RezaAslansoutrage

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Tuesday, 5 February 2013

God and Mammon and religious liberty

Posted on 01:54 by Unknown
You cannot serve both God and Mammon. At least, you can't if you're a corporation, according to the Obama administration's proposed new rules regarding what sort of organizations will be required to provide employees insurance coverage of contraceptives under Obamacare.

Previously, the Obama administration had allowed for an exemption to the contraceptives mandate that was fairly narrow. Groups were exempted only if they met four criteria: 1) their purpose was the "inculcation of religious values," 2) most of the employees shared that religion, 3) most of the people being served shared that religion, and 4) they were a non-profit organization. This defined the sort of organization the law was considering as "religious."

This definition of "religious" is the fundamental issue in a slew of lawsuits about the health care policy.

One of the main objections to this working definition was the way it deemed religious service groups to be not religious. A Catholic soup kitchen is not mainly about the "inculcation of religious values," nor does it primarily serve Catholics.

With these proposed changes to the rules, released last week, the administration acknowledges that "religion" can mean many things, and doesn't just describe houses of worship. In the proposal for new rules, it says:
The Departments agree that the exemption should not exclude group health plans of religious entities that would qualify for the exemption but for the fact that, for example, they provide charitable social services to persons of different religious faiths or employ persons of different religious faiths when running a parochial school. Indeed, this was never the Departments’ intention.
Therefore:
the Departments propose to amend the definition of religious employer ... by eliminating the first three prongs of the definition and clarifying the application of the fourth. Under this proposal, an employer that is organized and operates as a nonprofit entity and referred to in section 6033(a)(3)(A)(i) or (iii) of the Code would be considered a religious employer for purposes of the religious employer exemption.
In practice, what this would mean is that any non-profit organization can fill out a form stating their religious objections and identifying themselves as religious, and they thus opt-out of the mandate. They can then provide health insurance for their employees that fits with the requirements of their religion and the rules of Obamacare; other arrangements will be made to provide contraceptives for those employees who want it, arrangements that won't involve the religious employer.

This is designed to resolve a good many of the lawsuits while not requiring employees to be disadvantaged by their employers beliefs. Whether it will or not is an open question, I suppose, but that's the purpose of the new rules, to strike a balance between accommodating religious belief and not allowing religious practices to be imposed on or negatively affect those who don't believe. The administration says:
The proposed accommodations would provide such plan participants and beneficiaries contraceptive coverage without cost sharing while insulating their employers or institutions of higher education from contracting, arranging, paying, or referring for such coverage.
The way the balance is struck, here, is by broadening the legal definition of religious organization. Now, to be counted as religious organization, only two things are necessary: the group must considered itself to be and hold itself out to be religious, and there can't be any profit.

This means the lawsuits that have interested me most, which are about the religious rights of for-profit corporations, will go forward. This compromise specifically excludes them. Hobby Lobby, Inc., and other corporations with religious owners will still have to take their case to the courts to argue that corporations have religions and have the right to exercise them.

There have been a variety of responses to the proposed new rules. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops declined to comment for the Associated Press, and said they're studying the proposal. Law firms involved in the cases defending for-profit corporations that have religious objections to insurance plans covering employee's contraceptives have said this is "picking and choosing who is allowed to exercise faith," and that the government should create an exemption for any "moral decision," disregarding anything else. Other responses have been crazier. At National Review, one writer interprets the compromise as a "double dose of authoritarianism" designed to force Catholic nuns to have birth control coverage.

Here's a thought provoking question, though. Matthew Schmitz of First Things asks:
The Obama administration believes that conscientious objections to contraception should prevail in the non-profit sector, but not in for-profit corporations. Why? Do employees of non-profits need contraception less? Do the conscience claims of their leaders matter more? Why are tax-exempt organizations granted more rights than those which pay taxes?
To put it another way, why can't a corporation serve both God and Mammon? What is it about being for-profit that necessarily excludes an organization from being legally considered religious?
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in definition of religion, First Amendment, First Things, Hobby Lobby Inc. vs. Sebelius, Obama, Religion and the marketplace, religious practice | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home
View mobile version

