ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

Sunday Closing Law in North Dakota

The Mark of the Beast!!!

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Prophetic Intelligence Briefings

Sunday Closing Law in North Dakota · July 27, 2011



The North Dakota Catholic Conference defended a state-wide Sunday closing law restricting Sunday shopping by saying that the law is in place to “preserve the common good by ensuring that society is not overtaken by work and profit.” The regulation benefits everybody, they said.



“The purpose of North Dakota’s Sunday closing law is not to impose times of worship. Nor is it to demand adherence to religious doctrine,” wrote Christopher Dodson, executive director of the North Dakota Catholic Conference.



While critics suggested that partial opening on Sundays does not “honor a Sabbath day,” Dodson responded by saying that the laws “‘serve a secular, not religious purpose.’ He said that all people need periods of rest and free time for the sake of their families, social lives and religious activities.” “Only when communities set aside time devoted to these functions can human persons prosper and develop,” he said.



Dodson pointed out that individuals, families and communities can experience negative consequences if they do not have common periods of rest.



Please note the idea of “common periods of rest” for members of society. This is a common argument used in favor of Sunday closing and Sunday rest laws. A common period of rest was one of the reasons why God gave the command to observe the seventh day. Now this very principle is being used to argue for the preservation of an alternate common rest day in place of the one God commanded.



Closing stores on Sunday mornings is not merely a secular purpose. That is usually when church is convened. And people naturally associate Sunday mornings with church. This suggests that there is more to the idea of Sunday closing laws than just secular purposes.



Also, Dodson did not fail to mention Roman Catholic Social doctrine when he said that the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church, “describes public authorities’ duty ‘to ensure that, for reasons of economic productivity, citizens are not denied time for rest and divine worship.’”



In spite of his own denials that the law serves a religious purpose, Dodson, who represents the Catholic Church in North Dakota nevertheless, includes in its purpose the human need for “divine worship.” He gives away the underlying purpose for Sunday closing. It is so that people can attend church. While they can attend church even if the shops are open, the Sunday closing law removes the temptation to shop, in theory, thus boosting church attendance by providing a common free time, when people normally go to church. Of course the Catholic Church doesn’t want to say that openly, but fundamentally, Sunday blue laws, as they are called, have this underlying purpose.



If common free time and store closing laws were provided on Thursday morning, the law would indeed be secular since very few, if anyone, goes to church on Thursday. But the fact that the law is coordinated to restrict shopping on Sunday morning inherently tends toward an underlying religious purpose.



The fact that the Roman Catholic Church is defending and promoting the so-called “secular” Sunday laws undermines the argument that they are secular. The Roman Catholic Church is a religion and is inherently promoting its own religious purposes.



Dodson concludes by saying that “Sunday closing laws are not about honoring the Sabbath day… They are about honoring people and families.” But the law doesn’t actually give a purpose. He is making that up. It is his opinion and that of the Catholic Church. The North Dakota law is inherently religious in its language, and it says not a word about families.



Interestingly, the wording also states that the law does not apply to a person who “in good faith observes a day other than Sunday as the Sabbath,” as long as he closes his business to the public on the same time period on the day he observes.



This provision does protect the minority faiths that observe a day other than Sunday as the Sabbath, but the way it is worded, clearly implies that the whole idea of the law in the first place, is for a religious purpose.



The notion that Sunday closing laws benefit the “common good” is essentially an argument for the cooperation between the church and the state. The “common good” refers to the majority of society. In other words, so long as the majority supports Sunday closing laws, the common good is served. However, majority decisions do not usually protect the rights of minority groups, particularly those of a religious minority.



Those defending Sunday laws have to misrepresent the laws themselves in order to support their claims.



EWTN News



North Dakota Statute

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Vatican official exhorts Catholics to set aside Sundays for God and rest

The Mark of the Beast!!!

Vatican official exhorts Catholics to set aside Sundays for God and rest

Rome, Italy, Jul 19, 2011 / 01:48 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Sunday should be a day for worship, rest and time with family and friends, said Monsignor Miquel Delgado Galindo, under secretary for the Pontifical Council for the Laity.
 
