JD Vance spoke, then a TV star. A BYU professor was next and suggested a major shift in direction
WASHINGTON — The speaker lineup during a 20-minute stretch at IRF Summit 2025 certainly was unusual.
First, JD Vance spoke from teleprompters for 12 minutes to nearly 2,000 people in the ballroom of the Washington Hilton near the White House. He stood behind his own specialized podium bearing the seal of the Vice President of the United States of America and declared the Trump administration will support international religious freedom.
As what appeared to be Secret Service employees swiftly dismantled the podium, large screens around the ballroom broadcast live video of actor Rainn Wilson, who gained fame playing Dwight Schrute for laughs on 'The Office.' Wilson spoke for seven minutes from New York City, where he is appearing on Broadway.
'What a strange and profound honor to be following the vice president of the United States in any kind of talk,' Wilson said.
So, how do you follow both the veep and a famous comedian?
That job fell to Brett Scharffs, a stylish BYU law professor who has helped lawmakers around the world add religious freedoms to national constitutions in many countries.
Scharffs needed just three minutes to outline a new framework for thinking and talking about religious liberty. His point was that countries and cultures committed to religious freedom should actively promote certain virtues as the seedbed for those rights to grow and flourish.
'Or to put it another way,' he said, 'if Heraclitus was right, that character is destiny — what kind of character, both individual and social, would we strive to develop if we want to be people, and to live in places, that value religious freedom?'
He broke down his list of 13 of the most important virtues of religious freedom into three categories — habits of the head, habits of the heart and habits of the hand to be cultivated personally and in others, including children.
Those who care about religious liberty will seek to develop people who:
Are curious.
Are open-minded.
Seek for truth.
Stand for truth.
Are tolerant of others.
These seven virtues value reverence, awe and wonder, Scharffs said. He added, 'Where better to learn these virtues than Sunday School, the synagogue, the mosque.'
Faith, hope and charity.
Humility, kindness, respect and love.
Finally, those who want to protect religious freedom rights will seek to develop and spread a specific kind of desire:
To lift the downtrodden, to be of service to those in need, to reach out to the vulnerable and the broken.
'So in all of our talking about rights ... let us not forget to speak about the virtues of religious freedom,' Scharffs said.
'We want to live in cultures that cultivate people who will value religious freedom, not just as a right, but as deeply ingrained traits of character, habits of the head, heart and hand, indeed, virtues of our very soul.'
What a TV star says we can learn from members of his persecuted faith (Feb. 11)
BYU applications jump 15% since 2023 (Feb. 7)
'Dignity is a universal birthright,' Elder Soares says at religious freedom summit (Feb. 5)
The renovated Toronto Ontario Temple is open for public tours through March 8. Free reservations are available at TorontoTemple.ChurchofJesusChrist.org.
Relief Society General President Camille N. Johnson said at the Provo MTC that missionaries can 'mind the gap' through a personal relationship with Jesus Christ.
Young Women General President Emily Belle Freeman visited Japan for five days and spoke at a national devotional. She is also visiting Micronesia.
BYU religious education professor and Wheatley Institute fellow Jenet Erickson delivered the BYU-Idaho devotional and said, 'Heaven is not so much a place. It is a quality of relationship,' in a talk titled 'Designed for Love and Connection. Designed for Family.' She said, 'We are deeply relational beings, designed not for independence, but for radical dependence and connection. We are designed for family.'
The 13th Relief Society General President, Mary Ellen Wood Smoot, died at age 91.
While I was a BYU student after serving a mission in Frankfurt, Germany, I learned and became fascinated by the story of Helmuth Hübener, a faithful Latter-day Saint boy who resisted Hitler's rule and was executed by the Nazis. Now two German cities are honoring his life. Elder Dieter F. Uchtdorf said Hübener 'will always serve as a reminder and an invitation to follow the teachings of Christ.'
The Philadelphia Eagles won the Super Bowl with four Latter-day Saint coaches and players: offensive coordinator Kellen Moore, backup quarterback Tanner McKee, injured wide receiver and kick returner Britain Covey and practice squad offensive lineman Laekin Vakalahi. They beat the Kansas City Chiefs, who had at least three Latter-day Saints: head coach Andy Reid, assistant coach Porter Ellett and backup offensive lineman Kingsley Suamataia.
Kellen Moore was named the new head coach of the New Orleans Saints after the Super Bowl. So, yes, now a Latter-day Saint is coaching the Saints.