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • 'Going to glory'
    A notebook preacher.
  • (no title)
    Wohl dem, des Hilfe der Gott Jakobs ist; des Hoffnung auf den HERRN, seinem Gott, steht; der Himmel, Erde, Meer und alles, was darinnen ist,...
  • An interpretive endeavor
    Jason N. Blum, " Retrieving Phenomenology of Religion as a Method for Religious Studies ," in the Journal of the American Academy ...
  • Beer and church
    There's something about beer and church. The combination seems incongruous, especially when the church in question is a conservative on...
  • To capitalize, or not
    "Evangelical" or "evangelical"? "Pentecostal" or "pentecostal"? Is it "deist" or "Dei...
  • (no title)
  • Incarnation, in the context of demon possession
    A fascinating thing about demonology and explanations of exorcisms is the way theology -- sometimes very abstract theology -- is re-cast in ...
  • Catholics to bishops: never mind our souls
    American Catholic bishops attempted to exert their influence on the electorate, but to little effect. Looking at the Catholic vote the day a...
  • When a Nazi converts to Islam
    He wore a beard, but not a full beard. He walked to prayers at the nearby mosque. He read the Quran, but in his own native German rather tha...
  • The new irrelevance of Rick Warren
    There's something really about odd Rick Warren's explanation for why he's cancelled the planned Obama-Romeny forum. The megachur...

