Author Topic: bush connections to teen torture industry, Psy, Antigen,Ursu  (Read 2173 times)

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Offline Anonymous

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bush connections to teen torture industry, Psy, Antigen,Ursu
« on: November 26, 2008, 03:39:17 PM »
I'm trying to get some info to some notables about the Bush family's involvement with the teen torture industry.

Psy, Antigen, Ursurus, Hyurricane, Can you point me in the right direction?
thank you kindly,
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Offline Che Gookin

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Offline Che Gookin

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Re: bush connections to teen torture industry, Psy, Antigen,Ursu
« Reply #2 on: November 26, 2008, 06:39:23 PM »
http://http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/506799/george_w_bushs_legacy_will_include.html

I think we can safely say old Gee Dubbya has done a little bit of program time himself.

Follow the white pony!
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Offline psy

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Re: bush connections to teen torture industry, Psy, Antigen,Ursu
« Reply #3 on: November 26, 2008, 06:39:39 PM »
Quote from: "ljihk"
I'm trying to get some info to some notables about the Bush family's involvement with the teen torture industry.

Psy, Antigen, Ursurus, Hyurricane, Can you point me in the right direction?
thank you kindly,

Bush has connections to sembler and the DFAF.

Check out http://www.thestraights.com/

That's where you'll get most of what you're after.  or search fornits.  I believe Jeb bush has some connections too.
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Benchmark Young Adult School - bad place [archive.org link]
Sue Scheff Truth - Blog on Sue Scheff
"Our services are free; we do not make a profit. Parents of troubled teens ourselves, PURE strives to create a safe haven of truth and reality." - Sue Scheff - August 13th, 2007 (fukkin surreal)

Offline Che Gookin

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Re: bush connections to teen torture industry, Psy, Antigen,Ursu
« Reply #4 on: November 26, 2008, 06:46:05 PM »
His brother, the governer of Florida is up to his ass in it:

http://http://www.reason.com/news/show/117088.html

Barbara Bush used to shill for Anazazi(spelling?) as well.

http://www.anasazi.org/

It used to be all over their web page about 3 to 4 years ago. Achieve dot com might have it on record.

The Bush's connection to the DARE legacy is another good course.
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Offline Antigen

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Re: bush connections to teen torture industry, Psy, Antigen,Ursu
« Reply #5 on: November 26, 2008, 06:50:59 PM »
Here's a good essay
http://www.thestraights.com/gop.htm

And some video
President Bush I making a TV plug for Straight, 1989.
http://thestraights.com/video/bush.rm

Video of SAFE,Inc. Check out this 2000 video of the Straight legacy program SAFE by reporter Alan Cohn of WAMI TV in Miami. Brother Jeb is mentioned in it
http://fornits.com/anonanon/video/wami.ram

And more here:
http://thestraights.com/video/video_list.htm
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Offline Anonymous

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Re: bush connections to teen torture industry, Psy, Antigen,Ursu
« Reply #6 on: November 26, 2008, 07:54:46 PM »
Thank you. I am trying my best to bring some of these monsters to justice. I'm not simply lazy when i ask you guys to get these links for me, i just have personal problems that make it hard for me to effectively search, which i won't bore you with.

(Aside: life is very hard)

Also, which one of you guys could best advise me on something related to lawyers in general if i pm'd you?
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Offline psy

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Re: bush connections to teen torture industry, Psy, Antigen,Ursu
« Reply #7 on: November 26, 2008, 08:02:59 PM »
Quote from: "ghkgk"
Also, which one of you guys could best advise me on something related to lawyers in general if i pm'd you?

that would be me.  I can recommend a few good ones too.
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"Our services are free; we do not make a profit. Parents of troubled teens ourselves, PURE strives to create a safe haven of truth and reality." - Sue Scheff - August 13th, 2007 (fukkin surreal)

Offline Anonymous

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Re: bush connections to teen torture industry, Psy, Antigen,Ursu
« Reply #8 on: November 26, 2008, 08:19:50 PM »
YOUR family, you know, the ones who actually put you in a program... they have a heck of a lot more to do with this problem than any political leader. But I get it, let's call the parents ignorant, and blame it all on Bush... very original.  :beat:
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Offline Anonymous

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Re: bush connections to teen torture industry, Psy, Antigen,Ursu
« Reply #9 on: November 26, 2008, 08:25:56 PM »
Quote from: "wake up call"
YOUR family, you know, the ones who actually put you in a program... they have a heck of a lot more to do with this problem than any political leader. But I get it, let's call the parents ignorant, and blame it all on Bush... very original.  :beat:

The people i want punished are not so powerful as the bush's, but i think is important to know how high the corruption goes.
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Offline Anonymous

