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Posted by Randy | May 23, 2012
In 1996, both house of Congress overwhelmingly passed, and President Bill Clinton signed the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) into law. DOMA defines marriage as the union of a man and woman in U.S. Code. In addition, it defends the rights of states not to recognize same-sex marriages performed in other states. In addition to this federal law, nearly 40 states have state laws similar to DOMA.

Last year President Obama instructed the Department of Justice to no longer defend DOMA in federal court. By making this decision, the Administration is asserting the DOMA is unconstitutional and that it is no longer required to defend this law.

Question of the Week
 Do you believe the executive branch should resume defending the Defense of Marriage Act in court?

( ) Yes

( ) No

( ) Unsure

( ) Other (leave your comments below)

Take the poll here.

Find the results of last week’s instaPoll here.
Posted by Randy | April 17, 2012
I hope you are able to tune today to the Mike Huckabee radio show. I will be a featured guest at 1:15pm EST discussing the controversy surrounding two memorial crosses at Camp Pendleton, CA. It is important to stand up for our religious heritage and I look forward to discussing this issue with Governor Huckabee.

Click HERE to listen live.
Posted by Randy | February 10, 2012

I spoke with Bill Hemmer on Fox News yesterday about the Air Force’s decision to remove “God” from one of its official logos. Watch the video here or click the video below:

 Read more about the issue here.

Posted by Randy | February 07, 2012
The U.S. Air Force Rapid Capabilities Office (RCO) recently modified the logo on its official patch to remove its reference to "God," following a complaint from the Military Association of Atheists and Freethinkers.  The RCO patch, like many unit patches, included a line in Latin meant to be a clever pun understood by members of the unit.  The motto stated “Opus Dei Cum Pecunia Alienum Efficemus” (Doing God’s Work with Other People’s Money).  It was altered to now read “Miraculi Cum Pecunia Alienum Efficemus” (Doing Miracles with Other People’s Money).
I am concerned that the RCO capitulated to pressure from an outside group that consistently seeks to remove reference to God and faith in our military. The RCO’s action to modify the logo sets a dangerous precedent that all references to God, despite their context, must be removed from the military.

In reality, the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution does not prohibit the mention of “God.” In fact, the Courts have consistently upheld the constitutionality of the national motto “In God We Trust,” despite its obvious mention of God.

I joined with several members of the Congressional Prayer Caucus in sending a letter to Air Force Secretary Michael Donley and General Norton Schwartz, asking them to reverse their decision to alter the logo. You can read the letter here.
Posted by Randy | February 07, 2012
The Department of Health and Human Services announced in August 2011 that it will require all employers (with few exceptions) that provide health insurance to their employees to also include contraception, sterilization, and coverage for abortion-inducing drugs without charging co-pay fees.  The mandate only offers very limited conscience protections for select religious entities, such as churches, that meet strict criteria.  In response, numerous religious organizations protested this violation of their religious beliefs.  Nonetheless, the Administration recently announced that it will not expand the religious exemption in the mandate, or change it at all.  This means that religious institutions like Catholic colleges and hospitals, or other Christian institutions would be compelled to violate their conscience by cooperating with that which they believe to be wrong; non-compliance could result in heavy fines for employers and it has been suggested that schools like the University of Notre Dame could be fined millions of dollars. Currently, many of these institutions provide health-insurance plans that do not provide free coverage of these services.  Recently, pressure has increased on the Administration either to drop the HHS mandate, or else to devise a much broader religious exemption.  More than 60 evangelical and orthodox Jewish leaders sent a letter to the Administration on December 21 protesting the narrow mandate.  In addition, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops has informed the Administration that it will not comply with the mandate and other Christian schools have filed suit in federal court. 

Question of the Week: Do you support the Administration's requirement that religious institutions violate their religious beliefs and provide contraceptives and abortion-inducing drugs?

(  ) Yes, I support the Administration's requirement.
(  ) No, I oppose the Administration's requirement.
(  ) Other.
(  ) I am unsure.

Take the poll here.

Find the results of last week's poll here.

Read about Congressman Forbes' efforts to oppose the Administration's decision in his letter to Secretary Sebelius, which is available here.  In addition, Congressman Forbes worked to amend the recent healthcare overhaul to protect the conscience rights and religious beliefs of healthcare providers and purchasers by cosponsoring H.R.1179.  The legislation would ensure that the healthcare law does not discriminate against healthcare providers or purchasers who have religious or conscience objections to certain procedures and services.
Posted by Randy | February 01, 2012

Last week, the House of Representatives passed two pieces of legislation that would protect the freedom of religion in America and literally etch portions of our religious history in stone.

