IRS Harassment of Pro-Lifers

Monday, I’ll probably be publishing a potpourri of interesting clippings from Sunday afternoon reading. But I didn’t want this one to get lost, since it’s a legitimate outrage of exactly the sort I’ve come to expect from the fanatically pro-abortion despiser of religious freedom at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue: The IRS targeting, and methodically harassing, pro-life groups.

According to a World Magazine report, Susan Martinek, the founder of the Coalition for Life of Iowa, attempted to expand the pro-life movement in Cedar Rapids, Iowa by coordinating the resources of the churches and other pro-life organizations. She sought tax-exempt status with the Internal Revenue Service in October, 2008. In April, 2009, the IRS requested additional information—including “advertisements, schedules, syllabi, handouts, and summaries of the speeches given by those in the Coalition.” After complying with the IRS request for the records, Martinek called the IRS on June 6, 2009, and was advised by an IRS agent that in order to be approved for tax- exempt status, she and her board had to pledge—in writing and under the threat of perjury—that they would not organize groups to picket or protest at any Planned Parenthood office or clinic.
Christian Voices for Life in Sugar Land, Texas faced similar demands for additional documentation from the IRS when they applied in 2010. An IRS letter dated March 31, 2011, asked Marie McCoy, the founder of the pro-life group, whether she provided education on both sides of the issue of abortion. This request was a clear violation of IRS guidelines. In 1980, the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit ruled that groups did not have to present both sides of an issue to qualify for tax-exempt status. According to IRS guidelines, organizations have to be charitable, educational, religious, or some combination of the three in order to qualify for tax-exempt status. But Christian Voices (like Coalition for Life of Iowa) was required to meet a much more restrictive requirement—one that went far beyond what the law required. In the denial of their IRS application for tax-exempt status, the IRS questioned their involvement with “40 Days for Life” and the “Life Chain” events.

Alliance Defending Freedom has released audio clips of a telephone conversation on March 8, 2013, in which IRS Exempt Organization Specialist Sherry Wan told Ania Joseph, president of Pro-Life Revolution, that in order to obtain a tax exemption, “you cannot force your religion or force your beliefs on somebody else . . . .You have to know your boundaries, you have to know your limits.” The IRS has approved applications for tax exemptions for pro-abortion groups including Planned Parenthood and Life and Liberty for Women, yet it demands neutrality on abortion from Pro-Life Revolution.
Pro-Life Revolution is a faith-based organization providing support to pregnant women. Working closely with local pregnancy resource centers, churches, and other pro-life groups, the organization sought tax-exempt status in order to expand their educational activities. But during the recorded phone conversation, the IRS agent is heard advising Joseph that “your action is based on more blind, emotional feelings,” concluding that “you cannot force your religion or force your beliefs on someone else.” When Joseph protested that her organization was distributing educational brochures and not forcing anyone to do something they did not want to do, the agent disagreed, claiming that “asking people to take action against an abortion clinic is not educational.
Similar experiences were reported by Peter Shinn, founder of Cherish Life Ministries, a pro-life coalition of churches that “support mothers struggling with unexpected pregnancies, promotes abstinence and advocates for an end to abortion in the community, state and nation.”10 In an interview published at WorldNetDaily, Shinn disclosed that his application for tax-exempt status by the IRS was declined: “The representative was telling me I had to provide information on all aspects of abortion. I could not just educate the churches from the pro-life perspective .. . . Every time I pressed her on this issue and asked her to clarify her position, she would state that it wasn’t what she was saying, and then, she would repeat it almost the same way.” Shinn claimed that the IRS was accusing him of setting up a political organization: “I asked her why she said we were a political organization and she said it was because we had said in our application that we did less than 5 percent political activity. I explained to her that this was what was stated in the application and all we were doing was acknowledging that we were doing less than 5 percent political activity.” Shinn also said that the IRS agent accused him of having links to political activity on his website, even though he said he did not.

If this has Obama’s fingerprints on it, he ought to be toasted much toastier than Chris Christie, whose “traffic study,” even assuming he was involved, was not a trampling of constitutional rights by a former professor of constitutional law.

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“The remarks made in this essay do not represent scholarly research. They are intended as topical stimulations for conversation among intelligent and informed people.” (Gerhart Niemeyer)

Some succinct standing advice on recurring themes.

Nonsensical Secularist Caricature

Long ago if not far away, I sometimes speculated about what religion I’d be if I wasn’t Christian. I thought I’d probably be Bahai, because Diamond Girl was really cool and Bahais were pariahs in lands where pariahood was a badge of honor.

I now think the question was nonsensical, a gussied-up equivalent of “what would you believe if you didn’t believe what you do believe?” The appropriate response isn’t even “damned if I know.” It’s “what the hell kind of question is that?!” Continue reading “Nonsensical Secularist Caricature”

5 items & why I like ’em – Friday, 1/31/14

  1. On Moralism
  2. Paying for a little companionship
  3. Victim impact statement run amok!
  4. The Immortal Soul doesn’t exist
  5. Olde Fashionede bloggeurs
  6. Weirdest little rag you never read

Continue reading “5 items & why I like ’em – Friday, 1/31/14”

Enshrining hate?

I couldn’t bear to watch Indiana Public TV Friday night. A couple of hours of PBS and WFYI public affairs coverage used to be my Friday evening routine.

