Abbreviation TFN President/Executive Director Kathy Miller Purpose Freedom of religion | Formation 1995 Membership 19,000 members Founded 1995 Type of business Nonprofit organization | |
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Legal status 501(c)4 Educational Organization Similar National Center for Science, Americans United for Separatio, Discovery Institute, NARAL Pro‑Choice America, Bible in the Schools Profiles |
The Texas Freedom Network (TFN) is a Texas organization which describes its goals as protecting religious freedom, defending civil liberties, and strengthening public schools in the state. It works to counter the activities of the Christian right. Founded in 1996 by Cecile Richards, the daughter of former Governor Ann W. Richards. the group had 19,000 members by 2004.
Contents
- Atheist experience 247 texas freedom network
- Leadership and direction
- Bible study curricula
- Evolution curricula
- Other issues
- References
Atheist experience 247 texas freedom network
Leadership and direction
Under Richards, the organization focused mainly on education, but under the leadership of Samantha Smoot (1998-2004) it broadened its focus to include hate crimes and gay rights. As of February 2009, Kathy Miller is the president.
The TFN has opposed the attempts of Don McLeroy and other religious conservatives on the Texas State Board of Education to mandate that Texas high schools offer Bible classes and change history textbook standards, arguing that many of the proposed changes violate religious freedom and the separation of church and state. TFN has also closely followed the activities of the Board of Education and activists on other education issues, such as the teaching of evolution in public schools.
Bible study curricula
In 2005 TFN criticized the National Council on Bible Curriculum in Public Schools curriculum for promoting a fundamentalist Christian view and violating religious freedom. It commissioned a report by Southern Methodist University biblical scholar Mark A. Chancey, which found:
a blatant sectarian bias, distortions of history and science, numerous factual errors, poor sourcing reveal a curriculum that is clearly inappropriate for the 1,000 public schools the NCBCPS claims use its materials.
Evolution curricula
In a survey commissioned by TFN, "94% of Texas scientists indicated that claimed "weaknesses" of evolution are not valid scientific objections to evolution (with 87% saying that they “strongly disagree” that such weaknesses should be considered valid)."