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Re: bush connections to teen torture industry, Psy, Antigen,Ursu
« Reply #10 on: November 26, 2008, 08:30:43 PM »
Quote from: "Antigen"
Here's a good essay
http://www.thestraights.com/gop.htm

And some video
President Bush I making a TV plug for Straight, 1989.
http://thestraights.com/video/bush.rm

Video of SAFE,Inc. Check out this 2000 video of the Straight legacy program SAFE by reporter Alan Cohn of WAMI TV in Miami. Brother Jeb is mentioned in it
http://fornits.com/anonanon/video/wami.ram

And more here:
http://thestraights.com/video/video_list.htm

Someone needs to post that video on youtube
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Offline hurrikayne

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Re: bush connections to teen torture industry, Psy, Antigen,Ursu
« Reply #11 on: November 26, 2008, 08:47:56 PM »
http://http://www.news-record.com/content/2008/11/22/article/are_faith_based_programs_flawed

Are faith-based programs flawed?
Sunday, November 23
(updated 3:00 am)
By Nancy H. McLaughlin
Staff Writer

UNCG professor Bob Wineburg is wasting no time questioning President-elect Barack Obama's plan to keep the core of President George W. Bush's faith-based initiative - a plan that would continue to put billions of dollars each year in the coffers of religious congregations when community organizations are starving for the cash.

Wineburg even put his research on YouTube.

Obama might appreciate that Wineburg, one of the leading critics of Bush's initiative, has a master's degree in community organization from Syracuse University . Wineburg, the Jefferson Pilot Excellence Professor of Social Work at the Greensboro school, also wrote the book "Faith-Based Inefficiency: The Follies of Bush's Initiatives. "

"As President Obama moves through his issues and gets to the faith-based initiative - where he plans to keep the core of the Bush plan, take out the controversial religious hiring provisions, and create neighborhood councils - he will be doing the wrong thing confidently because his advisers are not on target with the reality of what is taking place in communities nationwide," Wineburg said.

Wineburg has been studying the role of religious organizations in social services delivery for 25 years.

"There's a better way than starting with a Washington initiative and ending with a novice local organization that's getting limited training and few federal dollars," Wineburg said. "Instead, the money should be shifted to trusted community stewards, like the United Way or local government departments that distribute Community Development Block Grants. These stewards have existing partnerships with religious congregations and small, sectarian nonprofits and could use some of the federal funds to prioritize community needs."

Stanley Carlson-Thies , the director of social policy at the Center for Public Justice, a nonpartisan Christian think tank near Washington, is a supporter of the faith-based initiative.

"People who are run down, who are battered by life, with things going against them - all those things require a 'people to people' service that's the speciality of volunteer groups and congregations," Carlson-Thies said. "Obama realizes how important those things are for the health of very stressed communities. That doesn't mean the congregation could do drug treatment, but they could do some of the things that make it successful."

However, "Bob has tried to keep an honest eye on what actually happens and not just on the rhetoric of what people hope will happen," Carlson-Thies said.

The faith-based initiatives office was created by President George H.W. Bush in 1991 to allow religious organizations the opportunity to compete for tax dollars. During the George W. Bush administration, the pot of money grew, and faith groups receiving funding were allowed to discriminate in hiring based on a person's religious background.

Bush's plan additionally set aside millions of dollars to teach small nonprofits and congregations how to apply for and manage federal grants.

Obama has said he would take out the controversial hiring part and add "neighborhood councils" to bring nonprofits and coalitions together.

"Obama's proposed initiative appeals to some on the left because it thickens the wall between church and state, where Bush's initiative consciously chipped away at that wall," Wineburg said.

Still, "Theirs is the earth is flat, and I'm saying the earth is round, and there's stuff here we should be building on."

Wineburg's views are not just based on theory. He has studied partnerships between religious congregations and community agencies in Greensboro after the Reagan budget cuts.

"Religious organizations, out of a moral sense of responsibility, started caring for the homeless," Wineburg said. "But the other services the homeless people needed had to be coordinated with other agencies and organizations ranging from the police to the hospitals to the veterans."

Those findings mirror his recent research for the United Way of Delaware.

Wineburg points to the Greensboro-based Welfare Reform Liaison Project as the model. The group, which partners with secular and religious groups, has received federal funding and national recognition for tackling barriers to self-sufficiency for the poor or undereducated, from skills training and obtaining a GED to attitudes and work ethic.

It is also a group Wineburg helped to nurture.

While the project receives hundreds of thousands of dollars in federal money annually, it also generates hundreds of thousands of dollars by redistributing unused corporate goods to churches, nonprofits and governmental agencies for a small administrative fee. The project then redistributes those earnings back to the program participants in the form of training stipends.

