Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Bused! South Carolina's Bishop Nailed for abandoning the Episcopal church


Disciplinary Board for Bishops certifies
that South Carolina Bishop has abandoned the church
[October 17, 2012] The Disciplinary Board for Bishops has advised Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori that the majority of the 18-member panel has determined that Bishop Mark Lawrence of the Diocese of South Carolina has abandoned the Episcopal Church “by an open renunciation of the Discipline of the Church.”
Following complaints of 12 adult members and two priests of the Episcopal Church in the Diocese of South Carolina, the determination was made under Canon IV.16(A).
The 18 member board – composed of 10 bishops, four clergy, four laity – issued a letter dated September 18. Following the assembly of numerous documents, the Presiding Bishop received the letter in her Church Center office on October 10; the letter was received via U.S. Mail.
On Monday October 15, the Presiding Bishop called Lawrence and, speaking directly with him, informed him of the action of the Disciplinary Board.  She also informed him that, effective noon of that day, the exercise of his ministry was restricted. Therefore, under the canon, he is not permitted to perform any acts as an ordained person. 
From here, Lawrence has 60 days to respond to the allegations in the certification.
Acts of abandonment
The Disciplinary Board for Bishops cited three particular acts of abandonment
“Bishop Lawrence failed to “guard the faith, unity, and discipline of the Church” by presiding over the 219th Convention of the Diocese of South Carolina on October 10, 2010, at which the following acts were adopted, without ruling them out of order or otherwise dissenting from their adoption, but instead speaking in support of them in his formal address to the Convention.”
“Bishop Lawrence further failed to “guard the faith, unity, and discipline of the Church” by presiding over the 220th Convention of the Diocese of South Carolina on February 19, 2011, at which Resolution R-6 was finally adopted on the second reading, without ruling it out of order or otherwise dissenting from its adoption.”
“On October 19, 2011, in his capacity as President of the nonprofit corporation known as The Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of South Carolina, Bishop Lawrence signed, executed, and filed with the Secretary of State of the State of South Carolina certain Articles of Amendment, amending the corporate charter 4 as stated in Resolution R-11, described in paragraph 7.c above. That amendment deleted the original stated purpose of the corporation “to continue the operation of an Episcopal Diocese under the Constitution and Canons of The Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America” and replaced it with the stated purpose “to continue operation under the Constitution and Canons of The Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of South Carolina.”
“On about November 16, 2011, in an apparent effort to impair the trust interest of The Episcopal Church and of the Diocese of South Carolina in church property located in that Diocese, Bishop Lawrence directed his Chancellor, Wade H. Logan, III, to issue quitclaim deeds to every parish of the Diocese of South Carolina disclaiming any interest in the real estate held by or for the benefit of each parish.”

http://www.diosc.com/sys/images/documents/tec/tec_certification_of_abandonment.pdf
http://www.diosc.com/sys/images/documents/tec/tec_restriction_of_ministry.pdf