“The Church teaches us to set aside this day, the first day of the week on which we remember the resurrection of Jesus Christ, for divine worship and for human rest,” the monsignor recently told CNA.
 
“On Sundays Catholics should participate in the Holy Mass, the unbloody renewal of Christ’s sacrifice on the cross” and “the greatest expression of worship and adoration that man can offer to the Lord our God,” he said.

Sundays should also be a day “devoted to rest with family and friends,” he added.
 
Msgr. Galindo underscored the importance of Blessed John Paul II’s 1998 Apostolic Letter, “Dies Domini,” which exhorts the bishops, the clergy and the lay faithful to keep Sunday holy and to treat it as the Lord’s day.
 
“We need to realize that we need more time with family and friends. It is hard to give them time during the week because of our professional and social commitments,” he noted.
 
Sunday rest is “a human necessity,” he continued. 
 
“Man cannot always be working, just as a bow cannot be constantly pulled back, because at some point it will break.”
 
Catholics should not see rest as “doing nothing,” but rather as time in which they devote themselves to activities that require less physical or intellectual effort such as going on a family outing, reading a good book, playing sports or watching a worthwhile film. 
 
“This makes it possible to return to our routine work with renewed energy. We need Sundays from a religious and a human point of view,” Msgr. Galindo said.
 
Sunday, the Lord’s Day
 
The letter “Dies Domini” explains that the Lord’s Day—the term used to refer to Sundays since apostolic times—has always had a privileged place in the history of the Church because of its close relationship to the very nucleus of the Christian mystery.
 
Sundays remind us, in the weekly succession of time, of the day of Christ’s resurrection. Therefore, it is the Easter of each week, when we celebrate the victory of Christ over sin and death, the fulfillment of the first creation in him.
Related articles:
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SPECIAL REPORT: County Sheriffs Push Back Against Feds

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SPECIAL REPORT: County Sheriffs Push Back Against Feds

http://RTR.org | Americans are pushing back all over the country. It's very clear that a revolution is in full swing. Tea Parties have been organizing to fight the bailouts and taxation. Occupy Movements have be springing up to fight against Wall St corruption at the hands of the Federal Reserve. Americans are pulling their cash out of Big Banks and supporting local Credit unions, as we move into a heated election season where it looks like it's anyone's game.

In today's exclusive special report Gary Franchi is joined by Former Graham County Sheriff Richard Mack. They discuss the County Sheriff Project, a movement that will compound the effort to push back against an over reaching Federal Government, a movement that needs your support.

There are a few things you can do to support the County Sheriff Project:

1st. Visit their website at http://CountySheriffProject.org and make a financial contribution

2nd. Simply share this video to your social networks and email lists. http://on.fb.me/sharvid

3rd. Give your local Sheriff a copy of Sheriff Mack's book "The County Sheriff: America's Last Hope" available at http://SheriffMack.com, and tell them about the County Sheriff Project.

Website: http://CountySheriffProject.org
Facebook: http://on.fb.me/County-Sheriff-Project
Share it: http://on.fb.me/sharvid


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Sex Abuse & the Grandiose Narcissist

Catholic bishop gets deal to avoid criminal charges

Amplify’d from www.wtvr.com

Catholic bishop gets deal to avoid criminal charges

Carey Gillam
KANSAS CITY, Missouri (Reuters) - The top Roman Catholic official for the Kansas City Diocese agreed on Tuesday to have his actions monitored by prosecutors in order to avoid criminal charges for failing to turn in a priest suspected of creating child pornography.

Bishop Robert Finn, the leader of the 134,000-member diocese, is the highest-ranking Catholic official ever to face U.S. criminal charges in a child sexual abuse case.








Finn was indicted by a grand jury in Jackson County last month on a misdemeanor charge of failing to report Father Shawn Ratigan to police despite months of warnings by others that the 46-year-old priest potentially posed a threat. He has pleaded not guilty to those charges.
The allegations against the bishop are tied to evidence that even after a church computer technician made church officials aware of hundreds of photos of young girls on Ratigan's laptop, Finn did not report it to police nor to the parents and children who interacted with Ratigan.

Ratigan is accused of taking pornographic photos of young girls, including one that showed a young girl on a bed with her panties pulled aside, exposing her genitals.