Of course, the end of football means the start of baseball. Good news on that front, TV ratings for baseball show it is a resurgent sport.
I loved this story about Brian Billick, a former BYU player who won a Super Bowl as a head coach and is part of the LaVell Edwards coaching tree.
The Deseret New spoke with Ross Douthat about why everyone should be religious.
Democrat and Republican presidents have backed the idea of ending the production of the American penny for a long time. President Trump said he's instructed the Treasury Department to stop. Did you know that the Treasury has discontinued the following coins in U.S. history, per NBC News:
The half-cent coin in 1857.
The trime, a 3-cent coin, in 1873.
The gold dollar coin in 1889. (It was different than the one now in circulation.)

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The Hill
an hour ago
- The Hill
Schiff questions funds spent changing water level during Vance kayaking trip
California Sen. Adam Schiff (D) sent a letter to Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and other senior Trump administration officials Thursday expressing 'serious concern' about actions taken to increase the water flow of a river in Ohio to allow JD Vance and his family better navigate a recreational kayaking trip. Schiff asked Hegseth, Adam Telle, the assistant secretary of the Army for civil works, and Sean Curran, the director of the U.S. Secret Service, to provide more information about a decision to change the outflow of Ohio's Caesar Creek Lake to help Vance celebrate his 41st birthday with a family boat float. 'Reporting suggests that the request from the Secret Service to alter the outflow request for Caesar Creek Lake was not just to ensure safe or secure conditions but also to create favorable kayaking conditions. If true, this is an inappropriate and embarrassing abuse of power over publicly owned resources by the Trump administration,' Schiff wrote. Federal agencies said the river's water level was raised to allow for 'safe navigation' of Vance's security team while the vice president was kayaking with his family. A source familiar with the situation told The Hill that public safety officials and Secret Service agents ran aground on a public safety boat when they went on a joint scouting mission in advance of Vance's paddle. The U.S. Secret Service has said that Vance was not informed of the decision to change the outflow of the lake. Schiff in his letter asserted that it while there's precedent for raising water levels to help some activities, such as emergency responder training, it would be inappropriate to do so for 'the sole personal benefit of one individual and his/her family.' 'The misuse of public water resources for the Vice President's family is particularly offensive considering this administration's cuts to federal agencies, cuts which are already harming outdoor recreation opportunities for American families,' Schiff wrote. The senator wants the Defense Department and Secret Service to explain what volume of water was required to raise the water levels of Caesar Creek by two feet to accommodate Vance's excursion and what was the original intended purpose of the water that was released. He wants to know whether the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers appropriately documented its decision-making process prior to releasing the water and whether it performed any analysis or assessment to examine potential effects on upstream or downstream water resources, navigation or environmental quality. Schiff is also seeking confirmation that Vance was not told of the decision to raise the river's water flow and an explanation of why he was not informed. The senator criticized President Trump for directing the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to release 2.2 billion gallons of water from two California reservoirs to help firefighters battling the Los Angeles wildfires in February, a move that critics said was done for political benefit and didn't help contain the destructive blazes. 'That reckless act of political theater put Central Valley farms and residents at risk of flooding and wasted water intended for irrigation during the driest months of the year,' he wrote. 'With the most recent act at Caesar Creek Lake, the Trump administration is providing further evidence of its willingness to exploit public resources for the personal and political benefit of administration officials.' He asked the Corps of Engineers to pledge to no longer fulfill personal requests that fall outside the scope of its mission. A spokesperson for the Secret Service on Friday confirmed receipt of Schiff's letter and said the agency would respond through official channels.


Politico
3 hours ago
- Politico
Are Christian nationalists targeting women's right to vote?
