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Saturday, October 7, 2023

New White House proposal to further alienate religious foster parents

 “All young people in foster care, including those who happen to be LGBTQ, deserve affirming, supportive environments to call home,” said Kasey Suffredini of the Trevor Project, as she and other advocates applauded the recent announcement from the White House proposing rules to require training for foster parents in how to care for these youth.

The rule might sound like a good idea, but it’s unconstitutional and will probably exacerbate the nationwide shortage of foster families.

First, issues regarding child welfare are governed by the states, not the feds. Placement for foster care is supposed to be done on the basis of what’s in the best interests of the child. States will define that differently, but this rule “puts a thumb on the scale of what is traditionally local issue and could usurp a state’s authority,” says Jon Scruggs, a lawyer at the Alliance Defending Freedom.

To understand what the Biden administration and the supporters of this policy are trying to accomplish, it’s instructive to look at the recent case in Massachusetts of Michael and Kitty Burke. The two were denied a foster-care license because they said they would not support surgery or hormone therapy for trans youth and referred to the latter as “chemical castration.” The Catholic couple also expressed hesitation about using a child’s “preferred pronouns.”

Their application was denied by the state’s Department of Children and Families.

Or take Jessica Bates, a single mother of five in Oregon who was denied the opportunity to adopt a child out of foster care. Contrary to the department’s policy, she would not agree in principle to take a child to receive hormone shots or to avoid religious services that did not support a gender transition.

Catholic couple Michael and Kitty Burke were denied a foster-care license after they refused to support gender-affirming medical care for children.
Courtesy of Michael and Catherine Burke

Supporters of these rules argue that LGBTQ youth are overrepresented in the child welfare system because they have been rejected by their own families and that the problems of these youth will be alleviated if they find a family who will call them by different pronouns or pump them full of hormones. Unfortunately, there is not much hard evidence for this.

But these policy proposals are part of a long campaign to make religious foster families adhere to progressive ideology. For years, much of this effort was directed at religious foster agencies, some of which would not place foster youth with same-sex couples.

This conflict came to a head in 2021 when the Supreme Court unanimously found in favor of Catholic Social Services in its lawsuit against the city of Philadelphia. Local officials had ended their contract with faith-based organizations because of their policy, but the court found that since all foster agencies can make exceptions to the city’s “nondiscrimination” policies, “the City offers no compelling reason why it has a particular interest in denying an exception to CSS while making them available to others.”

Mother-of-five Jessica Bates was not allowed to adopt a child out of foster care because, in part, she refused to avoid religious services that did not support a gender transition.
Alliance Defending Freedom

But “the Biden administration is not paying close attention to what the Supreme Court is saying,” Lori Windham, vice president of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, tells The Post.

In the time since numerous lawsuits have been litigated against states for continuing to accommodate the religious tenets of faith-based agencies. Just last week, A federal court upheld South Carolina’s decision to continue partnering with Miracle Hill, a faith-based foster care ministry. The ACLU and Americans United for Separation of Church and State had sued to stop the state from working with religious foster agencies. 

In Philadelphia, South Carolina, and everywhere else in the country there are numerous alternative nonreligious organizations as well as the state itself that can certify foster parents and place children. But these activists seem determined to wipe out any vestige of religious families from the system.

After the ACLU and Americans United for Separation of Church and State sued the state of South Carolina to stop it from working with religious foster agencies, a federal court upheld the state’s decision to continue partnering with Miracle Hill, a faith-based foster care ministry.
Miracle Hill.org

Which is a real shame because religious families do the heaviest lifting in our foster system.

More than one-fifth of foster parents say they are motivated to do this work because of their faith. And more than 80% attribute their success in fostering to the support of their faith. 

As Jedd Medefind of the Christian Alliance for Orphans notes, “A rule like this would undoubtedly have a chilling effect on the willingness of people of earnest faith to serve through the child welfare system. In a time when we desperately need more caring families serving children in foster care, this rule would almost certainly lead to fewer.”

There are plenty of nonreligious parents who don’t believe that double mastectomies or calling a child by a different name are beneficial either, but in the world of foster care, we have seen time and time again that scoring ideological points trumps the best interests of children.

https://nypost.com/2023/10/07/new-wh-proposal-will-further-alienate-religious-foster-parents/

NYC felony assaults against women have soared more than 40% over four years: NYPD

 Physical attacks on women have surged a shocking 41% over the last four years, according to disturbing NYPD data obtained by The Post. 

Through Oct. 1 this year, 2,830 women have been the victims of felony assault, excluding domestic violence, compared to 2,006 just four years ago. 

The attacks, ranging from random subway shoves to vicious beatings, have jumped 5% from the same period last year, when 2,699 women were felony assault victims. 

“It seemed like a while ago, it was old Asian people, and now it’s young women,” one 27-year-old told The Post, three weeks after a stranger sucker-punched her in the face at the West 4th Street subway station. “It feels like men just hate us.” 

She ripped ex-Mayor Bill de Blasio and his comrades for pushing to empty the city’s jails during the pandemic and lashed out at city pols for passing legislation to cut down on the number of people in custody as part of its goal to close Rikers Island.

