Concerted attacks on religious liberty have triggered a moral
upheaval that contributes to deadly social pathologies, Attorney General
William Barr said Friday at the University of Notre Dame.
“The imperative of protecting religious freedom was not just a nod in
the direction of piety,” Barr said. “It reflects the framers’ belief
that religion was indispensable to sustaining our free system of
government.”
The attorney general said numerous measures of social decline are
rising as religion recedes from public life, citing higher instances of
drug addiction, mental illness, and suicide. Those outcomes are not
random, but the fruit of a dedicated campaign against orthodox religious
belief, Barr added.
“This is not decay,” Barr said. “This is organized destruction.
Secularists and their allies have marshaled all the forces of mass
communication, popular culture, the entertainment industry, and academia
in an unremitting assault on religion and traditional values.”
Barr said state governments and municipal agencies have been at the
vanguard of that effort, noting the board of education in Orange County,
California, recently decided religious dissenters may not excuse their
children from portions of the school curriculum broaching LGBT issues.
Schools are the usual forum for attacks on religious liberty, Barr said.
In that connection, the attorney general noted
the Department of Justice recently
intervened in a dispute between a gay teacher and a Catholic high
school near Notre Dame. The case arose when the Archdiocese of
Indianapolis directed Cathedral High School to dismiss a teacher in a
public, same-sex marriage or forfeit its Catholic affiliation. The high
school did so. The teacher, Joshua Payne-Elliott, sued the school in
turn.
The Justice Department filed
a statement of interest in
the case Sept. 27, arguing that the lawsuit suppresses the
archdiocese’s First Amendment right to expressive association, and
impermissibly asks the court to interfere with internal church matters.
“The First Amendment precludes this court, a state actor, from
cooperating in plaintiff’s attempt to stifle the archdiocese’s First
Amendment right to expressive association,” the filing reads. “The First
Amendment also precludes the court from entangling itself in a
quintessentially ecclesiastical question: whether the archdiocese
properly interpreted and applied Catholic doctrine. The First Amendment
commits that question exclusively to the ecclesiastical tribunals of the
church.”
Anti-Barr demonstrators picketed near the Notre Dame campus during the attorney general’s visit,
according to the South Bend Tribune. Some protesters blew whistles in reference to
a whistleblower complaint from
the intelligence community concerning President Donald Trump’s July 25
phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
Trump asked Zelensky to investigate
Hunter Biden’s business interests in
Ukraine, and suggested Barr could support that effort. Hunter, the son
of former Vice President Joe Biden, served on the board of a Ukrainian
energy company called Burisma Holdings.
The attending controversy prompted Notre Dame Law School Dean G. Marcus Cole to issue a statement defending academic freedom.
“Notre Dame Law School will neither endorse nor condemn invited
speakers,” Cole said. “An institution of higher education must be a
place where controversial ideas and points of view are expressed, heard,
and discussed. This is such a place.”
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