Saturday, October 13, 2012

The intersection of faith, the Episcopal Church, and politics


[Episcopal News Service] By some accounts, at least 1,500 preachers in a variety of denominations across the nation deliberately defied federal tax rules Oct. 7 by backing political candidates from the pulpit.
And then there was the Rev. Canon Ed Bacon, rector of All Saints Episcopal Church in Pasadena, California, who defied the defiers from his own well of experience.
“Pulpit Freedom Sunday” is a four-year-old effort by the Alliance Defending Freedom to provoke a trial in order to challenge the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) codes prohibiting tax-exempt organizations from endorsing political candidates.
Bacon, whose church successfully fended off a 2004 Internal Revenue Service challenge to its own tax-exempt status, called Pulpit Freedom Sunday “an ill-conceived movement confusing pulpit freedom with partisan politics.”
“Preachers who tell you for whom to vote and who become instruments of partisanship have thus relinquished their freedom to evaluate prophetically all candidates and all parties using the plumb line of the house of love,” said Bacon in remarks posted on YouTube.
Others who spoke with the Episcopal News Service about the intersection of faith, God and politics agreed that the church’s role must be prophetic, not partisan.
Mary Getz said the Episcopal Church’s Office of Government Relations and the Episcopal Public Policy Network, for which she is grassroots and online communications officer, help “Episcopalians stay active in our nation’s democratic process by providing them with current information about legislation that stands before Congress and about related General Convention resolutions.
“In an election year, we remind, encourage, and support full voter participation,” she said in an e-mail to ENS.
For example, a ballot question in Maryland calls for repeal of the state’s new DREAM Act that allows undocumented students to pay in-state tuition. “The Episcopal Church passed a resolution this summer supporting DREAM Act legislation, so we will highlight this when we send voting reminders to EPPN members in Maryland,” said Getz.
Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori told ENS that “Jesus was deeply concerned with political processes in his own day, challenging people around him as well as the Roman and religious governments about injustice, violence, and exploitation.”
“Our task as Christians is always to explore how the political processes and decisions before us can help or hinder the coming of the Reign of God in our midst,” she added. “Does a tax proposal seem to care for ‘the least of these’? Does a policy decision mean greater justice for the ‘little ones’? Does one candidate seem to have a greater interest than another in the primary issues of justice that Jesus spoke most about?”
And while people of good faith “may come to different conclusions about any such question” the quality of the dialogue and the way it is conducted must also be taken into account, the presiding bishop said.
The Rev. Bob Massie said faith inspired his candidacy and the way he organized political campaigns, for Massachusetts lieutenant governor in 1994, and for the U.S. Senate two years later. He decided to run for office, partly because “the public conversation was so bleak and pessimistic … [and] about welfare, taxes, not about the possibility of what people could do together in community.”
“To my surprise I won the Democratic primary” for lieutenant governor, Massie said during a recent telephone interview, but he was defeated in the general election. He dropped out of the Senate race.
Still active as a priest, he currently serves as president and chief executive officer of the New Economics Institute, a Barrington, Massachusetts think-tank whose mission is to advance a just and sustainable economy.
Faith meant, for him, no negative campaigning or personal attacks on opponents. Which is different to telling the truth, he said.
“If I pointed out that Congress, and particularly the House of Representatives controlled by the Republican Party, was trying to deny health insurance for 50 million Americans, some people might experience that as a negative comment,” he said. “But it’s a true comment. Part of my responsibility as a citizen and as a candidate was to talk about what was true, but I didn’t believe in attacking anyone else on personal basis.”
What is not appropriate, he said, is for clergy to avoid public issues.
“We live in a world that remains grotesquely unjust and controlled by powerful forces we need to expose,” he said. “Secondly, we are on the path to destroying the planet and generations that follow will wonder why people of faith didn’t rise up to object to this slow-motion self-destruction. It is a critical part of one’s faith and of any Christian community to take public issues seriously, to engage them, to discuss them in the light of the Gospel and then to act on them.”
Given the complexity of local politics in Baraboo, Wisconsin, however, Stephanie Seefeldt and her husband Scott, the rector of Trinity Episcopal Church, have made “a clear commitment to not getting into any political conversations that could lead people to think one thing or another about us and/or our church” because of the complexity of local politics, she said in an e-mail to ENS.
The congregation’s political opinions run the gamut from ultra conservative to ultra liberal, she added. “My favorite image is that of the Prius covered in Obama stickers parked next to the Expedition with the ‘how’s that hope and change thing workin’ out for ya?’” she said.
Still, her husband “works very hard to raise the level of discourse from the pulpit, and does a great job of it, so that what he challenges our congregation to do is to honor Christ and one another, no matter the political persuasion.”
Bishop Alan Scarfe of the Diocese of Iowa agrees that the church’s ability to have “a grace-filled conversation” can offer free and safe discussions about political issues, he said in a recent telephone interview with ENS.
