Though an outcry over a Christian concert event at Fort Bragg inspired a demand for a non-religious equivalent, it turns out the US military has been quietly slipping non-religious events onto military bases for some time.
Mollie Gross, a comedienne and former military wife, recently visited Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, NC, to bring a little humor home.
“A lot of different comedians and musicians go overseas to Read more…
Categories: Government and Religion Tags: atheism, camp lejeune, cherry point, chess, christian, comedy, fort bragg, marines, Military, mollie gross, Religion, religious freedom
Last week, Pentagon leadership gave testimony to the Senate Armed Services Committee on their Annual Threat Assessment. A surprising, if somewhat understated, highlight was the pronouncement of a “growing concern” of terrorist threats from within the US intelligence and military communities:
Senior US military and intelligence officials are warning of their growing concern that rogue “radical” elements are operating – or preparing to operate – “within the ranks” of the intelligence community and armed forces.
Ultimately, this should be of little surprise, Read more…
Categories: Government and Religion Tags: annual threat assessment, armed services committee, bradley manning, Congress, dia, homosexual, Islam, Pentagon, Religion, ronald burgess, Senate
The unofficial motto of “Initial Success or Total Failure” (ISOTF) — intended to convey the life or death consequences of the Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) profession — has been banned by the US military.
Rear Adm. Michael Tillotson told school leaders this month that the motto could be viewed as disrespectful to the hundreds of Explosive Ordnance Disposal technicians who have died in the line of duty.
Adm Tillotson went on to say that to “imply [the fallen have] failed” Read more…
Reuters reported last week that Afghanistan wants NATO to put the “Koran burners” on trial — and Afghanistan reportedly claimed NATO had agreed to a trial, though Reuters qualified the statement as not “immediately verified.”
“NATO officials, in response to a request for the trial and punishment of the perpetrators…promised this crime will brought to court as soon as possible,” Karzai’s office said in a statement.
While it is unlikely NATO actually made such a concession — NATO has already said the burning was “inadvertent” and there is no crime against burning Korans in the Western world — the confusion may be understandable. Even President Obama’s Read more…
Categories: Government and Religion Tags: Afghanistan, Bible, george little, imam, isaf, Islam, john allen, koran, lavoy, leon panetta, Military, mosque, nato, Obama, quran, Religion, religious freedom
A Department of Defense article highlights the unique story of Daniel J. Houten, an enlistee with the Georgia National Guard. He’s now in basic training — but he hardly took the traditional route to get there:
Houten…wanted to join the U.S. Army — but without a GED and 15 hours of college credit, he was ineligible.
An acquaintance told Houten the Israeli Army recruited new soldiers simply because they were Jewish…
Although his religious faith had diminished somewhat, he still identified himself as a Jew and felt strong connections to Israel, the homeland of his people, culture and religion. He decided this should be his next step in life.
Houten learned Hebrew and was Read more…
Categories: Government and Religion Tags: army, daniel houten, ged, georgia, hebrew, israel, Jewish, Military, Prayer, Public Expression, Religion, religious freedom
A group representing “more than half of America’s uniformed chaplains,” the Chaplain Alliance for Religious Liberty, decried the decision by the Department of Justice to abstain from defending the Defense of Marriage Act against lawsuits.
Chaplain (Col, Ret) Ron Crews accurately notes the existence of DOMA was often cited by supporters of DADT repeal as a mitigation of critics’ concerns: Read more…
Despite ongoing budget issues, the US Air Force intends to develop and field a new bomber colloiqually known as the Long Range Strike Aircraft.
The Air Force has already set aside $292 million in research dollars for the bomber in their fiscal 2013 budget request. The service plans to spend $6.3 billion into the effort over the next five years. Once developed, the new bomber will replace B-1Bs and B-2s. The new plane will be designed to evade advanced aerial defense systems, employ stealth Read more…
The Thomas More Law Center has filed a lawsuit on behalf of the Center for Military Readiness:
The purpose of the lawsuit is to obtain records believed to show intentional deception by the Pentagon to gain congressional support for repeal of the 1993 law regarding open homosexual conduct in the military, usually called “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”
The TMLC alleges the Pentagon has
engaged in a pattern of deception in its efforts to persuade Congress to allow open homosexuality in our military.
The lawsuit centers around the premise the Pentagon leaked information to the Washington Post in 2010 to sway public opinion and Congress Read more…
Categories: Government and Religion Tags: Congress, dadt, foia, homosexual, lawsuit, Military, Navy, Pentagon, Public Expression, Religion, religious freedom, richard thompson, thomas more
The Columbus Dispatch highlights a familiar connection of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation and the Military Association of Atheists and Freethinkers through Ohio State University.
Two of the most-prominent national organizations fighting for religious freedom in the U.S. military have roots at Ohio State University.
Retired [sic] Army Capt. Jason Torpy incorporated the nonprofit Military Association of Atheists and Freethinkers while getting a master’s in business administration at Ohio State in 2006.
Air Force Reserve Capt. Casey Weinstein, whose experiences at the Air Force Academy helped lead his father to begin the [MRFF], also has an MBA from Ohio State. His wife, Reserve Capt. Amanda Weinstein, is working toward a doctorate in economics there now.
It’s interesting to see OSU as a common thread, but “prominent” is Read more…
The US Air Force chose its top fighter squadron, naming the 67th Fighter Squadron at Kadena Air Base, Japan, as the 2011 Raytheon Trophy winner.
The annual award, originally started by the Hughes Aircraft Company in 1953, is now sponsored by Raytheon Systems Corporation and is given Read more…
US Navy Sailors and Marines congregated on the USS New Orleans to take advantage of the chaplains’ support for Ash Wednesday. Navy Chaplain (Lt) Paul Armstrong supported the practice of the sailors’ and Marines’ religious beliefs:
“Freedom of religion is one of our constitutional Read more…
Categories: Government and Religion Tags: ash, Bible, Chaplain, christian, Constitution, lance bonney, marines, Military, Navy, new orleans, paul armstrong, Religion, religious freedom
Michael Weinstein took a pay cut in 2010, so it looks like he felt the need to write a book to try to make up the difference. He wrote an “op-ed” printed on the Washington Post website, though it was characterized by a fairly solid theme: No new material, except for hawking Weinstein’s book.
It was refreshing, in some respects, to see Weinstein eschew the subtlety of some of his supporters and just come right out and say he and his “religious freedom” group are targeting Christians: Read more…
Categories: Government and Religion Tags: air force, akiva david miller, army, Bible, christian, Church and State, Constitution, david horn, Jewish, mikey weinstein, Military, MRFF, Prayer, Religion, religious freedom, trijicon, USAFA
The Jewish Community Centers (JCC) Association has decided to present its Jewish Military Leadership Award to Rear Admiral Herman Shelanski, commander of USS Harry S Truman strike group. The group said the reasons include RAdm Shelanski’s
consistent concern for the ability of Jews in the Navy to fully express their Jewish identity while they serve their country.
As commander of the carrier USS Harry S Truman, RAdm Shelanski Read more…
Ever the one for florid vitriol, and never failing to connect Christianity to military scandals, Michael Weinstein claims the recent burning of Korans at Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan, was an intentional act of Christian “exceptionalism aimed at the people of Afghanistan.”
The root of this ongoing crisis is the fundamentalist Christian extremist scourge within the U.S. Military.
Naturally, Weinstein fails to say how he knows the religious beliefs or the malicious motivations of the troops involved — yet he still Read more…
Categories: Government and Religion Tags: Afghanistan, Bible, christian, clare lopez, isaf, Islam, karzai, koran, mikey weinstein, Military, MRFF, nato, newt gingrich, Obama, quran, Religion, rochelle davis
The lengths to which the US military will go to protect the free exercise of its troops have been noted here many times before. From delivering fresh palm fronds at Easter to helping servicemembers build a Sukkah, the military generally does an admirable job of trying to provide religious resources to those it separates from those resources in the call to war.
Recently, the base chapel in Kandahar, Afghanistan, received its first Torah scroll, created in memory of fallen servicemembers. Chaplain (LtCol) Avi Weiss explains the significance of the scroll:
Capt Rubin at Jews in Green recognized this for the support of religious freedom that it is.
Military atheist Justin Griffith, on the other hand, Read more…
Categories: Government and Religion Tags: Afghanistan, atheism, avi weiss, Islam, Jewish, justin griffith, kandahar, Military, Public Expression, Religion, religious freedom, rubin, torah
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