Categories

  • "sacred steel" (1)
  • #PrayforBoston (1)
  • 1848 (1)
  • 1916 (1)
  • 2012 (4)
  • 2013 (1)
  • 4th of July (1)
  • 9/11 (1)
  • A Christian Manifesto (1)
  • AAR (1)
  • Aaron Schock (1)
  • abolitionists (1)
  • abortion (6)
  • Abraham Kuyper (2)
  • Abraham Lincoln (1)
  • abuse (4)
  • academia (22)
  • academica (1)
  • Acton Institute (1)
  • aesthetics (2)
  • African-American religion (3)
  • Al Mohler (1)
  • Albert J. Raboteau (1)
  • Alex Grenier (1)
  • aliens (1)
  • Alton Lemon (1)
  • Amazon (1)
  • ambition (1)
  • ambivalence (1)
  • America (21)
  • America’s Blessings: How Religion Benefits Everyone (1)
  • American (1)
  • American religion (128)
  • American Revolution (1)
  • Amish (1)
  • anabaptists (1)
  • Andrew Hamblin (1)
  • Andrew Sullivan (1)
  • Angela Zimmann (1)
  • animation (1)
  • Ann Taves (1)
  • Anti-Catholicism (1)
  • Anti-Mormonism (1)
  • apocalyptic (3)
  • apocalypticsm (2)
  • apologetics (1)
  • Appalachian (1)
  • Archdiocese of Philadelphia (1)
  • arguments (5)
  • Arizona Republic (1)
  • ark (1)
  • art (12)
  • Art Gish (1)
  • Art Young (1)
  • astrophysics (1)
  • asylum (4)
  • Aten Reign (1)
  • atheism (28)
  • audience (1)
  • authors (1)
  • Baby Doe (1)
  • bad faith (2)
  • baptism (1)
  • Baptists (2)
  • Baron d'Holbach (1)
  • Barry Hankins (1)
  • bars (1)
  • baseball (1)
  • bear market in God (2)
  • beer (1)
  • belief (13)
  • Ben-Hur (1)
  • Benedict XVI (4)
  • bible (4)
  • Big Mountain Jesus (1)
  • big Other (1)
  • Bill O'Reilly (1)
  • Billy Graham (4)
  • Billy Sunday (1)
  • birds (1)
  • birth control (10)
  • bishops (1)
  • Black Mountain Poets (1)
  • blasphemy (2)
  • blues (1)
  • Bob Dylan (2)
  • Bob Grenier (1)
  • book (4)
  • book culture (6)
  • book review (1)
  • bookshelf (1)
  • bookstore (3)
  • Boston (2)
  • Boz Tchividjian (1)
  • Brennan Manning (2)
  • Brethern (1)
  • Broderick Rice (1)
  • buddhism (1)
  • Bulldogs (1)
  • Calvary Chapel (2)
  • calvinism (12)
  • Canada (1)
  • capitalism (9)
  • cardinals (1)
  • Cardus (1)
  • Carl F. H. Henry (1)
  • Catholic hierarchy (1)
  • Catholicism (19)
  • Chance The Rapper (1)
  • charity (2)
  • Charlemagne (1)
  • Charles Chaput (1)
  • Charles Darwin (1)
  • Charles Fox Parham (1)
  • Charles Olson (2)
  • Charles Taylor (3)
  • Chicago (2)
  • child molestation (1)
  • children (2)
  • Children's literature (1)
  • Chris Rock (1)
  • Chris Stedman (1)
  • Chris Sullivan (1)
  • christian fiction (14)
  • Christian Hedonism (1)
  • Christian music (5)
  • Christian publishing (7)
  • Christian Reconstructionism (2)
  • Christianity (15)
  • Christianity Today (1)
  • Christmas (7)
  • Chuck Colson (2)
  • Chuck Smith (1)
  • church (7)
  • church suppers (1)
  • churches (6)
  • churches in bars (1)
  • citations (1)
  • civil religion (7)
  • Civil War (4)
  • Clarence Darrow (1)
  • clergy (2)
  • Cloud Ten (2)
  • cognitive minorities (1)
  • Col. Sanders (1)
  • comedians (1)
  • comedy (1)
  • commodification (1)
  • Conestoga Wood Specialties vs. Sebelius (1)
  • congress (1)
  • Constantin Volney (1)
  • Consuming Spirits (1)
  • conversation (3)
  • conversion (4)
  • Cotton Mather (1)
  • Courageous (1)
  • cover-up (2)
  • creationism (2)
  • creativity (1)
  • creeds and confessions (1)
  • crime fiction (2)
  • crime writing (1)
  • criticism (5)
  • crucifixion (2)
  • cubicle (1)
  • culpability (1)
  • cultural relevance (3)
  • cultural studies (10)
  • culture war (8)
  • D.G. Hart (1)
  • D.T. Max (3)
  • Dale McGowan (1)
  • Dan Fincke (1)
  • Daniel Dennett (2)
  • Darwin (1)
  • David Foster Wallace (3)
  • David Lipsky (1)
  • David Silverman (3)
  • David Tamayo (1)
  • de (1)
  • death (5)