Happy Friday. Thanks for keeping up with us! As always, reach out with thoughts, questions, offerings: ecordover@ and klong@ This week we examine the theocratic, patriarchal movement making waves in Washington. Last week, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth reposted a CNN interview of his pastor, Christian nationalist Doug Wilson, writing 'All of Christ for All of Life.' In the video, church members discussed why they believe women shouldn't be allowed to vote — a tenet of Wilson's main church, Christ Church in Moscow, Idaho. In the CNN segment, Wilson, who founded a network of churches in the late 1990s called the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches, or CREC, said 'women are the kind of people that people come out of.' He has written several books on marriage, masculinity and childrearing, along with blog posts with titles like 'The Lost Virtues of Sexism.' He has referred to various women as 'small-breasted biddies,' 'lumberjack dykes' and 'cunts' and extolled the 'benefits' of slavery. The pastor's views are coming under scrutiny as he gains influence within the Republican Party. Last year, he declared that his church was seeking to make inroads with 'numerous evangelicals who will be present both in and around the Trump administration.' Since then, he's appeared at congressional events, cheering when Hegseth — one of his congregants in Tennessee — was confirmed. Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought also has ties to the church. Christian nationalism is the belief that the U.S. was founded as a Christian nation and should remain so in the future — and that our laws should reflect Christian values. A 2024 survey by the Pew Research Center found that half of U.S. adults think the Bible should have some influence on federal laws, even though the First Amendment prohibits the government from 'establishing a religion.' The public support for Christian nationalism from high-ranking members of the White House cabinet is alarming for civil rights advocates, political scientists and Christians alike who say it could impact policy, further gender inequality and promote fear among women. 'To have the Secretary of Defense repost this message is especially worrisome ... because it resonates so strongly with this notion of threat. What role does Pete Hegseth see the military playing in carrying out, in enforcing, in reinforcing this Christian nationalist understanding of women's submission?' Traci West, professor emerita of Christian Ethics and African American Studies at Drew University Theological School, tells Women Rule. A 2024 study from the Public Religion Research Institute found that a 'key aspect often linked to Christian nationalism is adherence to patriarchal ideals.' According to their research, 33 percent of Americans agree that 'in a truly Christian family, the husband is the head of the household, and his wife submits to his leadership,' while 51 percent of Christian nationalism sympathizers and nearly seven in 10 adherents to Christian nationalism agree with that statement. Also, 'there is a very, very high correlation between support for Christian nationalism, and those who voted for Trump in 2024,' says Diana Orcés, director of research at PRRI. According to Samuel Perry, a professor of sociology at the University of Oklahoma, with Hegseth and others in the Trump administration, there's a 'reassertion that 'No, patriarchy is not just an option, I think it's a good thing.'' Perry says that the Christian nationalist ideology has already influenced Trump administration policy, particularly regarding childbearing and fertility. He says that data shows that 'conservatives, even when they're quite pronatatalists,' i.e. promote having more babies, 'are actually the least likely to support things like paid leave and childcare, even tax credits — which, he says could make it 'more difficult for women to go back to work.' Jared Longshore, a minister of Wilson's church, tells Women Rule he personally supports President Donald Trump and is 'very grateful for what he's doing. … I'm certainly grateful for what he did with Supreme Court justices. … I know Pete has done things' related to women in combat roles. 'Scripture calls the husband the head and then the woman the body,' Longshore says. 'When you hear that the husband has a hierarchy in the home, we should think in the same way that we think about the relationship between our heads and our bodies.' Longshore says repealing the 19th Amendment is 'not something I'm pressing for, but when asked would I support that, I said yes, I would. … from the beginning of our nation up until the time of the suffrage movement, we had one vote per household and I think that would be a good thing.' Women Rule reached out to Hegseth to ask if he supported his church's belief that women should not vote or participate in government. In response, Chief Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell said in an emailed statement, 'The Secretary is a proud member of a church affiliated with the Congregation of Reformed Evangelical Churches, which was founded by Pastor Doug Wilson. The Secretary very much appreciates many of Mr. Wilson's writings and teachings.' POLITICO Special Report 'My Life Became a Living Hell': One Woman's Career in Delta Force, the Army's Most Elite Unit by Seth Harp for POLITICO: 'Courtney Williams was 24 years old when she learned of an intriguing job opportunity at an unnamed 'special mission unit' at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, the headquarters of the top secret Joint Special Operations Command. It was 2010, and she was coming off a four-year enlistment in the Army, in which she'd been an interrogator and Arabic linguist