Wineburg's YouTube presentation, for example, is a product of the agency's Copycents media production company. Trainees who now work in the program told him his research on community initiatives was good but the presentation was boring.

Contact Nancy McLaughlin at 373-7049 or nancy.mclaughlin@news-record.com
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Offline hurrikayne

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Re: bush connections to teen torture industry, Psy, Antigen,Ursu
« Reply #12 on: November 26, 2008, 08:49:09 PM »
For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
January 29, 2001

Executive Order
Agency Responsibilities with Respect to Faith-Based and Community Initiatives

     By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, and in order to help the Federal Government coordinate a national effort to expand opportunities for faith-based and other community organizations and to strengthen their capacity to better meet social needs in America's communities, it is hereby ordered as follows:

     Section 1.  Establishment of Executive Department Centers for Faith-Based and Community Initiatives.  (a)  The Attorney General, the Secretary of Education, the Secretary of Labor, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, and the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development shall each establish within their respective departments a Center for Faith-Based and Community Initiatives (Center).

     (b)  Each executive department Center shall be supervised by a Director, appointed by the department head in consultation with the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives (White House OFBCI).

     (c)  Each department shall provide its Center with appropriate staff, administrative support, and other resources to meet its responsibilities under this order.

     (d)  Each department's Center shall begin operations no later than 45 days from the date of this order.

     Sec. 2.  Purpose of Executive Department Centers for Faith-Based and Community Initiatives.  The purpose of the executive department Centers will be to coordinate department efforts to eliminate regulatory, contracting, and other programmatic obstacles to the participation of faith-based and other community organizations in the provision of social services.

     Sec. 3.  Responsibilities of Executive Department Centers for Faith-Based and Community Initiatives.  Each Center shall, to the extent permitted by law:  (a)  conduct, in coordination with the White House OFBCI, a department-wide audit to identify all existing barriers to the participation of faith-based and other community organizations in the delivery of social services by the department, including but not limited to regulations, rules, orders, procurement, and other internal policies and practices, and outreach activities that either facially dis-criminate against or otherwise discourage or disadvantage the participation of faith-based and other community organizations in Federal programs;

     (b)  coordinate a comprehensive departmental effort to incorporate faith-based and other community organizations in department programs and initiatives to the greatest extent possible;

     (c)  propose initiatives to remove barriers identified pursuant to section 3(a) of this order, including but not limited to reform of regulations, procurement, and other internal policies and practices, and outreach activities;

     (d)  propose the development of innovative pilot and demonstration programs to increase the participation of faith-based and other community organizations in Federal as well as State and local initiatives; and

     (e)  develop and coordinate department outreach efforts to disseminate information more effectively to faith-based and other community organizations with respect to programming changes, contracting opportunities, and other department initiatives, including but not limited to Web and Internet resources.

     Sec. 4.  Additional Responsibilities of the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Labor Centers.  In addition to those responsibilities described in section 3 of this order, the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Labor Centers shall, to the extent permitted by law:  (a) conduct a comprehensive review of policies and practices affecting existing funding streams governed by so-called "Charitable Choice" legislation to assess the department's compliance with the requirements of Charitable Choice; and (b) promote and ensure compliance with existing Charitable Choice legislation by the department, as well as its partners in State and local government, and their contractors.

     Sec. 5.  Reporting Requirements.  (a)  Report.  Not later than 180 days after the date of this order and annually thereafter, each of the five executive department Centers described in section 1 of this order shall prepare and submit a report to the White House OFBCI.

     (b)  Contents.  The report shall include a description of the department's efforts in carrying out its responsibilities under this order, including but not limited to:

     (1)  a comprehensive analysis of the barriers to the full participation of faith-based and other community organi-zations in the delivery of social services identified pursuant to section 3(a) of this order and the proposed strategies to eliminate those barriers; and

     (2)  a summary of the technical assistance and other information that will be available to faith-based and other community organizations regarding the program activities of the department and the preparation of applications or proposals for grants, cooperative agreements, contracts, and procurement.

     (c)  Performance Indicators.  The first report, filed 180 days after the date of this order, shall include annual performance indicators and measurable objectives for depart-ment action.  Each report filed thereafter shall measure the department's performance against the objectives set forth in the initial report.

     Sec. 6.  Responsibilities of All Executive Departments and Agencies. All executive departments and agencies (agencies) shall:  (a)  designate an agency employee to serve as the liaison and point of contact with the White House OFBCI; and

     (b)  cooperate with the White House OFBCI and provide such information, support, and assistance to the White House OFBCI as it may request, to the extent permitted by law.

     Sec. 7.  Administration and Judicial Review.  (a)  The agencies? actions directed by this Executive Order shall be carried out subject to the availability of appropriations and to the extent permitted by law.