  • Declaration of Independence (1)
  • definition of religion (3)
  • demons (6)
  • denominations (2)
  • depression (1)
  • Derrida (2)
  • Descartes (1)
  • Detroit (1)
  • digital humanities (1)
  • discourse analysis (1)
  • documentary (3)
  • dominionism (1)
  • Doomsday Preppers (1)
  • Dorothy Day (1)
  • doubt (2)
  • Dutch Calvinist (3)
  • e-books (2)
  • e-readers (1)
  • Eastern Orthodox (3)
  • economics (6)
  • ecstatic prayer (4)
  • Ed Gass-Donnelly (1)
  • Edith Schaeffer (1)
  • election (4)
  • Elmbrook v. Doe (1)
  • end times (4)
  • Episcopal Church (3)
  • epistemology (1)
  • Erasmus (1)
  • Eric Hobsbawm (1)
  • Errorl Morris (1)
  • ethics (5)
  • ethics of writing (1)
  • evangelicalism (38)
  • Every Love Story is a Ghost Story (2)
  • evil (2)
  • evolution (5)
  • exorcism (1)
  • experimental fiction (2)
  • faith (4)
  • Family Life Faith and Freedom v. Lynda Serrano (1)
  • Family Research Council (1)
  • fasnet (1)
  • Faulkner (1)
  • Fenway (1)
  • fiction (6)
  • film (8)
  • financial crisis (1)
  • fireworks (1)
  • First Amendment (26)
  • First Things (4)
  • folk art (1)
  • forgiveness (1)
  • fortune telling (1)
  • FOX news (1)
  • France (1)
  • Francis Schaeffer (4)
  • Frank Peretti (1)
  • Freedom From Religion Foundation (1)
  • freedom of religion (14)
  • French Revolution (1)
  • Front Porch Republic (1)
  • Fundamentalist-Modernist (4)
  • funerals (2)
  • gender (1)
  • George Beverly Shea (1)
  • George McGovern (1)
  • German (1)
  • German Reformed Church (1)
  • Germany (9)
  • giving (2)
  • Good Friday (1)
  • gospel (4)
  • gothic (1)
  • government (1)
  • grace (1)
  • Grammys (1)
  • Gravity (1)
  • Greece v. Galloway (1)
  • Greg Abbott (1)
  • Greg Brown (1)
  • Gruppe 91 (1)
  • Habermas (2)
  • Hagee (1)
  • Halakha (1)
  • Halloween (1)
  • Harry Crews (1)
  • HCA (4)
  • health care (3)
  • Heidelberg (2)
  • Heidelberg Catechism (1)
  • hell (3)
  • Henry Luce (1)
  • Herbert Rösler (1)
  • Herman Miller (1)
  • hermeneutics (1)
  • Hinduism (1)
  • Hispanic (1)
  • history (24)
  • Hitchcock (1)
  • Hobby Lobby Inc. vs. Sebelius (7)
  • Hobby Lobby Inc. vs. Sebillius (1)
  • holiness (1)
  • Hollingsworth v. Perry (1)
  • holy roller (1)
  • homemaking (1)
  • homeschooling (4)
  • homosexuality (2)
  • horseshoe (1)
  • Hosanna-Tabor (2)
  • hospitality (1)
  • Houndmouth (1)
  • houses of worship (2)
  • How's that working out for you -- being clever? (1)
  • Howard Phillips (1)
  • HR 1627 (1)
  • HSLDA (4)
  • humanism (2)
  • Hume (1)
  • icon (1)
  • icons (3)
  • ideology (1)
  • immigration (4)
  • In God We Trust (1)
  • In the Year of Dreaming Dangerously (1)
  • incarnation (1)
  • Including Atheists (1)
  • infanticide (1)
  • Intelligent Design (3)
  • Ira Glass (1)
  • Iraq (1)
  • Islam (3)
  • J. Gresham Machen (1)
  • Jack Chick (1)
  • James D. Bratt (1)
  • James Turner (2)
  • James Turrell (1)
  • James W.C. Pennington (1)
  • Jamie Coots (1)
  • Jason Molina (1)
  • Jehovah's Witnesses (1)
  • Jerry Jenkins (2)
  • Jesus (3)
  • Jesus People (1)
  • Jim Bakker (1)
  • Jodi Arias (1)
  • Joe Biden (1)
  • Joel Barlow (1)
  • Joel Osteen (1)
  • John Bunyan (1)
  • John Jay Institute (1)
  • John Piper (1)
  • John Reist (1)
  • John Roberts (2)
  • John Weiners (1)
  • John Wesley (1)
  • John XXIII (1)
  • Jonathan Cahn (1)
  • Jonathan Edwards (3)
  • Jonathan Smith (1)
  • Joseph M. Bauman (1)
  • journalism (4)
  • Juan Mendez (1)
  • Judaism (1)
  • Judge Carol E. Jackson (1)
  • Judge Sarah Evans Barker (1)
  • Justin Taylor (2)
  • Justin Townes Earle (1)
  • Kathryn Jean Lopez (1)
  • Kathryn Lofton (1)
  • Kenneth D. Royal (1)
  • kerfuffle (1)
  • language theory (1)