Ratigan was eventually turned in by another diocese official five months after the pictures were discovered. He has been charged with 13 counts of child pornography and is in jail awaiting trial next summer.

Clay County prosecutors were pursuing criminal charges against Finn in addition to the charges brought by Jackson County, but the settlement announced Tuesday will defer any charges in Clay County as long as the bishop complies with the terms, prosecutors said.

The agreement announced Tuesday with Clay County prosecutors gives prosecutors oversight in the Kansas City-St. Joseph Diocese's handling of any case or complaint in which children might be victims for the next five years. It gives prosecutors five years to file charges against Finn, four years longer than the normal statute of limitations.

Finn agreed to report monthly directly to Clay County Prosecuting Attorney Daniel White, and to "apprise him of any and all reported suspicious or alleged abuse activities involving minors" throughout the diocese's Clay County facilities, the prosecutor's office said.

"This will be a learning experience for the bishop," said White in a statement announcing the deal. "The diocese and the bishop acknowledge past reporting systems had flaws; injecting an outsider into the mix - an outsider who can trigger a criminal investigation and file charges - gives parents and children in our community confidence that if anything were to happen, it will be promptly and effectively addressed."

Finn said in a statement that he was "grateful for the opportunity" to resolve the issue.

"The children of our community must be our first priority. Each deserves no more and no less," Finn said. "I stand ready to do all within my power not only to satisfy this agreement but also to ensure the welfare and safety of all children under our care."

(Reporting by Carey Gillam; Editing by Jackie Frank)
Read more at www.wtvr.com
 

Controversy surrounding service of altar girls at Mass

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Controversy surrounding service of altar girls at Mass

Controversy reflects tension surrounding role of women in the church

Controversy surrounding service of altar girls at Mass

A controversial subject rises again at the Arlington Diocese.

In 2006, the leader of the Diocese of Arlington announced that altar girls would be permitted at Roman Catholic churches in northern Virginia, but the decision would left up to individual priests.

At that time, Arlington and a diocese in Lincoln, Nebraska were the only two, out of nearly 200 in the United States that did not allow women and girls to serve at the altar, or to assist priests at Mass.

A vigil was held today at Corpus Christi Catholic Church, in northern Vir., to protest the church’s decision last year to switch back and no longer permit girls to be altar servers.

In 1994, the Vatican granted bishops the authority to permit altar girls to serve at Mass, according to the Associated Press. Later that year the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops decided to allows girls to serve. According to the AP, nearly all dioceses permitted altar girls.

One reason offered by bishops who resisted the decision was that the service should be preserved for boys who wished to follow the path to priests.

The Rev. Michael Taylor, Corpus Christi’s pastor, shares that belief, according to the Washington Post.

The paper reported that about a dozen families left the 1,100 church after the decision was made, and that the subject reflects “ongoing tensions among American Catholics over the role of women.”

A majority of churches, 60 percent, across northern and eastern Virginia still allow only altar boys, reported the Washington Post.

Girls who had already trained to serve at Mass, at Corpus Christi, have been permitted to continue, but they are not allowed to wear the same new robes that were given to boys.

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“The King’s Chapel, And The King’s Court”

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This message was preached by Chuck on Sunday, October 30, 2011, during the service at Liberty Fellowship.



To hear the message audio, simply click on the link below.



(Play sermon audio.)



More Liberty Fellowship information can be found here.

More livestream information can be found here.





A couple of weeks ago, I brought a Sunday message, which was taken from the Old Testament Book of Amos, chapter 7, verse 13, entitled, “The King’s Chapel, And The King’s Court.” In this chapter, the chief priest of Bethel, a man named Amaziah, scolded the prophet Amos for delivering an unpopular message against the kingdom of Jeroboam. In delivering his rebuke, he told Amos that neither he nor his message was welcome in Bethel, because “it is the king’s chapel, and it is the king’s court.” I cannot think of a passage of Scripture that is more relevant to what is happening in the United States of America today than this passage in the Book of Amos.



