Did you know that in many American cities it is illegal to
give a homeless person food? You
could become a criminal if you so much as roll your window down and hand a Kit
Kat chocolate bar to an indigent Veteran begging for work at an
intersection. This completely
incenses me. Of all the shit that
needs to be flushed in this country, feeding hungry citizens who don't even
have a place to sleep is insane.
Conservative, mostly Republican city counsels and mayors
have passed this legislation--but not exclusively--not by far. I won't call any of them Christian,
because apparently persecuting homeless people in the most fundamental and
life-threatening way is justified in their minds. It doesn't jive with Christ's thought, "I tell you
truly, in so far as you did it to one of these my brothers, even to the least
of them, you did it to me." - (Matthew 25:40b) either. How it is that the majority of citizens
in these cities who ARE Christians accept and vote for representatives who pass
immoral laws like this is beyond me.
The list includes a lot a big cities (Here's a partial list):
ALABAMA: Birmingham
ARIZONA: Phoenix
ARKANSAS: Little Rock
COLORADO: Denver
CALIFORNIA: Los Angeles, Pasadena, Sacramento, San Diego,
San Francisco, Ventura
FLORIDA: Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Fort Myers,
Gainesville, Jacksonville, Miami, Orlando, Sarasota, St. Petersburg, Tampa,
West Palm Beach
GEORGIA: Atlanta
INDIANA: Indianapolis
IOWA: Cedar Rapids, Davenport
MARYLAND: Baltimore
MISSOURI: Kansas City, St. Louis, Springfield
NORTH CAROLINA: Charlotte, Raleigh
NEW HAMPSHIRE: Manchester
NEW MEXICO: Albuquerque
NEVADA: Las Vegas
OHIO: Cincinnati, Cleveland, Dayton
OKLAHOMA: Oklahoma City
OREGON: Portland
PENNSYLVANIA: Philadelphia
SOUTH CAROLINA: Columbia, Myrtle Beach
TENNESSEE: Chattanooga, Nashville
TEXAS: Corpus Christi, Dallas, Houston
UTAH: Salt Lake City
WASHINGTON: Olympia, Seattle
Dove tail this into the latest conservative craze: Religious
Freedom Laws. These laws allow
people to void other laws IF those laws go against their strongly held
religious beliefs. They are
primarily aimed at allowing "Christians" to persecute Gay Americans
by denying them access to goods and services provided by these
"Christian" people.
Without this law, such persecution would be a hate crime and they would
be in deep doo doo. But the rub is
that they don't admit to this in the laws. The laws are written in such a generic way to allow this
outcome without preventing other outcomes and interpretations. If they were written as intended they
would be patently UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
Enter one good Samaritan named Joan Cheever. She is my new HERO. Here is her story.
Joan Cheever, a San Antonio woman who’s been feeding the
homeless for the past decade, is arguing that Texas’ religious freedom law
should protect her from the $2,000 fine she’s facing for her charitable work.
Cheever was cited by police last week for handing out food in a local park. She
argues the Religious Freedom Restoration Act legalizes her activities.
According to the San
Antonio Express News, which we saw via Raw
Story, Cheever, a chef, runs a nonprofit food truck called the Chow
Train, promising healthy, gourmet meals to the hungry. She says she’s
been feeding people at Maverick Park since 2005 without incident, until last
week, when four bike patrol officers ticketed her for providing food out of a
vehicle other than her food truck.
Cheever
told WOAI she believes that both the Constitution’s provisions on
free exercise of religion as well as Texas’ fifteen-year-old Religious Freedom
Restoration act—enacted well before it became a national trend—should protect
her feeding the homeless. She claims the police disagreed: “One of the police
officers said, ‘Ma’am, if you want to pray, go to church,’ And I said, ‘This is
how I pray. When I cook this food and deliver it to the people who are less
fortunate.”
Cheever’s citation carries a fine of up to $2,000. Her court
date is in June; she’s said she’ll cite the RFRA in her defense.
Unlike, say, homosexuality or abortion, Jesus had a great
deal to say about feeding the hungry. From Matthew 25:
Then the righteous will answer him, saying, ‘Lord, when did
we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you drink? And when did we
see you a stranger and welcome you, or naked and clothe you? And when did we
see you sick or in prison and visit you?’ And the King will answer them,
‘Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brothers,
you did it to me.’
Presumably, though, when Jesus handed out loaves and fishes
during his speaking engagements, he had all the proper permits in place.
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