Iowa’s system of caucusing means “you go to a local school and you’re all pushed together in a big crowd, Republicans and Democrats all together,” he said. “You’re pushing down the corridor to go to the Democratic caucus and you’re pushing past your neighbor who’s going to the Republican caucus and you’re saying, ‘Hey Joe. How are you?’ There’s no hiding.”
A priest he knows called this “the most divisive election she’s ever experienced in her congregation among her own people,” Scarfe said. “I wonder if she’s attempted to say, ‘let’s sit down and have a conversation and set some rules and be civil and do it under the shadow of the cross and in the spirit of the reconciling God.’”
He envisions a gathering where “you’d have people who are Romney supporters and Obama supporters within a given congregation talking together about what is a fair and just budget, with perhaps some leadership from pastors and priests that can lead into some biblical searches. You can do the same for one’s nation’s place regarding security and interdependence globally, all these things.
“We can use the church as the place where people live a reconciled life and through the safety of that reconciled life they can talk to each other about these things that are most important. We can put some human face on issues, because it is your neighbor, and hopefully there is some way you can humanly appreciate the other person just beyond their politics.”
For Nancy Frausto, 29, a “DREAMer” in the Diocese of Los Angeles faith is absolutely the jumping off place for politics.
DREAMers qualify for benefits under the Development, Relief and Education for Minors or DREAM Act, which provides a pathway to citizenship for undocumented youth who meet certain criteria.
For Frausto, faith means siding with the candidate who is “talking to the real people down here in the streets, the working class, all of us who are struggling.
“We are here on earth to look after one another, to take care of the poor, to be there for the orphan and the widow … the voiceless,” she said.
“I have been so frustrated because I’ve never been able to vote and I have friends who are citizens who’ve never voted at all. You may think your vote doesn’t count but you are willingly letting people take your voice away, take away your rights. As people of faith, we need to stand up and make our voices heard.”
U.S. Democratic Representative Bradley Miller of North Carolina told ENS that throughout his political career he has tried to behave ethically and faithfully, but acknowledged that what Jesus would do isn’t always all that clear.
“It is hard to take from our faith a sense of confidence that we really do know exactly what the Lord would command on really detailed issues,” the former Episcopalian turned Roman Catholic said during a recent telephone interview from his Washington, D.C. office.
“Faith teaches humility that we should recognize and understand the limitations of human knowledge and, guided by charity or Christian love, try to apply that as best we can. Then, we are acting as best we can on our faith,” said Miller. His district was divided up through reapportionment; he is not seeking re-election.
The Rev. John Danforth, an Episcopal priest and Missouri Republican, who retired in 1994 after serving three terms in the U.S. Senate, agreed. “One of the dangers is when people who are in politics purport to speak for God, or to say that their political positions are God’s positions, because they’re not,” Danforth told ENS.
“We have a candidate in Missouri for the U.S. Senate, Todd Akin, who has become very famous nationally for his comments about abortion,” Danforth added. “He would say yes, that it’s God’s will that he’s the candidate. I think his reading of God’s will would not be mine. I think that’s a claim that’s dangerous to make.”
Rather, politics is “a balancing of interests, meaning there are all kinds of peoples and groups asking the question ‘what’s in it for me?’,” he said.
“Religion does offer into this political world of self-interest a second question which is, is there something beyond yourself, something that you want to serve beyond your own interests? That’s an important message in politics and it’s not heard today.”
He added that “the prophetic message of the church should be precisely against the claim that one position or set of positions is the religious position. Because in reality, everything is debatable in politics, and everything is up for compromise or else it’s just going to be gridlock, which is the current situation we now have and have had for the last decade or so.”
Politics is a business of struggle, Danforth said. “It’s ambiguity and it’s different people with different positions and how do you hold them together. By the way, that’s a very religious undertaking, isn’t it, simply to hold things together?”
The Rev. John Forney, an Episcopal priest since 1985, and a chapter organizer for Progressive Christians Uniting in Los Angeles, said that faith informs everything we do, from budgets that serve as moral documents to “how we treat other people and being a community that is life-giving.
“Essentially, our national life is our national community, a community that invests in people, is safe for people, those kinds of communities reflect our religious values,” he said.
He cited the criminal justice system as an example. “We are bound to do better than locking up 60 percent of minority youth for crimes white kids would never get locked up for,” said Forney, who is white. “When you do this it diminishes their ability for the rest of their life to be productive citizens. Our faith values say that we mustn’t throw away people. There are no throwaways, no 47 percent here. God loves everyone here and we must love everyone and do by them what God does by them.”
Mixing partisan politics and religion only makes religion the loser, he added. “Sure, the church needs to say something about politics. But we don’t need to be backing candidates.”
An explanation from the Pew Forum on Religion and Politics of the 2012 IRS rules on political activity by religious organizations is here.
–The Rev. Pat McCaughan is a correspondent for the Episcopal News Service. 