     (b)  This order does not create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or equity against the United States, its agencies or instrumentalities, its officers or employees, or any other person.

                              GEORGE W. BUSH

THE WHITE HOUSE,     January 29, 2001.

http://http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2001/01/20010129-3.html
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Offline hurrikayne

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Re: bush connections to teen torture industry, Psy, Antigen,Ursu
« Reply #13 on: November 26, 2008, 09:07:43 PM »
President Discusses Faith-Based Initiative at Youth Education Center
Remarks by the President at the Dedication of the Oak Cliff Bible Fellowship Youth Education Center
Dallas, Texas

6:18 P.M. CST

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, all.

THE AUDIENCE: USA! USA! USA!

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, all.

THE AUDIENCE: USA! USA! USA!

   
Jim Towey Director Jim Towey — Progress
on the Faith Based Initiative
Watch the video.
   
THE PRESIDENT: Zip it. (Laughter.) Thank you all for coming, it's great to be home. (Applause.) I'm glad to be with people who are transforming a community one heart and one soul at a time. That's what's taking place here and that's why I'm here.

I want to thank you all for supporting Project Turn Around. I want to thank you for supporting with your resources, with your time and with your prayers. I want to thank my friend, Tony Evans, for his leadership. He's what I like to call a social entrepreneur. (Laughter.) We've got business entrepreneurs, and this country has got social entrepreneurs -- those are people who use their wits and their talents as change agents, as positive change agents. (Applause.)

You can hear Tony on 500 radio stations. (Applause.) You can read 20 of his books. You can listen to his powerful sermons on Sunday. He is a busy man, and one of the advantages of being President is he'll take my phone call. (Laughter and applause.) And I'm glad he does, I appreciate his advice -- and he's got good, sound advice. I appreciate his friendship, he is a loyal friend. And I appreciate his prayers. The greatest gift American people can give a President and his family is prayer, and I want to thank you for that. (Applause.)

Tony and I married well. (Laughter.) I'm so honored to be with Lois Evans, thank you very much for your hospitality. (Applause.) And the Evans family, Chrystal and Priscilla, as well as Anthony, Jr. Anthony, Jr. was telling me -- actually, he's a modest guy, so his dad was telling me -- (laughter) -- that he just got back from cutting a record with Michael W. Smith. (Applause.) I think that's what he said, kind of like that. Well, he was with Michael W. Smith. (Laughter.) We'll see if the record happens or not. (Laughter.)

Some of my greatest memories was living in Austin, Texas, and showing up for work at the Capitol. Two members of the legislative branch are here, people who I remember fondly, people who I miss. Senator Royce West and Representative Helen Giddings are with us. (Applause.)

I want you to know that I'm aware that Reverend E.K. Bailey passed, and I send our deepest sympathies to his family and to his congregation. He was a great leader here in the great state of Texas. (Applause.)

I bring up -- I bring up a preacher because I want to thank all the preachers who are here, the pastors, those who shepherd. One pastor who is not here is my friend Jack Graham from Prestonwood Baptist. I bring that up because social entrepreneurs find out ways to leverage resources in a proper way. And what Tony Evans has done with Pastor Jack Graham, is to start an urban suburban and partnership. It's an opportunity for suburb and churches to participate in salvaging lives and making lives better in neighborhoods where most members of the congregation will never go. It's a chance for urban and suburban churches to work on racial reconciliation. Social entrepreneurs think about ways to make societies a better place. And I want to thank Tony, and I appreciate Jack, for having a vision about how to -- about how to make America a better place, one neighborhood at a time. (Applause.)

A President must set great goals, worthy of a great nation. We're a great nation. (Applause.) Therefore, a President must set big goals. I set a goal for this country to make the world more peaceful by spreading freedom. Freedom is not America's gift to the world, freedom is God's gift to each and every individual in the world. (Applause.)

I set a great goal here at home. I want the American Dream, the great hope of our country, to extend in every neighborhood in our country. I want every single person in this land to feel welcome and wanted and hopeful. It's a great domestic goal. And of course, when you think about setting goals, you've got to think about the tactics and strategies to achieve a goal. It's one thing to set a goal, it's another thing to actually meet the goal.

And one of the reasons I'm so thrilled to be here with Tony Evans is because he helped me understand how to best meet that goal. He probably didn't realize it at that time -- but there's something about mysterious ways. (Laughter and applause.) We were together in Greenville, Texas in 1996 -- it's an usual place for, you know, a governor and a famous pastor to meet. But we were there because we were worried about racial reconciliation as a result of some fires that had destroyed church.

