Dear Conservatives,
Cadets at the United States Air Force Academy should expect to be
trained in dealing with fear -- fear of surface-to-air missiles,
anti-aircraft fire, or falling into enemy hands. Unfortunately at
today's Air Force Academy, cadets must also deal with fear of expressing
their faith.
Recently, a cadet wrote a Bible verse on the dry-erase board on the
door to his dorm room. Apparently, the Apostle Paul's words to the
Galatians that "I have been crucified with Christ, and I no longer live,
but Christ lives in me..." (Gal. 2:20)
were a little too much for someone to tolerate, and the verse was
removed after an anti-Christian activist group complained to the
Superintendent of the Academy.
This incident reflects a culture of suppression that is being instilled among some of America's best young warriors. When
religious expression is whitewashed because of the complaints of a
hyper-sensitive few, the Academy develops a culture of fear when it
should be developing warriors.
If cadets are taught to be afraid of Bible verses, how will they
respond against terrorists who are willing to die for their cause? Our
U.S. Air Force Academy cadets should be taught how to intercept the
enemy, not how to tiptoe around the hyper-sensitive complainants.
Join me in standing against this culture of fear at the U.S. Air
Force Academy and stand for the cadets by signing the petition to
Superintendent Lt. Gen. Michelle Johnson to protect the religious
expression of Air Force Academy cadets.
Sincerely,
Lt. Gen. (US Army-Ret.) William "Jerry" Boykin
Executive Vice President
P.S. Please forward this alert to friends, family and fellow church members, and post to your favorite social networks.
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