Friday, October 12, 2012

Anglican Alliance is looking for "Agents of Change" volunteers for distance learning course


The Anglican Alliance is calling for volunteers to take part in a distance learning course in community development skills is providing with Open University.

The course called "Agents of Change" has been developed especially for the Anglican Alliance by Open University, the world famous distance learning university based in the UK. The course will soon be ready for use worldwide, and the Anglican Alliance is looking for some small groups of up to 10 people to try it out. The course is free of charge to Anglicans or people studying in Anglican academic institutions.
"Agents of Change" takes six months to complete, and includes modules in:
  • Inclusion
  • Consultation
  • Governance
  • Protection of vulnerable people
  • Work Programming
  • Principles of financial management
Students can study on-line, via CD Rom, or by running off the material in hard copy. They need to be able to get to a computer with internet access three times during the course so that they can upload their work. 
They can study individually, but they will have to meet with other students once a month - preferably face to face or if this is not possible, then via the internet - to talk through the challenging issues they will study. The course is designed for access level, so students need to have completed primary schooling, and done some secondary schooling, but do not need to have completed secondary education or done a degree. It is a challenging course, and during it students will design a development project for their own community.
Students on the course need to spend about four hours a week on their studies. To qualify for the course students need the support of their local vicar, and must either be Anglicans or studying in an Anglican academic institution. The course is free of charge.
It is possible for students to study on their own. However, during the consultation most people said that they wanted to study in groups. So this is ideal for a small group in a community who want to do something to tackle some of the challenges in their community, or for a small group who live close to a church office, or for a group in a theological college who want to understand more about development issues.
Students can be located anywhere in the world. At present the course is delivered in English, but in future, it may be translated into other subjects.
Students who complete the course get a certificate of completion from the Open University.
The course includes two videos which have been made especially for the Alliance, including one on community which is available on their  vimeo channel.
If you would like to take part in a pilot programme, and have a few friends who would like to study with you, please contact the Anglican Alliance director, Sally Keeble at sally.keeble@aco.org.

COO: “We are seeing some encouraging signs, particularly in giving and average Sunday attendance.”


Episcopal Church Facts and Figures
COO: “We are seeing some encouraging signs,
particularly in giving and average Sunday attendance.”
[October 12, 2012] New facts and figures about membership in the Episcopal Church have been posted on the Research page: www.episcopalchurch.org/research
Among the facts:
- In 2011, membership in the Episcopal Church is 2,096,389 with 1,923,046 in the domestic (50 U.S. states) dioceses and 173,343 in the non-domestic (non U.S. states) dioceses.
- Twenty-seven domestic dioceses showed growth in membership in the past year: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado, Dallas, Fort Worth, Maine, Maryland, Navajo Missions, Nevada, North Carolina, Northern Michigan, Northwest Texas, Oklahoma, Pittsburgh, Quincy, South Carolina, South Dakota, Southeast Florida, Southwestern Virginia, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Washington, West Tennessee, West Missouri, Wyoming.
- In the non-domestic dioceses, growth in membership was marked in six dioceses: Colombia, Dominican Republic, Ecuador-Litoral, Puerto Rico, Taiwan, Venezuela.
- The Average Sunday Attendance table shows a total for the Episcopal Church of 698,376, with 657,837 in the U.S. dioceses.

- The largest active congregational membership in a domestic diocese remains St. Martin’s, Houston this year marking 8,480.
“The on-going work of our research office continues to provide vital information for our strategic planning efforts,” noted Bishop Stacy Sauls, Episcopal Church Chief Operating Officer. “Overall, we are seeing some encouraging signs, particularly in giving and average Sunday attendance.  Thirty-three dioceses witnessed growth and upswing in the past year.  These figures, in noting comparisons to previous years, continue to suggest that our health as a body depends on an outward focus in mission and ministry.  One thing I personally hope for the future is that we can find ways of telling the story of what is going on in our churches more comprehensively so as to get at the real picture of people being served and missional commitment.”