WWII Memorial Prayer Act, H.R. 2070 

In recent years there has been some controversy regarding the omission of the phrase “so help us God” in an inscription excerpting President Roosevelt's address to Congress following the attacks on Pearl Harbor.  The National Park Service claims the phrase was excluded because it was not spoken at the point in the address from which the excerpt was derived.  This legislation directs the inscription of President Franklin Roosevelt’s historic “D-Day Prayer” at the World War II memorial in Washington, D.C.  The bill passed with bipartisan support by a vote of 386-26.

War Memorial Protection Act, H.R. 290
Legislation to allow religious symbols to be included in military monuments was introduced after the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals declared a cross that stands at Mt. Soledad Veterans Memorial in California and that serves as a centerpiece of the Korean War Memorial to be an unconstitutional “government endorsement of religion.” This legislation ensures that memorials commemorating the U.S. Armed Forces may contain religious symbols. The bill passed the House by a voice vote.

There may come a day when a generation of Americans is willing to turn its back on our nation's religious heritage, but I am working to make sure that today is not that day and this is not that generation.

Follow my work on this issue here.

Posted by Randy | December 09, 2011
"No religious items (ie: Bibles, reading material, and/or artifacts) are allowed to be given away or used during a visit."

Those words were included in a memo issued September 14 by Walter Reed Medical Center, one of our nation’s primary medical facilities for thousands of wounded military men and women.  

The policy was brought to the attention of my colleagues and me, along with valid concerns that family members or pastors would not be able to bring Bibles or other religious materials to visit their wounded sons or daughters or husbands and wives. My colleague Rep. Steve King pointed out that “It means a priest that might be coming in to visit someone on their death bed couldn’t bring in the Eucharist, couldn’t offer Last Rites. This is the most outrageous affront.”

Our troops have risked their lives for our freedoms and liberties - including our religious liberties. To deny them this freedom when they return home is deplorable.

This week, I hosted a meeting with officials from Walter Reed regarding the policy. The officials said that the policy was not properly vetted and has been rescinded. The following apology has been posted on their website:

We are in the process of rewriting our policy and would like to offer the following statement:

Bibles and other religious materials have always been and will remain available for patient use at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. The visitation policy as written was incorrect and should have been more thoroughly reviewed before its release. It has been rescinded. We apologize for any confusion the policy may have caused.

Please know that at admission, all patients are asked for their religious preference and a chaplain associated with their preference visits them regularly to provide spiritual services. In addition, their families may also bring religious material and we will not refuse any religious group entrance.

WRNMMC provides multiple venues at WRMNMC for religious expression and worship. There is daily Catholic Mass as well as Protestant, Hindu, and Muslim services. Eucharist is also available at the bedside. There are weekly Torah studies, multiple weekly Christian bible studies, as well as weekly Qur'an study. Furthermore, chaplains coordinate spiritual needs for those whose faith groups are not represented by staff chaplains (such as Latter-Day Saints, Buddhist, and Christian Scientist).

Walter Reed National Military Medical Center remains committed to supporting the religious preferences of all our patients and we will continue to ensure their spiritual needs are met.

I have requested background information about the policy, how it was implemented without proper vetting, and what forces were behind its implementation. Additionally, Rep. Steve King was featured on Fox and Friends this week to discuss the situation. You can view his comments here.
Posted by Randy | November 03, 2011
I am happy to share with you that this week the House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly to reaffirm our national motto, In God We Trust. This reaffirmation offers optimism during tumultuous times.  It provides clarity amidst a cloud of confusion about our nation's spiritual heritage and offers inspiration to an American people that face challenges of historic proportion.

I gave remarks during debate of the resolution on the House floor. You can watch those remarks here or by clicking the video below:


As we reaffirmed the national motto last night, we joined the ranks of leaders throughout American history. Here is a look at the ways the national motto has been a guiding principle since our nation’s inception:

At our nation's founding.  Authors penned the Declaration of Independence writing, “And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor.”

In nation's infancy. Francis Scott Key wrote the poem that would become our national anthem the Star Spangled Banner containing the stanza, “And this be our motto—‘In God is our trust.’”

In the midst of Civil War. President Lincoln addressing a war torn, weary, and divided nation, saying at the Gettysburg address, “this Nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom—and that Government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.”

