FFRF

(redirected from Freedom From Religion Foundation)
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AcronymDefinition
FFRFFreedom From Religion Foundation
FFRFFormation Flying Radio-Frequency
FFRFFANUC FA and Robot Foundation
FFRFfat-free refed
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References in periodicals archive ?
Patrick Elliott, a Freedom From Religion Foundation attorney, said the city that's also home to the University of Wisconsin has recently seen an increase in religiously-owned rental housing.
Paul, features best-selling author and scholar Susan Jacoby as well as leaders from national freethought organizations: Dan Barker, co-president of Freedom from Religion Foundation and Debbie Goddard, director of African Americans for Humanism and director of outreach for Center of Inquiry.
The atheist group called, the Freedom from Religion Foundation, is urging its supporters to boycott the stamp, besides launching a campaign to reveal about what it calls the "darker side" of Mother Teresa.
They bring in a variety of other voices, including Annie Laurie Gaylor from the Freedom From Religion Foundation, who says she may appreciate life more than others because she doesn't believe in an afterlife.
Freedom from Religion Foundation, and Plains Commerce Bank v.
Mid-State Technical College President John Clark said he wasn't aware of the 1996 court order until the Madison-based Freedom From Religion Foundation lodged a complaint.
The Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF) is spreading its message through a common evangelical Christian tactic.
The plaintiff, Freedom From Religion Foundation, and three of its members brought suit in federal district court for the western district of Wisconsin alleging that the executive orders violate the First Amendment's restriction upon the establishment of religion by organizing conferences that singled out Faith-Based organizations "as being particularly worthy of federal funding ...
(11.) See Press Release, "FERF Challenges 'Faith-Based Prison Ministry,'" Freedom from Religion Foundation, November 8, 2005.
But $1 million is considered a hefty sum for a college of ACC's size and critics like the Madison, Wisc.-based Freedom from Religion Foundation (FFRF) criticize the appropriation as being a violation of the separation of church and state.
Then I did some research, with help from Dan Barker of the Freedom From Religion Foundation and the Internet website BibleGateway.com, and I discovered a subtext of his speech.
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