I invite readers to view or download this message by going to:



http://chuckbaldwinlive.com/home/?p=4130



I was reminded of this Biblical story again as I read the news report that a US judge has thrown out a suit brought against the Transportation Security Administration by former Minnesota Governor Jesse Ventura. According to Paul Joseph Watson at InfoWars.com, “Former Minnesota Governor Jesse Ventura said he would now refer to the country of his birth as the ‘Fascist States of America’ after a judge dismissed his case challenging airport pat downs, adding that his only recourse now would be to run for President.



“‘Ventura made his comments outside the federal courthouse in St. Paul, where in January he sued to challenge the Transportation Security Administration’s (TSA) airport security procedures,’ reports the Minneapolis Star Tribune.”



US District Judge Susan Richard Nelson rendered the decision.



Watson’s report continued saying, “A further detail that Ventura revealed on the Alex Jones Show which has not been picked up by mainstream media reports is the fact that Ventura’s lawyer was told the case could not go to a jury trial due to ‘secrecy reasons’ related to national security.



“‘You cannot know what’s legal for the TSA to do or not, it’s considered national security, so there’s no way to know if you’re being abused or not,’ said Ventura, adding, ‘The judge said it in the ruling, it’s secret and we have no way of knowing whether the Governor was abused or not.’”



The report also said, “Vowing to ‘never fly commercial’ again, Ventura gave a passionate press conference today, expressing his anger at TSA grope down procedures that force people like himself with metal implants to go through humiliating pat downs every time they pass through airport security.”



Watson concluded his report saying, “During his interview on the Alex Jones Show, Ventura put out a ‘come and get me’ plea to the Libertarian Party, indicating that he will run for President if they approach him. Ventura has also said he would seriously consider being Ron Paul’s Vice-President pick if the Congressman was successful in the Republican nomination or if Paul ran as the Libertarian Party candidate.”



This report reminded me of the above-mentioned Scriptural passage in the Book of Amos, because, historically, both the chapel (church) and the court are supposed to be independent of the executive power of government–regardless of what kind of executive power happens to be in place at the time. Historically, the chapel (church) is considered the province of God, and the court is considered the province of justice. But when government’s chief executive (king, president, prime minister, etc.) hijacks the chapel (church) and/or court, that executive government becomes tyrannical and despotic. The maintenance of freedom and liberty depends on an independent clergy and an independent court. But just as in Amos’ day, so in America today, neither the church nor the court is truly independent. Both are subjects of an omnipotent central government.



For many years, but especially since the events on 9/11/01, US courts have rolled over and played dead in the face of the usurpation of individual and State rights and do not even remotely resemble being the check and balance to government abuse of power as envisioned by America’s Founding Fathers and enshrined by the US Constitution. The Ventura case is a prime example.



In the name of “national security,” the courts have repeatedly “looked the other way” to the encroachments of liberty by the executive branch of the federal government. In his report, Watson wrote, “Referring to 9/11, Ventura questioned the reasoning behind the whole war on terror. ‘George Bush said we were attacked because they were jealous of our freedoms. So we take away our freedoms so they won’t be jealous anymore?’ he said. ‘I think they’re winning.’”



See Watson’s report at:



http://tinyurl.com/6bdtw6u



Well, Governor, I KNOW they are winning! The courts, like many in Congress, and even many in State governments, are little more than rubber stamps for what more and more looks like an American Fuhrer.



That leaves only the “chapel.” And, unfortunately, here, too, there is hardly any independence. Thanks to a brilliant piece of deception known as the 501c3 section of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC)–and a pervasive and fallacious interpretation of Romans chapter 13–the vast majority of today’s pastors, churches, and radio and TV preachers are modern-day Amaziahs: toadies for modern-day Jeroboams. To them, the church really is Jeroboam’s chapel. Believe me, these Amaziahs know exactly where Jeroboam has drawn the line. They know exactly where the “third rail” is, and they will not go near it!



And, trust me, too, when I say that when an Amos comes along (anyone who dares to challenge unlawful abuse of power by the executive branch of the federal government)–be his name Jesse Ventura, Ron Paul, or Chuck Baldwin–the modern-day “priests” will be as vocal and vociferous in their denunciations of said prophet as was Amaziah, the chief priest of Bethel.



Ladies and gentlemen, when the churches and courts lose their independence, when they lose their ability to think for themselves, when they lose their courage to stand against “the powers that be,” when they cannot be trusted to judge righteousness and stand for truth, then freedom and liberty are threatened with extinction in the land. And that is exactly the threat that these States United now face!