During the economic expansion of America's industrialization. Congresses passed the Coinage Act stating that the Secretary of the Treasury "may cause the motto ‘In God We Trust’ to be inscribed on such coins as shall admit of such motto."   

World War I.
In his speech before Congress asking for a declaration of war, President Wilson said “…The day has come when America is privileged to spend her blood and her might for the principles that gave her birth and happiness and the peace which she has treasured.  God helping her, she can do no other.”

After nearly a decade of Great Depression.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued a Thanksgiving proclamation saying, “Thus from our earliest recorded history, Americans have thanked God for their blessings. In our deepest natures, in our very souls, we, like all mankind since the earliest origin of mankind, turn to God in time of trouble and in time of happiness. In God We Trust.”

At D-Day facing Nazi advances on Europe.
In his famous radio address, President Franklin D. Roosevelt asked Americans to join him in praying, “Help us, Almighty God, to rededicate ourselves in renewed faith in Thee in this hour of great sacrifice… As we rise to each new day, and again when each day is spent, let words of prayer be on our lips, invoking Thy help to our effort.”

During the Baby Boom.
"In God We Trust" was inscribed above the south entrance door in the Senate chamber during the 1949-1951 reconstruction.

Cold War and Economic Prosperity.
In a speech given during the Cold War, President John F. Kennedy said, “Today our Nation is passing through another time of trial… We will need to draw upon the best that this Nation has--often--and draw upon it physically and intellectually and materially.   But we need also to call upon our great reservoir of spiritual resources…The guiding principle and prayer of this Nation has been, is now, and ever shall be ‘In God We Trust.’”

Civil Rights Movement.
Two years after Brown vs. Board of Education and one year after Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a public bus, ‘In God We Trust’ was adopted as the official national motto of the United States.

Vietnam War.
In the midst of the Vietnam War, President Lyndon Johnson said, “Not long ago I received a letter one morning from a mother whose son had been killed in Vietnam.  She wrote to me saying, ‘…As long as we believe, our strength is in our faith in God and He will never fail us.’ So, my countrymen, in those words from that dear mother are to be found the greatness of this Nation and also the strength of its President.”

Reagan Years.
In 1984, in an address to the nation, responding to an effort to remove prayer from our public schools, President Reagan said, “The first amendment of the Constitution was not written to protect the people from religion; that amendment was written to protect religion from government tyranny. The act that established our public school system called for public education to see that our children learned about religion and morality. References to God can be found in the Mayflower Compact of 1620, the Declaration of Independence, the Pledge of Allegiance, and the National Anthem. Our legal tender states, ‘In God We Trust.’  But now we're told our children have no right to pray in school.  Nonsense.  The pendulum has swung too far toward intolerance against genuine religious freedom. It's time to redress the balance.”

1990’s.
Following the Oklahoma City bombings, President Bill Clinton delivered a speech saying, “I ask all Americans tonight to pray—to pray for the people who have lost their lives, to pray for the families and the friends of the dead and the wounded, to pray for the people of Oklahoma City. May God's grace be with them.”

Present day.
In 2002, in response to a case challenging the words ‘under God’ in the Pledge of Allegiance, Congress passed and President Bush signed a law reaffirming the Pledge of Allegiance and ‘In God We Trust’ as our national motto.  Additionally, in 2006, the Senate reaffirmed ‘In God We Trust’ on the 50th anniversary of its adoption as the official national motto of the United States. On the night of the September 11 terrorist attacks, President George W. Bush delivered a speech to the nation saying, "Tonight, I ask for your prayers for all those who grieve, for the children whose worlds have been shattered, for all whose sense of safety and security has been threatened. And I pray they will be comforted by a power greater than any of us, spoken through the ages in Psalm 23: 'Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I fear no evil, for You are with me.'”
Posted by Randy | October 31, 2011

In January 2011, I introduced H.Con.Res.13, to reaffirm 'In God We Trust' as our national motto and encourage its display in public building and government institutions.  Since that point, the bill has gained 64 bipartisan cosponsors and was reported favorably out of the House Judiciary Committee in March of 2011. And this week, the resolution will be brought to the floor of House of Representatives for a vote.

“In God We Trust” has been our official national motto for over five decades, and it has been a pivotal part of our nation’s history for even longer.  So is it important that we reaffirm “In God We Trust” as our national motto? There are five reasons:

President Obama inaccurately proclaims "E Pluribus Unum' our national motto.
  Last November before a worldwide audience, in a much-anticipated and much-publicized speech focusing on the United States' relationship with the Muslim world, President Obama falsely proclaimed that our national motto was E pluribus unum. In reaction, 42 bipartisan Members of Congress wrote a letter calling on the President to correct his inaccurate statement, noting that the official national motto is In God We Trust. Not only did the President fail to issue a correction, he has failed to even respond to the letter. The uncorrected transcript of the Jakarta speech in which President Obama states, "In the United States, our motto is E pluribus unum -- out of many, one" remains on the White House websiteE pluribus unum has never been the motto of the United States.