And I'll never forget his speech, it's stuck with me to this day. As a matter of fact, what I'm telling you is it's helped formulate policy -- first at state level, now the federal level. Because he got up and he said, in speaking about programs meant to help people, welfare programs -- he said, you know, get rid of your welfare programs, think differently. He said, the best welfare programs are on every corner in America. They're open 24 hours a day. They've got a workforce that is guided by an ancient guidebook -- (laughter) -- who's tenets have stood the test of time. (Applause.) They've got a motto over the door that says love your neighbor like you would like to be loved yourself.

Tony went on to explain why faith-based programs, programs that emanate out of faith institutions work so well, he told the story, maybe he has told it to you. (Laughter.) If he has, I've got to repeat it because the TV cameras are here. (Laughter.) He said he's reminded of the time when a fellow had a house and he got a crack on the wall. And he went and got a painter or a plasterer, and a fellow came and covered it up. And two weeks later, the crack reappeared. And so he said, well, I better get another painter. And he did. And he repainted the crack. But it reappeared again. He finally got a wise painter who said, sir, you'll never fix the crack until you fix the foundation. (Applause.) Project Turn Around fixes the foundation. (Applause.)

That's what we're here to herald, programs such as Project Turn Around. It's got such a wonderful sense of mission. It says, to rebuild lives from the inside out. It's a powerful statement, isn't it? Really think about it -- to rebuild lives, that's a hopeful goal for our country. We want people to realize the great potential of America. Some lives have to be rebuilt. And it didn't say, from the outside in, it said, from the inside out. It's a faith-based initiative built from the inside out, not from the outside in.

Listen to what you do through this ministry. There's a thousand volunteers, who provide shelter, and food, and clothing. There's marriage counseling. It's vital that we have strong families in America and they provide marriage counseling. (Applause.) Job training. Somebody walks in this building and they want to work, they just -- there's human dignity that comes from work and they can find a chance to train for jobs right here, in Project Turn Around. Advice on starting a small business -- that warms my heart. If you own something, you have a vital stake in the future of our country. There's nothing better than somebody realizing their dreams by starting and owning their own business. It's uniquely -- not "uniquely," it's inherently American that people are able to do that right here. (Applause.) Who would think that in a church you would have a program to teach you how to start your own business? Social entrepreneurs think that way.

Project Turn Around is a complete program. A woman can find help during a crisis pregnancy. There's a tenderness and a practicality to Project Turn Around. This program is a beacon for Dallas. And this program is a model for the nation. (Applause.)

We just came from the dedication of the Education and Youth Center. If you haven't been there yet, you need to go take a look. (Laughter.) It's impressive. The brick and mortar is impressive. The architectural design is fantastic. What's more fantastic is what's going to take place inside the building. (Applause.)

I'm appreciative of the idea of the Fellowship Christian Academy taking root and taking wing here. This is a program which challenges the soft bigotry of low expectations. (Applause.) It raises standards, it believes every child can learn. See, that's important in education. We must challenge the mediocrity of a system. We must not let people just get shuffled through because their skin happens to be black -- you know, people can't quit on a child. No child should be left behind. This school and this building understands that. (Applause.)

But the building across the street not only houses the school, it also houses a mentoring program that gathers children from 60 schools. Five thousand children a week are mentored. That's powerful, that is a powerful program. (Applause.)

One of my passions -- and I spoke to the Congress about this at my State of the Union -- was to help the children whose mom or dad may be in prison. My hope is that -- and I know that Tony understands this -- the mentoring program for that child, those children are necessary for the country to be hopeful for every single citizen. What this program understands, and what I hope other programs around the nation understand, is that by mentoring a child, you shape the character of a child. And it's a high calling in life, because that influence reaches to eternity. (Applause.)

As I said, government can hand out money -- and we will, and that's an important aspect -- but it cannot put hope in people's hearts. (Applause.) See, that's the disconnect. It can't put hope in people's lives. We must understand that amidst our plenty, there are people who hurt, deeply hurt. And the deepest needs are oftentimes found in the human heart. In order to help that need, people need to know they're valued and wanted. People need to know a higher power that is bigger than their problems. (Applause.)

What the faith-based programs say, time after time after time, is that miracles are possible. When somebody puts their arm around a neighbor and says, God loves you, I love you, and you can count on us both. Faith-based programs work. (Applause.) They are able to address the deepest needs of our heart.

And so when I heard Tony speak at Greenville, I began to act. It touched my heart, what he had to say. I wanted everybody to realize the vast potential then of the state of Texas, now all across America. So I started to work on and think about faith-based programs. They're effective. They're so effective that it points to a new role for government, a new political philosophy.

But first, let me say, government has no business funding religious worship or teaching. They don't want the church to be the state, and we don't want the state to be the church. (Applause.) However, our government should support the good work of religious people who are changing America. (Applause.)