As for Governor Ventura, I applaud his courage to face the giant, and I hope he will stay on the battlefield and help us fight this leviathan, because there are still a lot of Amoses out there who will not submit to Jeroboam’s tyranny or Amaziah’s coercion. There are still millions of red-blooded, freedom-loving Americans who have vowed to live free or die trying! And I am one of them!



Please don’t give up, Governor!



P.S. My constitutional attorney son Tim Baldwin and I have just released the second edition of our blockbuster book, “Romans 13: The True Meaning of Submission.” The new edition is simplified, succinct, and very salient. I am absolutely convinced that if churches and Christians throughout America could get a good grasp of the true meaning of Romans 13, we could literally change the direction of the country! This imbecilic “obey-the-government-no-matter-what” misinterpretation of Romans 13 is as much responsible for America’s demise as is anything else that one can name. I strongly encourage readers to purchase this book for themselves and for their friends and relatives–and especially for their pastors and fellow churchmen.

The sacrificial lambs

Amplify’d from www.ottawacitizen.com

The sacrificial lambs

By Janice Kennedy, The Ottawa Citizen

This week alone: a Kansas City Catholic bishop got his knuckles rapped for shielding a priest accused of taking hundreds of pornographic pictures of children, some as late as last year; a Chilean priest, protected by his bishop, was connected with sexual misconduct stretching back more than 40 years; residents of northeast Pennsylvania learned that a former parish priest, who'd also worked at a high school, is accused of sexual misconduct - like his brother, defrocked two years ago.

Sexual abuse, cover up, restitution: just another week in the life of the Roman Catholic Church, right?

More or less. But while the abuses, revelations and payouts continue to dominate the routine of the world's largest Christian church, its apologists have adopted a new defensive angle.

Those Catholics who remain in denial about the corrosive rot at the institutional core of their church have always had an impressive arsenal of cynical excuses to trot out with each new public shaming.

The abuse, they like to say, is the work of a tiny minority, a few bad apples, but the media blow it out of all proportion. Such coverage is an anti-Catholic attempt to blacken the church's eye.

Besides, the apologists continue, abuse happens everywhere, not just in the church. And when it has happened in the church, you can understand why: priests of recent decades have been so infected by the disease of postmodern liberalism you can hardly blame them.

In any case, the Pope has apologized, and things have changed with the Vatican's new guidelines. Most of the abuse talk is irrelevant ancient history.

Right. All this has constituted the official line for years. But now there's another weapon in the excuse arsenal.

The latest medium of exculpation for Catholic diehards? Institutional self-preservation - as a good thing.

In the wake of the Penn State scandal, observers everywhere have been condemning institutions that turn a blind eye to criminal exploitation so they can preserve reputation and safeguard revenues.

Church defenders, however, have taken this self-preservation line and run with it in a different direction. Now, when an institution like the Church protects itself by hiding the sins of its ministers - shuffling creeps from one parish to another, shielding criminals from civil authorities - it is justifiable. As columnist David Warren put it last Sunday, their actions and inaction are not even "necessarily morally contemptible. For they are in a position to see that more harm than good could come of it" - "it" being admission of guilt.

In short, some twisted form of logic dictates that the victimization of children is the lesser evil, while the preservation of this mighty fortress dedicated to God's work - or the illusion thereof - is the greater good.

They don't get it. They don't get that their particular institution is not just a school, benevolent organization or community group that can shrug sadly about a few inevitable bad apples.

They don't get that it's not (supposed to be) a mere shrine to Latinate ritual, an empty historical and artistic shell. They don't get that their church, notwithstanding its history, is supposed to be above corruption, representing the good and the Godness in people.

Destroying the lives of children and shattering the trust of untold others is not merely a regrettable and costly indiscretion, one that repeated anguished apologies might eventually erase. In an institution ostensibly devoted to the precise opposite, it is an evil so monstrous it threatens - as it should - the church's very future.

For God's sake, how many times does it have to be said? There is no greater evil than sinning against children.

Do they think their founder was kidding when he said (according to Matthew) that those who corrupt children would be better off drowned in the sea, millstones around their necks?