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Catholic Voters Reject Political Influence of Bishops

New Poll Reveals How Catholics View Key Election Issues

WASHINGTON, Oct. 11, 2012 -- As the two Catholic candidates for vice president prepare to face each other in a debate tonight, a new poll of 1,000 self-identified Catholic likely voters shows that, despite the best efforts of the bishops, they are least concerned about abortion and gay marriage. Catholic voters are most concerned about jobs, public education and healthcare.

Amidst growing concerns about Catholic priests and bishops using the pulpit and church resources to tell Catholics how to vote, a large majority does not feel a religious obligation to listen to them. More than four out of five Catholic voters (83 percent) feel no obligation to vote the way bishops recommend and three-quarters of Catholic voters (76 percent) do not believe Catholic politicians are obligated to vote the way bishops desire.

"As we prepare to vote in this election, we have witnessed a concerted effort by the US bishops to convince Catholics that some issues are more important than others," said Jon O'Brien, president of Catholics for Choice. "The Fortnight for Freedom was just one part of their campaign. Some bishops and priests have been less subtle, giving explicit voting advice to congregants. In short, the bishops are trying to bully Catholics to vote in a certain way. This poll shows that the bishops' efforts have been a spectacular failure. Catholics reject this type of politicking from the pulpit and refuse to be cowed by their religious leaders. Just like other Americans, Catholics care most about the bread and butter issues that affect our families when we consider the political decisions to be made come November 6."

Denying communion for Catholics because they support abortion is very unpopular. There is not a single
demographic group that would support the practice. It is even very unpopular among the most conservative Catholics voters: 65 percent of those who attend Mass weekly or more; 60 percent of Republicans; 58 percent of those who describe themselves as conservative; and 53 percent of self-described pro-life Catholics disagree with this policy.

A strong majority of Catholic voters (79 percent) wants the next president to make jobs his highest priority. Only 28 percent of Catholic voters believe abortion should be the highest priority of the next administration. Gay marriage is even less of a priority than abortion among Catholics, with only 16 percent prioritizing the issue as the most important.

In addition, majorities of Catholics disagree with criminalizing abortion and do not want priests to withhold communion from those Catholics who support legal abortion. Those who strongly agree that abortion should be legal outnumber those who strongly disagree by a 2:1 margin.

John Russonello, partner at Belden Russonello Strategists, said, "This poll is one in a long line of polls that all tell the same two stories: first, Catholics do not listen to their bishops when making electoral decisions. In fact, they reject the bishops' political views and make up their own minds about whom to vote for and what issues they care about. Second, Catholic voting patterns are consistent with those in the wider electorate. Watch how Catholics vote and predict the vote for president."

Download the entire poll here.

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Equality California Celebrates LGBT History Month With Gratitude to All Those Who Have Worked to Advance a State of Equality in California

(San Francisco) October is designated as a special month for celebrating the history of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender rights movement and for honoring the achievements of LGBT community leaders.  In that spirit, the boards of directors of Equality California and Equality California Institute proudly honor and thank the many grass-roots activists, advocacy organizations, government leaders, and California voters and residents who have furthered equality for LGBT Californians and their families. 
In reflecting particularly upon the past dozen years of progress in California, the boards of directors of EQCA and EQCAI especially salute the visionary leadership and dedication of Geoff Kors, who served for nine years as Executive Director, of Jim Carroll, who served as Managing Director and Interim Executive Director, and of the many Equality California staff and board members, both past and present, who were instrumental in strategically moving California from a state with extremely limited legal protections for LGBT people to a state with some of the most comprehensive human rights protections in the nation. 

Equality California has partnered with legislators and other organizations to sponsor successfully more than 90 pieces of pro-equality legislation, including six measures in the legislative session that just concluded.  We look forward to a vibrant future that builds upon Equality California's heritage and commitment to partnering with sister organizations in leading California to a state of equality for LGBT people.
In advance of National Coming Out Day on October 11, the boards of directors of EQCA and EQCAI also honor the bravery and honesty of all those who have chosen to come out and live their lives openly. Through their example, we are given both the responsibility and the possibility of living confidently and loving sincerely. We are thankful to them and promise to work to make California a state where everyone can live openly as who they are. 

Visit Equality California online at www.eqca.org.