“They’re not being careful about who they’re letting out,” she said.

Through Oct. 1 this year, 2,830 women have been the victims of felony assault, excluding domestic violence, compared to 2,006 just four years ago. 
Christopher Sadowski

“There’s nowhere safe for them to go, so they are on the streets and they’re drug-addicted and they’re desperate for a sense of control and women are an easy target.”

Misdemeanor assaults, excluding domestic violence, against women have also risen 8% over the same period, from 8,008 in 2019 to 8,668 in 2023.

The tally is also up a troubling 12% compared to last year when 7,734 women were attacked.

Artist Emine Ozsoy was paralyzed after a man came up behind her and pushed her head into a departing E train.
Gofundme

 Overall, felony and misdemeanor assaults on all genders are both up 6% citywide this year. 

Several victims agreed that women are more likely to be targeted for their small size and stature, but also blamed city and state politicians for passing legislation to allow more criminals to roam the streets — or for failing to provide sufficient services to drug addicts and mentally ill individuals to reduce the chances of them violently acting out.

“You could see a lot more people with mental illness out and about — it’s never been this bad,” said HR executive Gladys Chen, who was punched so hard by a crazed woman on the N/R/W platform at the 23rd Street station that her contact lens popped out of her eye. 

“Attacks are up because people who are committing the crimes are not getting the treatment they normally would need.”  

Wan Xu suffered a fractured leg after Samuel Junker followed her into a Chambers Street subway station and suddenly pushed her onto the tracks.
Brigitte Stelzer

A City Council spokesperson said lawmakers recently passed legislation expanding mental health services and has advanced budget initiatives supporting violence prevention and victim services programs.

In recent months, a number of assaults have shaken New York women’s sense of safety in the city, including:

  • On June 18, accused maniac Kemal Rideout went on a subway slashing spree, leaving gashes in three women’s legs — with one victim’s injuries so severe she required a tourniquet before being transported to Bellevue Hospital. Rideout, 28, who managed to evade police capture for almost two days, was charged with three counts of felony assault.
  • On Aug. 8, a stranger punched New York Post Police Bureau Chief Tina Moore in the ribs on Chambers Street in Lower Manhattan. She snapped his photo and gave it to the NYPD. Police sources said the man had 12 prior assaults on his record and is on parole until 2025 for criminal possession of a weapon. But he hasn’t been arrested.
  • On Aug. 30, an unhinged Samuel Junker allegedly followed Wan Xu, a married nail technician, into the 1/2/3 subway station at Chambers Street late at night before shoving the 34-year-old mother of one onto the tracks and fracturing her ankle. Junker, 41, was charged with felony assault and had bail set at $250,000. Xu said she may never take the subway again.
  • In the early morning hours of Sept. 1, 200-pound brute Norton Blake allegedly clobbered 60-year-old Laurell Reynolds more than 50 times with her own cane, his belt, and his fists at a Harlem subway station — which landed the disabled senior in the hospital for two weeks. Blake, 43, was indicted by a grand jury on assault charges.
  • On Sept. 27, a man suddenly pushed emergency room technician Aniqa, 24, to the ground and bashed her in the face after she said “excuse me” to him while exiting the 90th St.-Elmhurst Avenue 7 train station in Queens. Since no one at the crowded subway stop made an effort to help rescue her from the assailant, the victim plans on getting a weapon to protect herself.
Elizabeth Gomes was viciously beaten by a homeless man at a Queens subway station after she ignored him on a train.
Gomes lost one of her eyes as a result of the attack.
rfaraino

“I felt pretty defenseless,” Aniqa said. “Now I would probably carry a knife or pepper spray in my pocket or my hand, in case I needed it.”

Jane Manning, director of Women’s Equal Justice Project, also attributed the skyrocketing assault cases to an uptick in “aggressive explicit misogyny” in public.

“On the right, we have a leading presidential candidate who bragged about brutalizing women. On the political left, we have organizations that are exclusively calling for domestic violence to be decriminalized,” she said, adding that this rhetoric is emboldening some men to attack women.

Sarah Arias, 18, survived being pushed onto the subway tracks — and still attended her senior prom that same day.
Matthew McDermott

“The two go hand in hand,” she said.

Joseph Giacalone, a retired NYPD sergeant and adjunct professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, said assailants are often looking to prey on the most vulnerable.

“Criminals are opportunists, and they’re cowards, and they’re going to seek out the easiest targets available. It’s as simple as that,” he said.

“There are plenty of people that are out, specifically in the subway and the streets, that shouldn’t be out among the public…and it results in more victimization.”

Ellio Wagner warned New York City women to keep alert when out and about after she was sucker-punched in Chelsea last month.
TikTok @elliowagner

Women, however, are banding together online to help keep others safe.

“If you are a woman living in New York City, please protect yourself,” 19-year-old Ellio Wagner, who was sucker-punched by a stranger in Chelsea last month on her way to work, said through tears in a TikTok video captioned “PSA TO NYC GIRLIES!!” 

With her face still covered in bruises, she pleaded: “Please stay aware because you will never know when s–t like this is gonna happen.”

https://nypost.com/2023/10/07/nyc-felony-assaults-against-women-soar-over-40/