They must, if they see child sexual exploitation as a lesser evil, to be brushed off with a glib "No, it's not nice, but it happens." Or "Seriously, it's not the end of the world." Or "Nice payout, though, huh?"

Which is stunning, given the mountains of accumulated evidence, the tragic stats, reports, stories and obituaries that testify to the destruction of countless - well, sacrificial lambs, apparently. When a priest, revered and representing The Good, sexually abuses a child (or adolescent, a mixed-up and stillevolving kid in an adult body), he creates enduring disillusionment, loss of faith, mistrust of authority, self-doubt, psychological and sexual confusion and, of course, trauma. He contributes to the creation of an adult who is often angry, unshakably vulnerable, incapable of trusting relationships and prone to whatever dulls the pain, whether booze, drugs or suicide.

Multiply all that by all the victims. Then add the effects on all their families, friends and larger communities.

And the institution's self-preservation remains the greater good?

There are not millstones enough to go around.

Janice Kennedy writes here Saturdays. Email 4janicekennedy@gmail. com

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SOCIETY’S HIDDEN SECRET

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SOCIETY’S HIDDEN SECRET: SEX ABUSE Sex –Predators Cross all Boundaries – Relational, Religious, Cultural And Professional

By Dr. Bikkar Singh Lalli,

Given the opportunity even the “Rishies and Munnies (Holy Men) succumb to the temptation and lure of lust”, said my totally unlettered grand-father. He further added that “when they are young and are alone, even closely related individuals can indulge in sinful activities.”

Indeed there is some weight and truth in the wise man’s concerns.

While watching the football game between Penn State and Nebraska  on Saturday, I was feeling sorry for the fired coach, Joe Paterno, of Nitnay Lions. What happened at Penn State campus, reminded me of the assertion by my grandfather and I vividly recalled a disgusting happening which my class fellow at D.A.V. College Jalandhar described to me. He was giving private Math lessons to a girl studying in grade 10. One day that girl started crying and told him that her father was sexually abusing her. That incident of the violation of innocence of a helpless girl by her own father reminded me of several other similar episodes of sadistic nature. One of the prominent cases was that of World Boxing champion Dave Hilton Jr from Montreal, who was found guilty of sexually assaulting his two young daughters, and was sent to jail for seven years.

On Saturday, I did not find my favorite football coach Joe Paterno with the Penn State team. “As you know, the kids that were the victims, I think we ought to say a prayer for them,”. This statement from Joe does not cut. Because he had failed to inform the police when he was told that his assistant, Jerry Sandusky, was seen sexually molesting a 12 year old boy in a locker in the Univ. gym washroom. Joe paid a very heavy price for keeping his silence. The most celebrated 84 years old coach was ingloriously fired along with the President of the Pennsylvania State University. After having coached the team for 46 years, and having won the most football bowls in the N.C.A.A. history, bringing two national championships to the institution, his firing was a tragic end of the career a legend.. He did inform his superiors, but at that time it was believed that Paterno was the “de facto” superior and he should have called the police as the law required him to do…

In Canada, studies show that up to 50 per cent of sport participants have experienced mild harassment to abuse. More than 20 per cent of elite athletes have had sexual intercourse with people in positions of authority in sport. In a study of high school students, over 40 per cent identified sporting environments as places of harassment. By looking at Graham James, who was coaching Swift Current Broncos, a WHL junior team, it was hard to imagine that he was a pedophile. I saw him behind the bench once when Broncos were playing Saskatoon Blades.  A 14 year old boy, Sheldon Kennedy from Manitoba, was recruited to play junior level hockey – the first stage of playing in NHL. In 1997, he disclosed publically that for years he suffered sexual abused at the hands of his ice hockey coach, Graham James, who controlled Kennedy’s hockey career and his life from the time he was 14 to 19. It was Kennedy’s testimony against his former coach that helped end the silence about the physical and sexual abuse of athletes. “The coach is so respected,” says Kennedy. “Your parents send you away and say, ‘Do what he says.’ At that age, you listen — it’s the first step if you want to play pro.”

