The latest edition of Columbia includes an article by Alton J. Pelowski entitled "In Defense of Life, Love and Freedom" describing the problems when a private charity becomes dependent on public funding. Similarly, Catholic Charities in Illinois are closing their adoption services because of new requirements to change their screening criteria to accept gay couples in order to receive government funding.
Although I empathize with their distress, American Catholics who have traditionally supported government-sponsored social programs have only themselves to blame. Non-profit organizations who have been happy to trade arduous fund-raising for siphoning tax revenues are likewise guilty.
"Free money" is always hard to resist, but there's always a catch. Once you've accepted the money you lose the freedom to run your organization as you like (which is why some organizations like Hillsdale College eschew public funding).
Indeed, the Catholic charities are faced with a dilemma of their own making. If they refuse to compromise their principles for money, they must either close their doors or return to the days when they relied on their own voluntary fund-raising efforts. The latter option is obviously more difficult; a consequence of diverting funds from private donations to publicly mandated tax revenue.
Instead it looks like they're taking the easy option: quitting.
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