a prerequisite for a society that holds itself out to be free, without which all other freedoms are imperiled. 

NURSE ACCUSED OF STEALING OVER 140 THOUSAND DOLLARS FROM ELDERLY, BLIND POLK COUNTY MAN

Nurse accused of stealing over $140K from blind, elderly Polk County man Anthony Talcott – A home health care nurse was arrested Thursday in Polk County after more than $140,000 was stolen from a 77-year-old blind man, according to the sheriff’s office. Detectives said the nurse — Carrie Hutchinson, 46 — was originally hired to take care of the victim’s wife, though the woman passed away in 2020. But even after her death, the victim retained Hutchinson as a personal assistant, so she had access to his financial accounts to help pay his bills, do his shopping and take care of his finances, a news release states. According to deputies, she was paid $5,800 per month until 2024, which is when she got a pay raise to $6,000 per month. However, investigators explained that the man began to grow suspicious about what was happening with his finances in July, so he reached out to a friend of his (who happened to be a retired CFO) to investigate his financial accounts. The news release shows that there were several fraudulent transactions, including: An order of “Pop On Veneers’ that was sent to Hutchinson in July — $780 charged to the victim’s American Express card A United Airlines ticket in December 2023 for a friend of Hutchinson’s to fly to Florida to visit her — Charged to the victim’s American Express card A payment to Allegiant Airlines in August 2023 for Hutchinson and four of her friends to fly to Bangor, Maine — $1,588 charged to the victim’s Bank of America card 270 orders on the victim’s Amazon account from April 2021 to July 2024 — $4,774 In total, deputies accused her of stealing $141,594. “Her four years’ worth of theft from the victim included ATM withdrawals and payments for cruises, photography classes, VRBO rentals, pet supplies, animal hospital charges and her personal credit cards,” the release reads. After Hutchinson returned from a cruise in July, the victim confronted her about the theft and fired her, deputies said. In response, Hutchinson reportedly told the victim that she had “borrowed” money from him to pay for the cruise and had planned to pay him back. But with her being fired, she claimed she could no longer do so, deputies added. “This woman’s actions are despicable,” Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd said. “Taking advantage of an elderly man who entrusted her with his life savings while also paying her a good salary is inexcusable and unforgivable.” Hutchinson faces charges of grand theft of $100,000 or more; exploitation of the elderly; and criminal use of another person’s ID. 

https://www.clickorlando.com/news/local/2024/11/15/nurse-accused-of-stealing-over-140k-from-blind-elderly-polk-county-man/