What does that mean from a practical sense, from where I sit? What does that mean? It means this, that when government gives contracts to provide social services, religious groups should have an equal chance to compete. That's what that means. (Applause.) And when we make decisions on public funding, we should not focus on the religion you practice, but on the results you deliver. (Applause.)

This has not been the attitude of government, let's be frank about it. The attitude of government, particularly in Washington, has said, religious groups need not apply. That's the way it has been. We're missing an opportunity to help change lives and to meet a major goal in our country, which is everyone should realize the great vast potential of America.

If you're allowed to apply for grants on that rare occasion, some are asked to change their board of directors, to remove the cross from the wall, to change the very things that make the faith-based program effective.

And I'll give you an example of what I'm talking about. There's the Orange County Rescue Mission in Tustin, California. It's a fantastic initiative. They applied for funding from the Housing and Urban Development. We call it HUD. HUD said, fine, but it had a few conditions to meet. In other words, there was access, perhaps, to federal money, but let me tell you the conditions. The Rescue Mission had to form a secular nonprofit. They had to ban all religious activities from their facility. They had to rename their chapel and auditorium.

It's hard to be a faith-based program when you're forbidden from practicing your faith. (Applause.) It's hard to change hearts when you can't use the power you've got to change the hearts. (Applause.) Government action like this is pure discrimination. And when government discriminates against religious groups, it is not the groups who suffer. The real loss is felt by the hungry who do not get fed, by the addicts who don't get help and treatment, by the children who drift toward self-destruction. For the sake of so many people in need, this country must support the armies of compassion. (Applause.)

I asked Congress to join me and pass what I called the faith-based initiative, which would help change the culture of Washington and the behavior of bureaucracies. They have stalled. So I just signed an executive order. (Applause.) The executive order says that the federal government will have a level playing field when religious groups apply for federal money. There will not be discrimination. That's what it says, pure and simple. Every bureaucrat in Washington who might be tempted to fall back to the old ways now knows exactly where I stand.

And we've set up faith-based offices. We're trying to change the culture, see. We're trying to change an attitude. So we set up faith-based offices in several important Cabinet departments. And that's important. This is important for people who are charged with good policy to have a faith-based office that will work directly with the social entrepreneurs of America, the Tony Evans' of the world, so they get a sympathetic ear and get help, not a cold shoulder.

And there's some changes. Slowly but surely, the culture is changing. Just last month, the Department of Health and Human Services finalized regulations that helped open up three programs to greater competition -- in other words, began to level the playing field. Programs in which religious faith-based programs -- by the way, I'm talking about Christians, and Jewish people, and Muslims, Hindus, people of all faiths. See, we've all heard that call to love a neighbor.

The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, now opening up for grants. The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, TANF, is now opening up for grants. The Community Service Block Grant Program is opening up for grants from faith-based institutions. These are billions of dollars of money now available for new social spending. (Applause.)

Let me tell you, by new social spending, I mean spending dollars in a new way, in a way that's effective, in a way that will help change lives in a positive and constructive way. See, we want everybody in this country, every person -- we want the addict, we want the single lonely mom, we want the child, the dyslexic child -- all to feel a part of the future of this country. (Applause.)

Last month, HUD finalized new regulations that apply to aid programs covering $7.6 billion, so that now religious groups that build housing will no longer face discrimination when they seek HUD funds. That's important. (Applause.) We want churches in the middle of neighborhoods that may need new housing to be able to have a chance to access some money to provide new housing. We have a minority home ownership gap in America that needs to be closed. (Applause.) We've got a program in front of Congress to help people with the dow payment. HUD has got a program to help people understand the fine print. (Laughter and applause.) We're trying to simplify contracts. But in order to help close the home ownership gap, it seems to make sense to allow inner-city churches to become active builders of homes, affordable homes, so people can find housing in the neighborhoods in which they worship. (Applause.)

Remember, I told you about the program in Orange County, the Orange County Rescue Mission. It has now reapplied for a contract for HUD. It doesn't have to force to -- be forced to abide by those rules, those rules that make people nervous. Listen, nobody wants to apply for federal grants if you think you have to change your mission. Nobody in their right mind is going to say, look, let me -- let me access some of your money, but I've got to change the way I think. It defeats the purpose.

We're making changes of the culture in Washington, D.C. It takes awhile, but we're working on it. And the fact that I can come here -- (applause) -- and the fact that I can come here and herald this program as a successful program helps change the culture. There's nothing like success to change cultures. (Applause.)

We've got some other projects here in Dallas. The Builders of Hope in West Dallas is a faith-based group building new homes for low-income families, which HUD is supporting. HHS is supporting the Faith Walk Center in Dallas, a program which fights drug abuse amongst young people. You've got to understand that sometimes, and a lot of times, the best way to help the addict, a person who is stuck on drugs and alcohol, is to change their heart. See, if you change their heart, then they change their behavior. I know. (Applause.)