Monday, October 8, 2012

EPISCOPAL CHARITIES NIGHT OF LIGHT EVENT, PENNIES FROM HEAVEN


EPISCOPAL CHARITIES NIGHT OF LIGHT EVENT, PENNIES FROM HEAVEN
HONORING THE VENERABLE MALCOLM MANSON

Saturday, November 10, 2012, 6:30p.m.
Episcopal Charities Night of Light, Pennies from Heaven Event
Honoring the Venerable Malcolm Manson
Delancey Street, 600 Embarcadero Street, San Francisco.
Reception, Dinner, Dancing and Live Auction.
 Dinner is by Barbara Llewellyn Catering in Collaboration with Delancey Street.


For more than 30 years, Episcopal Charities has provided funding and professional volunteer support to address the root causes of poverty in the Bay Area. With the guidance of our Regional Action Networks, we work with new and existing non-profit organizations to make a critical difference in the lives of the poor and oppressed in the five-county San Francisco Bay Area, regardless of their religious affiliation or practice.


This year’s Night of Light, Pennies from Heaven celebrates and honors the dedicated and passionate lifetime work and service of the Venerable Malcolm Manson.  Father Manson is foremost an educator whose influence on independent schools can be seen throughout the Bay Area.  In each of his schools, Father Manson has been an equity advocate for ensuring access to quality educational experiences for all.  His service within Episcopal Charities has given broader scope to that advocacy.  Throughout the Bay Area, Episcopal Charities supports programs that bring life-changing educational opportunities to disadvantaged children and adults.


Tickets and sponsorships for this fundraiser can be purchased on line at www.episcopalcharities.org

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Campaign Against Anti-LGBT Web Filtering Discrimination in Schools Achieves Nationwide Reforms ACLU Asked Students to Report Censorship of Gay and Lesbian Educational Web Content

NEW YORK – Public schools across the country overwhelmingly responded positively to the “Don’t Filter Me” campaign to address discriminatory censorship of web content in public schools, the American Civil Liberties Union announced in a report today.

The report chronicles the conclusion of the campaign, which asked students to determine if web content geared toward the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) communities – a frequent target of censorship in schools – was blocked by their school’s web browsers.
The ACLU found that most schools did not realize that, in addition to blocking all sexually explicit websites regardless of sexual orientation, their filtering software also contained a feature to block LGBT-related websites that were not sexually explicit. Students were blocked from accessing anti-bullying resources or websites about the civil rights of LGBT people, but could still access anti-gay websites that condemn homosexuality or oppose legal protections for LGBT people. After being contacted by the ACLU, most schools reconfigured the software so that students could access LGBT-related websites on a viewpoint-neutral basis.

“Public schools aren’t looking for software that discriminates,” said Joshua Block, staff attorney with the ACLU LGBT Project. “Schools want filtering software that blocks pornography while still allowing students to access diverse viewpoints and educational resources. They don’t need or want software that discriminatorily blocks non-sexual LGBT websites.”

The ACLU had to sue one district in order to fix its discriminatory software. That district, in Camdenton, Missouri was ordered by a federal court to reconfigure its software to stop discriminating against LGBT websites. The court held that under the First Amendment, public schools cannot use filtering software that engages in viewpoint discrimination.

The release of the report comes on Banned Websites Awareness Day and in the middle of Banned Books Awareness Week, which draws attention to censorship of literature and online resources in public schools.
“Just as a school library can’t censor a book about LGBT people on the shelves, school web filters can’t block access to pro-LGBT content online,” said Block. “Barring access to all LGBT content sends a harmful message to kids that their school thinks being gay is shameful or inappropriate.”

The campaign also prompted software companies to change their web filtering programs. Several software companies simply removed their special LGBT filters from the software and categorized all LGBT-related websites into generally applicable categories such as “history,” or “politics.” Other companies issued public statements and rewrote their category descriptions to make clear to public schools that the LGBT filters are not recommended for public school customers and do not have to be activated in order to block pornography or sexually explicit content.

Although the campaign is ending, the ACLU has provided a toolkit as an appendix to the report for students to advocate on their own behalves if their school blocks pro-LGBT content. Students are also encouraged to contact their local ACLU offices if their rights are being violated.
The full report can be viewed at: www.aclu.org/lgbt-rights/dont-filter-me-final-report

For more information on the campaign, please visit: www.aclu.org/dont-filter-me-web-content-filtering-schools