Misunderstanding of the phrase "Separation of Church and State". 
The First Amendment to the Constitution reads, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”   The words ‘separation of church and state’ do not appear in the U.S. Constitution.  Rather, the phrase originates from a letter penned by Thomas Jefferson on January 1, 1802, to the Danbury Baptist Association.  In fact, just two days after sending this letter, on January 3, 1802, President Thomas Jefferson attended a church service in the U.S. Capitol. The Supreme Court has held, “The First Amendment, however, does not say that in every and all respects there shall be a separation of Church and State. . . We find no constitutional requirement which makes it necessary for government to be hostile to religion.” 

Rogue Court Challenges
.  Even despite the constitutionality of “In God We Trust” being established by the courts, just since 1996 there have been 7 direct court challenges to the motto. These cases are not isolated to one area of the country; instead, one-third of our federal circuit courts across the United States have heard appeals challenging “In God We Trust”.   Some groups bringing these challenges directly seek "freedom from religion," a goal which grossly distorts the constitutionally-granted "freedom of religion." These cases have sought to challenge the motto itself, as well as its inscription on our currency and display on public buildings. In every case, the courts have upheld the constitutionality of the national motto.  Other court challenges have been brought in recent years aimed at prayer in school, the long-standing displays of crosses at veteran’s memorials, the words ‘under God’ in the Pledge of Allegiance, the National Day of Prayer, and the words ‘so help me God,’ frequently used to conclude the presidential oath of office. 

Inaccuracies and Omissions in the Half-Billion-Dollar Capitol Visitor Center.
 In 2008, the over half-billion dollar Capitol Visitor Center opened for the purpose of educating over 15,000 Capitol visitors daily on the “legislative process as well as the history and development of the architecture and art of the U.S. Capitol.”  When finally opened, however, Capitol Visitor Center historians had sanitized the public building of any references to our national motto, including replacing the inscription of ‘In God We Trust,’ inscribed above the Speaker’s Rostrum with stars in a replica of the House Chamber and cropping an actual picture of the chamber so you could not see the words ‘In God We Trust.’  Additionally, a plaque was placed in the Visitors Center falsely "educating" visitors the national motto was “E Pluribus Unum.”  Only after Members of Congress intervened publically and legislatively were these omissions and inaccuracies corrected. 

Efforts to Remove God from Public Domain.
 In recent years unelected government bureaucrats have become increasingly apt to remove, obscure, or bar references to God or our national motto, even when their actions reverse decades of long-standing traditions.  In most cases, congressional intervention and pressure was required to reverse the decision. 

  • The Department of Veterans Affairs attempted to ban flag folding recitations at military funerals that referenced God or religion, even if specifically requested by the family of the deceased.
  • The U.S. Mint attempted to remove the inscription "In God We Trust" from the front of the new Presidential dollar and instead print it on the edge of the coin.  
  • The National Park Service attempted to turn a capstone replica of the Washington Monument, bearing the inscription "Laus Deo" or "Praise be to God" so the public could not read it.
  • The Navy and Air Force attempted to enact policies that would have affected the ability of military chaplains to pray according to their religious conscience.
  • The Architect of the Capitol refused a teen's request for a certificate noting his grandfather's "love of God, country and family" to accompany a souvenir flag that had flown over the building - a decision that would have prohibited even the Pledge of Allegiance from being printed on the flag certificates.
Posted by Randy | October 20, 2011
This morning, I appeared on FoxNews to discuss Vanderbilt University’s treatment of religious groups. Several religious student organizations at Vanderbilt University, including the Christian Legal Society and the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, were placed on “provisional status” for requiring their student leaders to share the groups’ religious beliefs.  Student organizations need official university approval in order to use school meeting rooms and facilities; access university listserves, groupmail, and web space; and use office space and equipment in the university’s student center. 

Earlier this month, I led 22 Members of Congress in sending a letter to Chancellor Nicholas Zeppos of Vanderbilt University, urging him to ensure that school’s nondiscrimination policy is not being interpreted in a manner that discriminates against religious student groups.

Watch the interview here or in the video below: