Saturday 22 March 2014

U.S. House Passes Bill Allowing Obamacare Insurance Exemptions for Religious Reasons

WASHINGTON – The U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill on Tuesday that would allow Americans exemptions from purchasing insurance under Obamacare if their religious beliefs prohibit them from doing so.
The Equitable Access to Care and Health (EACH) Act (H.R. 1814) was introduced by Representative Aaron Shock (R-Ill) and was backed with the support of 216 co-sponsors. The purpose of the bill is to “amend section 5000A of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to provide an additional religious exemption from the individual health coverage mandate.”
According to the legislation, waivers would be granted to anyone who “files a sworn statement, as part of the return of tax for the taxable year, that the individual was not covered under minimum essential coverage at any time during such taxable year and that the individual’s sincerely held religious beliefs would cause the individual to object to medical health care that would be covered under such coverage.”
However, if the person received medical care in the year prior, the exemption would be denied. Chiropractic care, dental services, midwifery services and optometry appointments would not count against the individual.
“Congress today reinforced basic constitutional protections for sincere believers of all faiths. Among the many problems with Obamacare are the insufficient safeguards for people of faith,” Shock said in a statement following the passage of the Act. “H.R. 1814 provides a strong provision that guarantees First Amendment religious liberties for all Americans while protecting U.S. taxpayers from potential fraud. Congress has long sought to uphold both these commitments, and has again today affirmed our founding principles.”
“Congress is not likely to reach agreement today—or any day—on the underlying law. Obamacare is as controversial now as it was when it was enacted, and perhaps more so,” he continued. “But we do agree that Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. On that, the American people can be assured there is strong bipartisan agreement.”
The bill will now head to the Senate for a vote.
 
While some Americans may seek an exemption from the insurance requirement altogether, many Christians are choosing rather to enroll in a health sharing ministry, which would avoid the payment of funds towards abortion services. As previously reported, the Affordable Care Act exempts members of Christian health sharing ministries, of which there are three: Medi-ShareCongress, Samaritan Ministries and Christian Healthcare Ministries.
“There are some mandates that are written in the law regarding the coverage of contraception and abortion that certainly many Bible-believing Christians are going to have objection to,” Tony Meggs, president of Medi-Share, told Christian News Network. “Healthcare sharing ministries are an acceptable and legal alternative to those insurance mandates that require insurance carriers to cover medical services that Christians would find objectionable.”
“It’s a great option for people of faith to provide for healthcare needs without insurance. It’s affordable, it’s Biblical and it’s personal,” James Lansberry, executive vice president of Samaritan Ministries, agreed. “Insurance and healthcare has generally become much less personal over the years, but having those notes and cards come in from other members when you’re sick, being able to know exactly where your money is going—those are all blessings to our members that we’re all excited about.”

Stenographer Ejected from House Floor, Hospitalized for Speech Says God Spoke Through Her


WASHINGTON – The stenographer for the U.S. House of Representatives who was escorted from the House floor last October is speaking out in a YouTube video, explaining why she felt moved to present a speech to Congress during a vote to end the government shutdown.

Dianne Reidy, who keeps record of proceedings for the House, approached the microphone on October 16 as the vote was underway. She then began to present an admonishment to Congress, gesturing with her hand as she spoke.

“He (God) will not be mocked,” Reidy declared three times, according to reports and audio footage.
The next segment of audio is disputed by Reidy and her husband, who believe that the speech was rather given on the elevator rather than at the podium.
“The greatest deception here is that this is not one nation under God,” she stated. “It never was. It would not have been.”
“The Constitution would not have been written by Freemasons,” she continued as she was approached by two members of House security, who began pulling her away by her arms. “They go against God. You cannot serve two masters. Praise be to God, the Lord Jesus Christ.”
Reidy was then escorted to George Washington University Hospital for a psychiatric evaluation and released.


“I remember getting up to the podium and after saying, ‘God will not be mocked.’ I don’t have a memory of anything else that was said that evening until I was escorted off the floor,” she stated in a YouTube video recorded with her husband Dan last week.
Reidy said that God had been waking her up in the middle of the night in the weeks prior, and that she knew that He was going to use her in some way.
“I knew [God] was doing something and I didn’t know what it was,” she explained. “As it got closer, I knew that God was going to speak through me … and I knew that it was going to be during the vote.”
But Reidy also outlined that she struggled a lot in the days leading up to the incident.
“This was a dying to the flesh,” she said. “I thought that I was going to lose my family. I thought that I was going to lose my freedom. I thought that I could end up in prison. I didn’t know. A lot of this was grieving what was to come.”
Reidy noted that she had a one in seven chance of being assigned to take the vote that night, as stenographers are assigned on rotation. But she felt that she would be the one selected, and would then have to do what God asked her to do.
“I’m not a protester. I’m not a conspiracy theorist,” Reidy stated in the video. “This is not anything that I had a dog in this fight.”
“I didn’t lose my mind,” she added. “I didn’t have a breakdown. … I remember once the elevator door shut [when they escorted me away], I felt this relief, like, ‘Thank God that’s over with.’”

Although Reidy lost her job as a House stenographer over the incident, her husband Dan says that she did what was right.
“She’s my hero,” he stated in the video explanation. “She was obedient to God.”

School District Corrects Teachers Union Contract Giving ‘Special Consideration’ to Non-Christians



FERNDALE, Mich. – A Michigan school district has corrected a teachers union contract that gives ‘special consideration’ to non-Christians
Public School.
Officials with the Ferndale School District state that they were unaware that language in the teachers union contract suggested discrimination against Christian applicants.
“Should there be two (2) or more of these applicants with equal qualifications for the position and one (1) or more of these applicants with equal qualifications is a current employee, the current employee with the greatest seniority shall be assigned,” the contract read. “Special consideration shall be given to women and/or minority defined as: Native American, Asian American, Latino, African American and those of the non-Christian faith. However, in all appointments to vacant positions, the Board’s decision shall be final.”
The Mackinac Center for Public Policy had recently discovered the language in reviewing contracts throughout the state. It then contacted the school district to express concern.
“Earlier this week, Ferndale Public Schools learned of antiquated language in employee contracts that we somehow missed when recently bargaining contracts,” district spokeswoman Shelley Rose wrote to FOX News. “This language dates back to at least 1979, and is not in compliance with current legislation. Fortunately, the district also has newer and strong anti-discrimination language in the contracts and has never, in our known history, enacted this now out-of-date language.”
“Ferndale Public Schools takes the issue of discrimination seriously and has acted swiftly to resolve this unfortunate contract language issue,” she said.
The district asserts that it does not discriminate against Christians, and states that it is unsure how the language at issue had been overlooked for so long. The latest teachers union contract had been for 2011-2012, but was extended to 2017.
EAG News notes that Michigan’s Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act prohibits discrimination in employment on the basis of religion.

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