but never deployed. She was recruited at a job fair by K2 Solutions, a contractor in Southern Pines, North Carolina, run by former members of Delta Force, the Army component of JSOC.' Eleanor Holmes Norton Keeps a Low Profile as Trump Takes Aim at DC by Nicholas Wu for POLITICO: 'Washington's locally elected government is under attack from President Donald Trump and congressional Republicans. But the capital city's self-proclaimed 'warrior on the Hill' is nowhere to be seen on the front lines. Eleanor Holmes Norton, the District of Columbia's nonvoting House delegate, issued a written statement Monday after Trump seized control of the city's police force and moved to send in National Guard troops, calling it 'counterproductive,' a 'historic assault on D.C. home rule' and 'more evidence of the urgent need to pass my D.C. statehood bill.' Donald Trump Took Over DC's Police. Why Is the City's Mayor So Zen? By Michael Schaffer for POLITICO: 'Muriel Bowser has given Donald Trump everything a blue-city mayor could possibly give a MAGA president. And he kicked her in the teeth anyway. But what's most telling about the power dynamics between Washington's mayor and Trump's administration is that the Bowser allies I spoke to think Trump's furious White House press conference on Monday actually represented a victory of sorts.' Number of the Week Read more here. MUST READS Trump Has Said Abortion Is a State Issue. His Judicial Picks Could Shape It Nationally for Decades. by Christine Fernando for The Associated Press: 'One called abortion a 'barbaric practice.' Another referred to himself as a 'zealot' for the anti-abortion movement. Several have played prominent roles in defending their state's abortion restrictions in court and in cases that have had national impact, including on access to medication abortion. As President Donald Trump pushes the Senate to confirm his federal judicial nominees, a review by The Associated Press shows that roughly half of them have revealed anti-abortion views, been associated with anti-abortion groups or defended abortion restrictions.' A Right-Wing Influencer Tried to Be a Tradwife. It Almost Broke Her. by Michelle Goldberg for The New York Times: 'Lauren Southern, one of the most well-known right-wing influencers during Donald Trump's first term, first went viral with a 2015 video titled 'Why I Am Not a Feminist.' Then 19, beautiful and blond, Southern argued that women are advantaged in many areas of life, including child custody disputes and escaping abusive relationships. 'Feminists are unintentionally creating a world of reverse sexism that I don't want to be a part of,' she said. But being an antifeminist, it turns out, is no shield against abusive male power. Southern's new self-published memoir, 'This Is Not Real Life,' is the story of conservative ideology colliding with reality.' How One Oregon Activist Is Using a Decades-Old Liberal Policy to Stall Green Energy Projects in Rural Areas by Tony Schick for ProPublica: 'During the outcry against nuclear power in the 1970s, liberal Oregon lawmakers hatched a plan to slow an industry that was just getting started. They created a burdensome process that gave the public increased say over where power plants could be built, and the leading anti-nuclear activists of the day used appeal after appeal to delay proposed nuclear plants to death. It had a huge impact: Oregon's first commercial nuclear plant, the one that spurred lawmakers into action, was also the state's last. What those lawmakers didn't plan for was that 50 years later, an Oregon citizen activist would use that same bureaucracy to hinder some of the very energy projects that today's liberals want: wind farms and the new high-voltage lines needed to support them. They didn't plan for Irene Gilbert.' QUOTE OF THE WEEK Read more here. on the move Families Against Mandatory Minimums President Shaneva D. McReynolds has been appointed as a voting member of the United States Sentencing Commission's newly formed Sentence Impact Advisory Group. Dezenhall Resources has added Katie Runkle and Steffen Newman as associates, Amma Boateng as senior director of coalitions, Mary Grace Lucas as vice president and Jana Spacek as managing director of organizational development and operations. (h/t POLITICO Playbook) Meghan Green is now general counsel for the Senate Budget Committee. She most recently was general counsel for the House Intelligence Committee. (h/t POLITICO Playbook)


Fox News
5 hours ago
- Fox News
Bondi puts sanctuary cities nationwide on notice after DC police federal takeover
GREENVILLE, S.C. – U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi, temporarily leading Washington, D.C.'s police at President Donald Trump's request, announced Thursday that she had sent letters giving sanctuary jurisdictions nationwide one week to comply with federal immigration laws or face Department of Justice action, contrasting South Carolina with Democratic states like New York and California. Bondi was in Greenville, South Carolina, on Thursday for a panel discussion with state Attorney General Alan Wilson, several members of Congress and local law enforcement agencies. In an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital moments before the announcement, Bondi responded to whether temporary federalization of local police departments could be done beyond D.C., such as in New York or elsewhere. "Oh, let's wait and see what's going to happen," Bondi told Fox News Digital's Danielle Wallace. "But I just sent sanctuary city letters to 32 mayors around the country and multiple governors saying, 'you better be abiding by our federal policies and with our federal law enforcement, because if you aren't, we're going to come after