But last night, I knew that IWIR was going to be dominated by HJR 3, the flawed Indiana Marriage Amendment. And I didn’t really need to hear another slogan smack-down.

Indiana has a statute that defines marriage as involving one man and one woman. HJR 3 seeks to make that more unassailable by putting it in the Indiana Constitution. I’m not sure that will work. The way litigation has been working these days, it might even bring down our current definition more rapidly, but that’s not my main topic.

Recall, please, Thursday’s lead paragraph:

… In 2002, some may remember, there was a horrific discovery that a crematory in Georgia had failed to cremate over 300 corpses, and instead had strewn the bodies around the crematory’s grounds. An article in the New York Times described the prosecutor’s conundrum: there was no law on the books against failure to perform cremation by which the owner could be directly prosecuted. … until that occurrence, no law existed because the behavior was inconceivable.

One of the competing slogans in the debate over HJR 3 is “we shouldn’t put discrimination in the Constitution.” Well, when Georgia worked on a law to make it a crime to take money for cremation but spread people around on the ground like fertilizer instead, were they “putting discrimination in” their law, or were they responding rationally to an unprecedented situation, one previously unaddressed by the law, simply because the behavior was inconceivable before?

An old paradoxical maxim is “the law isn’t passed until it’s broken.” Think about those corpses on the ground, and I think you’ll understand someone saying “there ought to be a law.”

That’s what HJR 3 is about in the marriage realm. (Well, maybe it’s also about thing like “galvanizing the GOP base,” too, but I’m speaking from the perspective of hoi polloi, not cynics).

I can’t exactly say “nobody thought of gay marriage until 20 (or 30, or even 40) years ago,” because there was the little 1971 matter of Baker v. Nelson. “Little matter” is just right; although the Minnesota Supreme Court’s unanimous opinion that there was no federal right to SSM technically brought the case to SCOTUS by mandatory appellate review rather than certiorari, SCOTUS’ dismissal for “want of a substantial federal question” was binding precedent and amounted to the “back of the hand” for a silly argument.

So: No need for any new law yet in 1971. Everything was under control. Christendom’s construal of marriage appeared unscathed. I’d venture a guess that many state laws on marriage licenses didn’t even mention “man and woman,” so taken-for-granted was that.

A corollary to “don’t put discrimination in the Constitution” is “mean-spirited” and “hate” and “phobia,” and their various conjugations and permutations (e.g., “mean-spirited hate-filled hateful homophobics”).

But there’s another maxim, this one not from law but reportedly from France (whence it came to me as witticism, not maxim): Cet animal est tres mechant; quand on l’attaque, il se defend. (This animal is very wicked; when you attack it, it defends itself.) In a sense, Georgia defended itself against the attack of rogue crematories. Was Georgia being wicked? I mean, how does it harm you if a crematory substitutes the desecration of leaving bodies on the ground for the desecreatiion of deliberate immolation? (Oops! Another can of worms!) Does it hurt your marriage?

Read this. And this. And especially this rabble-rousing bit of bigotry, hot off the press and ably refuted here.

Now: If you can’t imagine how “Christians” – ranging from mere citizens of Christendom who don’t like change, through Mormon special attorneys general and fundamentalist or Calvinist theology wonks, to quiet but serious daily mass-goers – can see themselves as the defenders, not the attackers, then don’t talk to me about deficits in empathy.

PRE-PUBLICATION UPDATE:

Jim Bob Duggars and/or his wife Michelle (who, if you are unaware as I was 15 minutes ago, are reality TV figures with “19 and counting” children) are apparently in an ad supporting HJR 3. The Two-Minutes Hate (or at least snarky derision) has begun.

A self-employed “music engraver, freelance artist and calligrapher,” a supporter of Freedom Indiana, calls them “both undereducated” and wonders how they “would support their nineteen (and I hear she’s going to try for another 20th) children if he hadn’t whored his family to the media.” <countersnark>I can understand how a self-employed music engraver, freelance artist and calligrapher would be incredulous that a family of any size could be supported by work rather than prostitution.</countersnark>

If ya can suck me in like that, on a measure I’m obviously ambivalent about, this is gonna be a long and bitter fight.

* * * * *

“The remarks made in this essay do not represent scholarly research. They are intended as topical stimulations for conversation among intelligent and informed people.” (Gerhart Niemeyer)

Some succinct standing advice on recurring themes.

Saturday, 1/25/15

  1. Evacuate! The Canary’s Dead!
  2. Forced membership = Coerced political speech?
  3. Certified victimhood means complete editorial control
  4. Rudyard Kipling Does Wall Street
  5. Too Christian, Too Foreign
  6. …In love and war
  7. The Boys Who Cry Wolf

Busy week with mental distractions left me with too little to blog Friday. (Hey! You get what you pay for – and then some!)

Continue reading “Saturday, 1/25/15”

Rhetorical questions du jour, 1/23/14

  1. What is it about culture war you don’t understand?
  2. Who’s really obsessed?
  3. Daddy: How do values get transvalued?
  4. What is it about “when hell freezes over” you don’t understand?
  5. Would you prefer Scylla or Charybdis?

Continue reading “Rhetorical questions du jour, 1/23/14”