We've got initiatives I've been talking to Tony about, he knows about this, called the Compassion Capital Fund. Sometimes, entrepreneurs need start-up capital, whether it be a business or the social entrepreneur needs start-up capital. I don't think Evans needs start-up capital. (Laughter.) I think we're beyond the start-up capital phase here at this fantastic, fantastic church. But it gives programs start-up money and expansion money directly to the social entrepreneurs, and that's important. I'm calling on Congress to increase the budget to $100 million this year, they need to triple the amount of money available for this program. (Applause.)

And so what I'm telling you is, is that the best way to meet a national goal is to rally the strength of America. The strength of America is the people of America. (Applause.) And the people of America, a lot of people in America understand there's a higher authority than their government, and respond to that higher authority. (Applause.) All the levels of government -- and I can only speak for the federal government, but I might be able to affect the state government and local government by just speaking -- (laughter) -- but all levels of government, the federal government, the state of Texas and all states, the city of Dallas and all cities, ought not to fear programs based upon faith. All levels of government must understand the power of faith programs to make the communities and states and country in which we live a better place. It's the reality. This is living proof of it right here, at Project Turn Around. (Applause.)

I love our country. I love what we stand for. We're a strong nation. And in this world today, we need to be strong. We need to defend ourselves, and we will. And we need to promote the peace, and we will. And when we see suffering around the world, this country should not turn its back. We're strong. But we're incredibly compassionate as a nation. This proud country, America, is leading the world in incredibly important work, like the work of human rescue for those who are dying from AIDS on the continent of Africa. (Applause.)

And we need to be strong at home, too, strong of heart, and strong of soul. Project Turn Around and other successful programs around our country show the strength, show the strength that bends down to help the child and the stranger and the outcast.

I want to thank you all so very much for your welcome. I want to thank you for your compassion and your care. I want to thank you for laying those strong foundations which help those who hurt. Because by laying that strong foundation, you're changing America one heart, one soul, one conscience at a time.

God bless your work, and may God bless America. (Applause.)

END 6:47 P.M. CST

http://http://www.earnedmedia.org/WH11221.htm
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"Motivation is everything. You can do the work of two people, but you can\'t be two people. Instead, you have to inspire the next guy down the line and get him to inspire his people. " - Lee Iacocca

Offline hurrikayne

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Fact Sheet: The Faith-Based and Community Initiative: A Quiet Revolution in the Way Government Addresses Human Need
President Bush Celebrates Seventh Anniversary Of Landmark Initiative To
Help Local Organizations Better Serve Their Communities


RSS Feed  White House News

     Fact sheet President Bush Discusses the Faith-Based and Community Initiative

Today, President Bush celebrated the seventh anniversary of the Faith-Based and Community Initiative (FBCI) by touring the Jericho prisoner reentry program in Baltimore. Jericho is a grantee of the Prisoner Re-entry Initiative (PRI), which the President proposed in 2004 as a signature program of the Faith-Based and Community Initiative. The program is run by Episcopal Community Services of Maryland and serves non-violent adult male offenders who have been released from prison within the last six months. The program emphasizes employment readiness training and job placement while providing recovery counseling, case management, and a network of partner service providers to meet the needs of recently released ex-offenders as they transition back to society.

Seven Years Of The Faith-Based And Community Initiative: A "Determined Attack On Need"

President Bush launched the Faith-Based and Community Initiative on January 29, 2001 by signing an Executive Order creating the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives. This Order charged the office with leading a "comprehensive effort to enlist, equip, enable, empower, and expand the work of faith-based and other community organizations." The President has since established Centers for Faith-Based and Community Initiatives at 11 Federal agencies, where they are successfully strengthening partnerships with these grassroots organizations and implementing the FBCI vision within their agency's human service programs.

The Faith-Based and Community Initiative is empowering faith-based organizations and other grassroots service providers to address the needs of their communities. Over the past seven years, the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives and the Agency Centers it oversees have worked to strengthen both faith-based and community organizations and to extend their work in partnership with government.

Faith-Based And Community Nonprofits Are Renewing Communities, Restoring Hope, And Changing Lives

The Initiative is changing the way government addresses human need by making grant programs and other opportunities more accessible to new faith-based and community partners. For example, through initiatives such as the voucher-based Access to Recovery program, the Administration is working to expand individual choice so that Americans in need of substance abuse treatment and recovery support services can receive help from the program that best suits them. In addition, the Compassion Capital Fund, another signature program of the Initiative, is helping small, grassroots organizations that have never received Federal funding build the capacity they need to compete for Federal grants and serve their communities.