you.' And they have, I think, a week to respond to me, so let's see who responds and how they respond." Bondi announced on social media that the DOJ has sent "demand letters" to sanctuary cities, counties and states as "a key step in our strategic effort to eradicate sanctuary policies from California to New York." Threatening lawsuits, she said that "any sanctuary jurisdiction that continues to put illegal aliens ahead of American citizens can either come to the table or see us in court." After Democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani's primary win in June, the New York City Police Department reportedly saw retirement filings surge. Bondi, who criticized incumbent Mayor Eric Adams over the city's sanctuary status in the past, told Fox News Digital on Thursday it's crucial for officers' safety for them to have strong leadership. Adams has cooperated with border czar Tom Homan on federal immigration enforcement. "It starts at the top and our leaders have to support our law enforcement," Bondi told Fox News Digital. "They risk their lives every single day to keep us safe. There's no ordinary day in the life of a police officer nor for their families, because they leave the house every day, and they don't know what to expect. And our government, our leaders, have got to back them and that's got to happen in New York. We have got back our law enforcement. We've got to back the NYPD. We have to back all of our federal, state and local officers around this country." Wilson, meanwhile, noted that slain Georgia nursing student Laken Riley's killer had been arrested in New York City and was released under the sanctuary policies there. "Obviously, here in South Carolina, we have excellent relationships, but it's also important that we support them in other states," Wilson told Fox News Digital. "Obviously, we all remember Laken Riley, a young woman in Georgia who was murdered. That individual had been arrested and released in New York state and then came to Georgia and committed that crime. So it affects us all when other states don't step up and are able to enforce the laws, it could have impacts on law enforcement in other states as well." Bondi highlighted one letter she sent to California Gov. Gavin Newsom in which she warned that "individuals operating under the color of law, using their official position to obstruct federal immigration enforcement efforts and facilitating or inducing illegal immigration may be subject to criminal charges." The letter, which was shared on social media, said cooperation between federal, state and local law enforcement agencies, including on immigration enforcement, "is vital to enforce federal law and protect national security." "Under President Trump's leadership, full cooperation by state and local governments in immigration enforcement efforts is a top priority," Bondi wrote, saying Trump directed her to "identify sanctuary jurisdictions and notify them of their unlawful sanctuary status and potential violations of federal law." In Greenville on Thursday, Bondi pointed to South Carolina as a model of federal, state and local law enforcement "working hand in hand." Thanking Wilson for advocating for increased partnerships with the FBI, Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) and U.S. Marshals, Bondi told Fox News Digital a member of the Sinaloa Cartel was recently busted after "massive amounts" of cocaine were seized in Myrtle Beach. Wilson credited such strong cooperation to law enforcement recently being able to make the largest fentanyl seizure in South Carolina's history. Last month, DEA agents, Lexington County Sheriff's deputies, and South Carolina State Transport Police made two coordinated traffic stops in two South Carolina counties, resulting in 156 pounds of fentanyl being seized. Two brothers from California were arrested and indicted in connection with the case. The Justice Department said that seized fentanyl had the potential to kill 36 million people and a street retail value of $1.7 million. In her letter to Newsom, Bondi said Trump also directed federal agencies to evaluate their authority to issue grants, contracts and federal funds "to determine where immigration-related terms and conditions may be added to combat sanctuary policies." Noting that Congress has "codified the duty of states and local governments to cooperate in immigration enforcement efforts," the letter said Bondi ordered investigations to identify "any such potential unlawful conduct." Newsom's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital. Bondi's letter comes roughly a week after the DOJ identified nearly three dozen cities, states and counties across the country that it said were sanctuaries for illegal immigrants. Bondi said in a statement at the time that the cities and states, which mostly lean blue, have immigration policies that "impede law enforcement and put American citizens at risk by design." "The Department of Justice will continue bringing litigation against sanctuary jurisdictions and work closely with the Department of Homeland Security to eradicate these harmful policies around the country," Bondi said. Four of the states on the DOJ's list – California, New York, Colorado and Illinois – have already faced lawsuits over their immigration policies. Others on the list include Delaware, Nevada, Minnesota and D.C. The lawsuit in Illinois is the furthest along in the court process and has not played out in DOJ's favor at this stage. A federal judge tossed out the Justice Department's claims, saying Illinois' state and local policies were protected by the Constitution and that the DOJ's lawsuit encroached on Illinois' sovereignty. The DOJ could still appeal the decision or amend its complaint.