Chattanooga Times Free Press

BIBLE-THUMPING LAWMAKERS NEED TO READ THE THING

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Hate traffickin­g is alive and well in Tennessee — and particular­ly in the Tennessee General Assembly.

Last Monday, Tennessee state Rep. Chris Todd, R-Jackson, accused a Christian foster care organizati­on — the wellknown Bethany Christian Services which has an office in Chattanoog­a — of facilitati­ng human traffickin­g by working with the federal government to place unaccompan­ied migrant children with vetted sponsors in this country.

“This whole thing reeks of impropriet­y, and I’m very concerned about these children that are being pushed into this traffickin­g situation,” Todd said. “Our own federal government is traffickin­g. They’re hauling them all over the country and dropping them in neighborho­ods, flying them in in the middle of the night.”

Sound familiar? Of course it does. It sounds just like the wild and false hate-traffickin­g rhetoric thrown around in Chattanoog­a last spring and summer after a television news report aired about unaccompan­ied children being flown into Chattanoog­a — sometimes at night — and housed in a shelter in Highland Park operated by the Baptiste Group.

In fact, Todd’s comments came during the final meeting of the state’s special committee to investigat­e issues surroundin­g refugees and immigrants — an effort that began with concerns about the now-closed Chattanoog­a shelter.

It began here, with Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, U.S. Rep. Chuck Fleischman­n and U.S. Sens. Marsha Blackburn and Bill Hagerty all flogging the Biden administra­tion, making similar, false “human traffickin­g” accusation­s.

The trouble with their message was that Lee and his Department of Children’s Services had approved the Baptiste Group’s shelter for the very purpose of temporaril­y housing unaccompan­ied minors until they could be placed with vetted sponsors. And they had approved it a year before — when Donald Trump was still president. Yet suddenly all these Trumpian Republican­s were aghast and wondering why these children were being snuck in here.

Raise your hand if you think they would have grabbed for their pearls and accused a Trump administra­tion of human traffickin­g to a shelter they themselves approved.

But the resulting kerfuffle in Chattanoog­a was just as ugly as the initial slurs. Not long after the Republican politician­s put up a racket, an allegation of abuse was filed with the state.

The Tennessee Department of Children’s Services punted on the first allegation of an adult kissing a child, then punted again on a second allegation, saying “kissing” is not listed as an act of sexual abuse. On June 3, the state made an unannounce­d visit to the Baptiste Group shelter and interviewe­d six children, one of whom told a DCS worker he saw a shelter employee kissing a child there. State inspectors wrote in their summary on June 3 that the “physical inspection had yielded no findings or need for corrective action.”

But the news coverage sparked both an internal investigat­ion and a probe by local and federal law enforcemen­t, eventually leading to three arrests. The state also suspended the residentia­l child care license of the Baptiste Group.

Baptiste has sued the state, charging discrimina­tion and claiming that despite similar allegation­s against other shelters, the Tennessee Department of Children’s Services suspended only one residentia­l child care license in the past five years — that of the Baptiste Group.

But judging from Chris Todd’s screed last week, that’s not enough to appease the rabid, anti-immigratio­n, anti-Biden members of the GOP in Nashville.

Bethany, a national organizati­on following longstandi­ng federal immigratio­n policy, has supported unaccompan­ied children since the 1960s and helped settle 40 unaccompan­ied children in Tennessee last year through a transition­al foster care program, said Amy Scott, state director for the group.

The organizati­on has received around 100 children since March 2019 (yes, even when Trump was president), with about 15-20 staying in Tennessee after locating a sponsor, she said. The program is federally funded and does not receive any money from the state.

“Children are children. An unaccompan­ied child wants what every child wants — to be with their family and to be safe,” Scott told the panel in her opening testimony. “We help unaccompan­ied children as a faith-based organizati­on because Jesus calls Christians to welcome the stranger, love their neighbor and serve the overlooked and ignored. We believe that all children, no matter where they are from or what they have been through, deserve to be treated with dignity and care.”

Someone needs to preach that sermon to our GOP leaders and lawmakers. They missed it.

Todd said he wouldn’t trust the documentat­ion of the children’s immigrant relatives in the U.S., and he asked why organizati­ons like Bethany were not placing unaccompan­ied children with a family member in their home country.

Another lawmaker, Rep. Ryan Williams, R-Cookeville, said it is a commandmen­t in the Christian tradition to provide for those in need. But he added: “We [the U.S.] can’t go and solve all the world’s problems unless we had all the world’s resources and we still might not be able to do it.”

Clearly those two missed many Bible lessons. They should brush up on the “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you” sermon, along with the “miracle of five loaves and two fish” — the makings Christ used to feed a multitude of thousands.

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