  • Lauren Green (1)
  • law (12)
  • Lawrence Krauss (3)
  • Lecrae (2)
  • Lee Braver (1)
  • Left Behind (2)
  • Lemon Test (1)
  • let's be serious (1)
  • Lew Wallace (1)
  • liberal (5)
  • liberalism (1)
  • life in Germany (2)
  • Linda Rios Brooks (1)
  • links (1)
  • literary studies (2)
  • living in Germany (15)
  • Local Religious Beliefs and Mutual Fund Risk-Taking Behaviors (1)
  • logic (1)
  • Logical Positivism (1)
  • luck (1)
  • M.S. Simkin (1)
  • maps (1)
  • Marc Ouellet (1)
  • marijuana (1)
  • Mark Driscoll (1)
  • Mark Hatfield (1)
  • marriage (2)
  • married life (1)
  • Martin Luther King Jr. (1)
  • Marx (4)
  • Marxism (3)
  • material conditions (3)
  • Matthew S. Hedstrom (1)
  • Matthew Sutton (1)
  • Max Weber (1)
  • Mayan calendar (1)
  • megachurch (3)
  • Megan Phelps-Roper (1)
  • Mennonites (1)
  • metafiction (2)
  • metaphysics (3)
  • Methodists (1)
  • Metropolitan Jonah (2)
  • Michael Farris (4)
  • Michael W. Cuneo (1)
  • Michele Bachmann (1)
  • Michio Kaku (1)
  • Mike Huckabee (2)
  • minimalism (1)
  • misreading (1)
  • Mitt Romney (6)
  • modern conservatism (13)
  • monasticism (1)
  • Mormonism (2)
  • mural (1)
  • music (1)
  • my life (28)
  • names (1)
  • narratives (5)
  • Nate Silver (1)
  • Nathan Hitchen (1)
  • Natural Law (1)
  • natural theology (1)
  • Nazis (3)
  • Neil Carter (1)
  • Neil DeGrasse Tyson (1)
  • Neo-Calvinism (1)
  • networks (1)
  • New Atheists (4)
  • New New Atheists (1)
  • new religious movements (1)
  • ngrams (1)
  • Nibiru (1)
  • Nicolas Cage (1)
  • Nikolaevsk (1)
  • Nils Frahm (1)
  • Noah (1)
  • non-denominational (1)
  • non-profit (1)
  • nones (11)
  • not fiction (18)
  • notes on reading (4)
  • novel (2)
  • Obama (13)
  • obit (8)
  • obits (1)
  • OCA (2)
  • Old Believers (1)
  • Old North Church (1)
  • ontology (1)
  • P.T. Anderson (1)
  • pacifism (1)
  • patriots (1)
  • Paul Ryan (1)
  • peace activists (1)
  • Peggy Gish (1)
  • pentecostal (14)
  • pet funerals (1)
  • Peter Lalonde (1)
  • Peter Stormare (1)
  • phenomenology (1)
  • philosophy (11)
  • photographs (41)
  • photography (1)
  • Pilgrim's Progress (1)
  • platform (1)
  • pluralism (4)
  • poetry (4)
  • political debate (11)
  • politics (37)
  • politics of distraction (3)
  • poll (1)
  • Pope (6)
  • poverty (1)
  • practice (2)
  • prayer (8)
  • preaching (3)
  • priests (1)
  • printing (2)
  • pro-life movement (1)
  • processing (1)
  • proselytization (1)
  • Protestantism (3)
  • Psalm (1)
  • public service announcement (1)
  • public square (4)
  • publishing (3)
  • pulpit freedom (1)
  • Puritans (4)
  • Quakers (1)
  • quote (2)
  • quotes (1)
  • race (2)
  • racing (1)
  • Ragamuffin Gospel (2)
  • Ralph Reed (1)
  • rap (3)
  • Raymond Burke (1)
  • Reformed theology (3)
  • religion (11)
  • religion and politics (20)
  • religion and science (8)
  • Religion and the marketplace (27)
  • Religion for Atheists (1)
  • Religions in America survey (1)
  • religious data (19)
  • religious experience (1)
  • religious journalism (12)
  • religious marketplace (5)
  • religious practice (27)
  • religious right (6)
  • Religious Studies Project (1)
  • repost (1)
  • Republican Party (2)
  • Rev. Peyton's Big Damn Band (1)
  • revolutions (1)
  • Reza Aslan (1)
  • Rich Mullins (1)
  • Richard Buel Jr. (1)
  • Richard Dawkins (2)
  • Rick Warren (1)
  • rites (2)
  • ritual (4)
  • Rob Bell (2)
  • Robert Bellah (3)
  • Robert D. Putnam (1)
  • Robert Ingersoll (4)
  • Robert Randolph (1)
  • Rodney Stark (2)
  • Roe vs. Wade (2)
  • Romeike (4)
  • Ron Hansen (1)
  • Rosa Parks (1)
  • Ryan Hunter (1)
  • Saddleback (1)
  • saints (3)
  • Salmon Chase (1)
  • same-sex marriage (2)