The Initiative is producing real results for people in need. For example:

    * Prisoner Reentry Initiative: Returning non-violent offenders are linked with FBCOs that help them find work and avoid relapse into criminal activity. Released inmates who participate in this Initiative are returning to prison at less than half the national rate.

    * Mentoring Children of Prisoners: More than 70,000 children whose parents are behind bars have been matched with caring mentors under the Mentoring Children of Prisoners program, which is on-track to reach its goal of 100,000 matches this year.

    * Reducing Homelessness: From 2003 to 2006, the number of direct nonprofit grantees of the Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Department's Continuum of Care program to reduce homelessness grew by more than 30 percent, from 1,609 to 2,096. The latest data show that from 2005 to 2006, the number of chronically homeless individuals across America dropped by 12 percent, meaning more than 20,000 individuals moved from the streets or shelters to a new residence.

FBCI Has Led A Quiet Revolution In The Way Government Addresses Human Need

The FBCI works to place locally-rooted solutions at the center of Federal efforts to help those in need. The Initiative has:

    * Removed barriers and launched innovative programs to enable the government to partner with small, community-based nonprofits as never before.

    * Established a level playing field for faith-based organizations, and set clear, Constitutional guidelines for their use of public funds.

    * Delivered in-person training to more than 100,000 social entrepreneurs, by teaching them how to better track their outcomes, write grants, and develop other key skills that help their organizations maximize impact for the people they serve.

Federal competitive awards are expanding the good work of both faith-based and community organizations across America and beyond.

    * In 2006 alone, the Federal government provided more than 18,000 direct, competitive awards to America's nonprofit organizations to aid the homeless, at-risk youth, recovering addicts, returning offenders, AIDS victims, and others.

    * These grants totaled more than $14.7 billion to boost services to people in need. Faith-based organizations were welcomed as a central part of this work, winning more than 3,000 grants in 2006 totaling nearly $2.2 billion.

The PRI Is A Signature Program Of The Faith Based And Community Initiative

In his 2004 State of the Union address, President Bush proposed the PRI to help released inmates find work and make a fresh start in life after prison. The PRI is a collaborative effort between the Departments of Labor (DOL) and Justice (DOJ) to help reduce recidivism among ex-offenders in urban centers and other areas with the greatest need by connecting them with faith- and community-based organizations in the cities to which they return.

    * Labor Department funds are awarded to faith-based and community organizations entrenched in the communities they serve. Grants are awarded to local service organizations that provide a variety of assistance to returning prisoners, including workforce development services, job training, pre-employment training, work experience, basic skills remediation, counseling and case management, mentoring, and other reentry services. For example, Episcopal Community Services of Maryland, which operates the Jericho program, has received over $1.3 million in federal dollars under DOL's Prisoner Reentry Initiative.

    * Justice Department grants are awarded to State agencies to help them join their anti-recidivism efforts with the personal touch of faith-based and community-based organizations. The DOJ grants to State agencies help these entities provide prerelease services to offenders transitioning back to the communities where DOL grantees are located. For example, Maryland's Department of Public Safety and Corrections Services received a $450,000 grant to help join the State's anti-recidivism efforts with the efforts of organizations like Episcopal Community Services of Maryland.

    * In 2008, Congress accepted the President's proposal to merge PRI with the Responsible Reintegration of Youthful Offenders program. This created a single program (Reintegration of Ex-Offenders) to bring together the strengths of both programs and assist youth and adult ex-offenders.

Faith-Based And Community Groups Support Our Compassion Agenda Around The World

The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) partners with faith-based groups to deliver humanitarian assistance to people in need and to develop healthy societies. The President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) represents massive-scale implementation of the Initiative's vision. In PEPFAR's 15 focus countries, more than 80 percent of PEPFAR partners are indigenous organizations, and more than 20 percent of all partners are faith-based. By focusing on principles that have changed behavior, this program is succeeding.

The Faith-Based And Community Initiative Is Taking Root At The State And Local Level

Thirty-five governors - 19 Democrats and 16 Republicans - and more than 100 mayors have offices or liaisons dedicated to strengthening faith-based and community organizations and extending their vital works. Twelve of these States have changed governors, some across party lines, but not one has ended their efforts.

Even in states without a formal office for this work, the FBCI is active. For example, California does not currently have an official Initiative, but in 2006, its nonprofits won more than 1,550 competitive Federal grants totaling nearly $1.1 billion dollars to serve their neighbors in need.

http://http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2008/01/20080129-8.html
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
"Motivation is everything. You can do the work of two people, but you can\'t be two people. Instead, you have to inspire the next guy down the line and get him to inspire his people. " - Lee Iacocca