When we talk about the safety of our children can we trust people we know and people in a position of authority? Are our children safe in the care of priests/granthies? In 2002, the Boston Globe uncovered a scandal of international proportions when it began running a series of investigative reports detailing dozens of cases in which 1200 Catholic priests had sexually abused scores of children. More than 80 percent of the church’s victims were male. Those revelations shook the church to its core, prompting outrage and calls for reform all the way from California to New York to the Vatican in Rome.

We cannot be sure that our children are safe in Schools either. Last week, Delta Police recommended a charge of sexual assault against a 43-year-old male Delta Secondary School teacher after a young girl reported being attacked near a school gym. The teacher, whose name has not been released and who has not been charged in connection with the case, was arrested Nov. 6. The alleged offence occurred Nov. 4.  A national study, conducted by American Association of University Women, reported by Jenny Anderson (in New York Times, Nov. 7, 2011), reveals that nearly half of 7th to 12th graders experienced sexual harassment in the last school year, with 87 percent of those who have been harassed reporting negative effects such as absenteeism, poor sleep and stomachaches. Overall, 45 percent of students survey said they were harassed during the 2010-11 year. This student-on-student sexual harassment is such an epidemic it has become a normal part of the school experience for many students. Several parents from our community have mentioned to me that their son or daughter is not “listening” to them. My suggestion has been and still is that: “Talk to your child, express your loving support, and try to find out if he/she is being harassed or bullied”.. I would tell any of my kids, that his/her body is a temple which must be from desecration, that adults aren’t supposed to touch and their bodies in sexual ways, and that if anyone, no matter who it is, or how close we are, ever touches one of them in a way they find disturbing or embarrassing, they should come to me, and I will believe them, and I will act.

The tragedy is that only 9 percent of the victims report to the parents or to the school authorities. They do not report because of the fear that they will not be believed; fear that they will be blamed for the abuse; the intimidation of the power of the teacher; and because of the inability of most children to talk about sexual matters with adults, for cultural or other reasons. In our Indo-Canadian community there is a taboo against using “S” word in presence of females. Even in the pitch dark evening of my life I cannot discuss sexuality with my children and grandchildren. It is a difficult undertaking, However, we can handle it tactfully.

As parents, we have the responsibility to teach our children morals and values. We cannot depend solely on the schools to fulfill this important duty. What is going on in school corridors, school play grounds and classrooms, is also the result of the moral failings of the modern society. The vulgarity shown, acted/depicted in Soap Operas, movies and commercial ads, are making the individuals less sensitive and more indifferent towards those who are preyed upon. Thus, it is better to empower our children with self-confidence. Teach them the art of anticipation and tell them to keep in mind the Murphy’s Law”: “Anything that can go wrong will go wrong”. They should always take carefully measured steps.

Francis Bacon said “Parents, who wish to train up their children in the way they should go, must go in the way in which they would have their children go.”

Read more at thelinkpaper.ca
 

Belgian prosecutors target 100 'paedophile priests'

Amplify’d from www.expatica.com
Belgian prosecutors target 100 'paedophile priests'

Belgium's federal prosecutors have passed on the names of some 100 suspected paedophile Catholic priests to local prosecution departments for possible action, a newspaper reported Saturday.

The Flemish-language daily Het Laatste Niuews, quoting judicial sources, said the main intention was to keep an eye on the suspects to ensure they do not offend again.

The report said the list was drawn up on the basis of information gathered in controversial police raids on the headquarters of the Mechelen-Brussels diocese in June last year.

Other data came from evidence gathered by a special church commission on paedophilia and the complaints of abuse victims, it said.

Officials were not available Saturday to confirm the report, which also said that some local prosecutors had warned suspect clerics that they were aware of the allegations against them.

After similar scandals in the United States, Ireland and Germany, the country was rocked in April 2010 with revelations that the bishop of Bruges, Roger Vangheluwe, had abused a nephew for 13 years.

Vangheluwe's subsequent decision to quit opened a floodgate of allegations, with one report a year ago revealing almost 500 cases of abuse in Catholic institutions since the 1950s, including 13 known suicides by victims.

In September some 70 alleged victims filed joint legal action against the Belgian Church and the Holy See, the first such class action suit in Belgium and the first such suit involving the Vatican in Europe.

Read more at www.expatica.com