  • Sandy Hook Elementary (1)
  • satanic panic (1)
  • scandal (4)
  • scholarship (3)
  • scientisim (2)
  • Scientology (1)
  • Scopes trial (2)
  • Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus (1)
  • secularism (19)
  • secularity (15)
  • secularization (8)
  • self-publishing (1)
  • separatism (1)
  • Shane Claiborne (1)
  • sharia (1)
  • sketch (1)
  • Skewby (1)
  • slavery (1)
  • Slovoj Zizek (3)
  • Small Town Murder Songs (1)
  • snake handling (2)
  • Social Gospel (1)
  • social imaginaries (1)
  • social justice (1)
  • socialism (1)
  • sociology (1)
  • solidarity with the oppressed (1)
  • Sovereign Grace Ministries (3)
  • Spirit of Capitalism (1)
  • spirit phography (1)
  • spiritual warfare (2)
  • spirituality (2)
  • sports (1)
  • St. Francis (1)
  • statistics (6)
  • Stephen C. Meyer (1)
  • Stephen King (1)
  • student life (1)
  • Suess (1)
  • supernatural (1)
  • Supreme Court (5)
  • Susan Jacoby (2)
  • suspension of disbelief (4)
  • T.D. Jakes (1)
  • taxes (2)
  • teaching (8)
  • Ted Cruz (2)
  • televangelists (3)
  • Ten Commandments (1)
  • Terry Gross (1)
  • testimony (1)
  • Texas (1)
  • Thanksgiving (1)
  • The Birds (1)
  • The Color of Christ (1)
  • The Columbiad (1)
  • The Conjuring (1)
  • The Exorcist (1)
  • The Harbinger (1)
  • The Pale King (1)
  • the secular (5)
  • the South (2)
  • the work we do (3)
  • theodicy (1)
  • theology (3)
  • theory (1)
  • thinking (16)
  • This American Life (2)
  • Thomas Kincade (1)
  • Thomas Nagel (1)
  • Tim LaHaye (1)
  • Timothy Dolan (2)
  • Tony Perkins (1)
  • Tosca Lee (2)
  • tracts (1)
  • transatlantic (1)
  • travel (1)
  • Travis Alexander (1)
  • Treaty of Tripoli (1)
  • Tübingen (3)
  • Tulsi Gabbard (1)
  • TV (3)
  • Tyndale House (1)
  • Tyndale House vs. Sebelius (2)
  • UFOs (1)
  • UK (1)
  • unbelief (3)
  • Unitarians (1)
  • United Church of Christ (2)
  • United States v. Windsor (1)
  • USA Today (1)
  • utopia (1)
  • V.P. Roychowdhury (1)
  • Valerie Weaver-Zercher (1)
  • Van Orden v. Perry (1)
  • Vatican II (1)
  • violence (3)
  • Virgin of Guadalupe (1)
  • voting guides (1)
  • Walter Owens (1)
  • war (2)
  • weekend music (7)
  • welfare (1)
  • Westboro Baptist (1)
  • why philosophy? (4)
  • William F. Buckley (1)
  • William J. Lynn (1)
  • William James (1)
  • William Jennings Bryan (1)
  • Willow Creek (1)
  • women (1)
  • worldview (1)
  • worship (4)
  • WPA (1)
  • writing (4)
  • Zealot (1)
  • Zurich (1)

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (147)
    • ►  August (5)
    • ►  July (21)
    • ►  June (15)
    • ►  May (21)
    • ►  April (18)
    • ►  March (23)
    • ▼  February (20)
      • 'Free exercise' of religion & the covering up of c...
      • Things that Žižek says in between saying other things
      • No title
      • Evangelicals so dominate the North American religi...
      • What can be learned from repeated misprints in jou...
      • No title
      • Church suppers changing lives
      • Pope speaks on Dorothy Day
      • No title
      • Coming soon
      • American evangelicals ♥ Pope Benedict XVI
      • The North American papabiles
      • Lecrae and the future of Christian music markets
      • Wohl dem, des Hilfe der Gott Jakobs ist; des Hoffn...
      • Habermas' secular sources
      • Beyond "religious liberty"
      • No title
      • Francis Schaeffer and the death of Baby Doe
      • Doubt in the library
      • God and Mammon and religious liberty
    • ►  January (24)
  • ►  2012 (153)
    • ►  December (33)
    • ►  November (17)
    • ►  October (21)
    • ►  September (29)
    • ►  August (29)
    • ►  July (22)
    • ►  June (2)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile