ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

Government as God

Amplify’d from www.americanthinker.com

Government as God

While my car was getting an oil change, I buried my face in a magazine article.  I was trying earnestly, albeit unsuccessfully, to drown the constant rattling of a young newscaster's pedantic discourse streaming via the flat-screen TV the shop's owner had installed to oblige customers not driven to cultivate the rare skill of introspection.
I was suddenly perked to study the substance of the oft-repeated sound bite blaring in my ear, despite the fact that the frame from which it emanated betrayed the shallowness of a wet piece of toast.
"Who should get the Bush era tax cuts?" inquired the commentator in a pretentiously rhetorical fashion.
Should?  In one mere auxiliary verb, the sprightly news head had succinctly encapsulated the essence of liberal orthodoxy, particularly in the context of what its fiercest advocates believe is the collective moral duty of the most prosperous beneficiaries of a capitalist system.
My main objection was that the handsomely robed anchor implied that the government errs on the side of charity when it puts a temporary halt on the mandatory annual plundering of its citizens' wealth.  Presumably, when the government demands less money, this should be viewed as a kindness on its part for which the workers owe an incalculable debt.
Admittedly, the constant blabber spouted hourly by saucy automatons posing as reporters may not be enough reason for concern over Caesar's growing encroachment in our lives.  But the mindset that posits such questions in the first place is one which casts the ignorant masses as hopelessly dependent upon the edicts of an all-wise and powerful government, which is divinely endowed with the authority to arbitrate who should and should not be granted the "privilege" of keeping a portion of their own hard-earned wages.
I wrestled with a similar sense of bewilderment when I heard our illustrious president warmly reassure the people that in light of the government's undeserved magnanimity toward its citizens, manifested in its willingness to recommend that the Bush era tax cuts be extended, citizens' payroll checks at the beginning of the year would yield a significant bonus.  Hence, we are also to thank the president for persuading our elected officials to let us retain some of our own money.
Not the least of the reasons for this gratitude from victims of the government's splurging is the way in which the latter treats wealthier citizens, towards whom it feels no moral obligation to extend such leniency.  In fact, these well-off citizens deserve to be taxed more than others, mainly because the government, now posing as the supreme moral arbiter of justice, estimates that this coveted segment of society produces and accumulates more profits than they are reasonably expected to spend.  One eminent senator from Vermont even argued this very point recently.
This logic is born of a peculiar resentment toward the rich, an ancestral grudge harbored by many on the left who like to romanticize about the age of cruel and indifferent landlords accumulating wealth on the backs of poor laborers.  Once this grudge is awakened, which happens whenever liberals regain ascendancy, the fact that today the doors of opportunity and success are available to virtually anyone willing to put in the effort becomes a wholly indiscernible reality. 
And so have most citizens now long-conditioned to view taxes as the first fruits of the harvest awaiting proper designation by the government.  It is the government which decides what portion of our profits we are allowed to keep for our own sustenance and what portion constitutes a fundamentally unmerited excess that we are morally obligated to equally distribute amongst our less affluent peers.  A tithe, if you will, that is rightfully demanded by this supreme entity, without whom we would presumably lack the means and the necessary conditions to generate wealth in the first place.
The government has, in essence, taken on the role of such a deity.  As in the scriptures, not to present the tithe offering at God's altar is the same as robbing God of his due, so in Caesar's domain, it is the duty of every citizen to present his or her tithe before the altar of Government.
But unlike God's, this is not a free will offering.  To refuse to pay this tithe is, as we well know, a criminal offense of the highest degree.
Thus has Caesar become a God of sorts -- and not a terribly merciful one at that -- to whom citizens should resign their fate.  Moreover, we are to be eternally grateful that this infinitely wise, coldly equitable master has, for a season, decided to leave the ration paid for its unique services temporarily unaltered.  Yet it does not cease to abrogate the prerogative to resume this purging whenever it sees fit.  Citizens have no choice but to acquiesce to its ever-increasing pecuniary demands.  And why shouldn't they, since the government is a much better administrator of their capital than they could ever be?  Even Orwell himself could not have foreseen a more divinely inspired arrangement.
This is what the long-debunked pipe dream of wealth redistribution has wrought.  But most ironic is the fact that the very people who want to stoke the embers of class hatred, such as the Obama, the Harry Reid, and the Nancy Pelosi clans, are all people of extraordinary wealth.  One thing they also have in common is that they like to spend extravagantly when it comes to other people's money.
Read more at www.americanthinker.com
 

Jesuit school sued over alleged donation mishap

Amplify’d from abclocal.go.com

Jesuit school sued over alleged donation mishap

Strake Jesuit College Preparatory School is being sued by a rejected applicants father who claimed he donated $40,000 to the school on the premise his contributions would ensure his sons acceptance to the famed private school.


Strake Jesuit College Preparatory School is being sued by a rejected applicant's father who claimed he donated $40,000 to the school on the premise his contributions would ensure his son's acceptance to the famed private school.




HOUSTON (KTRK) --
One of Houston's most well-known private schools is being sued by a father who says he was misled into donating tens of thousands of dollars.

Michael Bardwil, an alumnus of Strake Jesuit College Preparatory School says he was first approached by a few of the school's staff members and volunteers in 2006. At that time, they were raising money for improvements to the campus. He says they knew he wanted his son to attend Jesuit.

According to the lawsuit, after several meetings and discussions, one of the school's fundraisers told Bardwil that the school was getting harder to get into and a contribution was important to ensure his son's acceptance into the school.

Bardwil pledged to pay $50,000 over five years and says he was told this would ensure his son would be admitted. Well four years and $40,000 later, his son was rejected from the school.

Bardwil says when confronted the school president, Father Daniel Lahart told him for the first time since the contributions were solicited, the admissions committee made decisions without knowledge of contributions.

Strake Jesuit's spokesperson told Eyewitness News the school will not comment on pending litigation.





(Copyright ©2010 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)


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The rich are failing to 'shoulder their load', says Archbishop

A call for greater control for Robin Hood!

Amplify’d from www.independent.co.uk

The rich are failing to 'shoulder their load', says Archbishop

Rowan Williams stressed the importance of people working together to rebuild trust

Rowan Williams stressed the importance of people working together to rebuild trust

The Queen talked sport, the Archbishop blasted the rich and the Pope called for peace in the Middle East while picking a fight with China. Variety was the distinguishing feature of a medley of Christmas Day messages from around the world.

In her annual broadcast, the Queen broke twice with tradition, first by using sport as a theme and second by broadcasting from Hampton Court Palace rather than Buckingham Palace. The sovereign said this year she had seen "how important sport is in bringing people together", with benefits for communities "of all kinds".

In his Christmas address at the Vatican, Pope Benedict called for peace in the Middle East, before going on to condemn China for its treatment of Christians. "May the light of Christmas shine forth anew in the land where Jesus was born, and inspire Israelis and Palestinians to strive for a just and peaceful coexistence," the Pope said. He added that he prayed Christmas would "strengthen the spirit of... the faithful in mainland China" and criticised "the limitations imposed on their freedoms of religion and conscience".

The Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, stressed the importance of people working together to rebuild trust, while making a robust attack on the rich. He said that confidence was in short supply "given the massive crises of trust that have shaken us all in the last couple of years and the lasting sense that the most prosperous have yet to shoulder their load".

President Obama used his weekly address to the nation to praise US troops: "Even as we speak, many are fighting halfway around the globe – in hopes that, someday, our children and grandchildren won't have to."

In a Christmas message to UK forces last week, David Cameron cited casualties as "the biggest worry that I have". "I think very carefully about it but I do think what we're doing is right," he said.

Read more at www.independent.co.uk
 

MI6 codebreaker's bizarre death provides fodder for conspiracy theories

One of the most famous unsolved deaths is that of Roberto Calvi, found hanging from Blackfriars Bridge in 1982. Suggestions that the Italian financier, who is alleged to have had links to the Vatican, the mafia and freemasonry, took his own life were dispelled and his death was classed as murder. Five people were tried in Rome in 2007 for the killing, but no one was convicted.

Amplify’d from www.guardian.co.uk

MI6 codebreaker's bizarre death provides fodder for conspiracy theories

Gareth Williams, whose body was found inside a sports bag four months ago, joins a list of unexplained deaths that fuel conspiracy theories

Police probe spy death
Codebreaker Gareth Williams, whose body was found locked inside a sports bag four months ago. Photograph: Metropolitan Police/PA

MI6 codebreaker Gareth Williams, whose decomposing body was found locked inside a sports bag four months ago, is the latest addition to a small group whose unexplained deaths provide fodder for conspiracy theorists.

An early entrant to the club was Lionel "Buster" Crabb, an MI6 diver who in 1956 was dispatched into Portsmouth harbour to reconnoitre a Russian ship and was never seen again. A headless and handless corpse was found in the vicinity a year later, but there was no proof it was Crabb.

One of the most famous unsolved deaths is that of Roberto Calvi, found hanging from Blackfriars Bridge in 1982. Suggestions that the Italian financier, who is alleged to have had links to the Vatican, the mafia and freemasonry, took his own life were dispelled and his death was classed as murder. Five people were tried in Rome in 2007 for the killing, but no one was convicted.

In 1978, Georgi Markov, a Bulgarian communist defector living in London, died after being stabbed in the thigh by a man holding an umbrella. A postmortem examination established that he had been killed by a tiny pellet containing the poison ricin. No one was charged and the subsequent deaths of those believed to have sanctioned the killing helped to perpetuate interest in the case. Markov's death bore similarities to the murder of Alexander Litvinenko, who was poisoned in 2006 by suspected Russian agents but, again, no one was charged.

The police have cooled towards the idea that Williams's death was linked to his job, but if he had not worked for MI6 it would have gained little attention. Fascination with his demise will end only if the case is proven conclusively to have had nothing to do with his secret service activities.

Read more at www.guardian.co.uk
 

Vatican Ambassador to Zambia Nicola Girasoli calls for more effort in poverty reduction

Amplify’d from www.postzambia.com
Girasoli calls for more effort in poverty reduction
By Masuzyo Chakwe
Vatican Ambassador to Zambia Nicola Girasoli
Vatican Ambassador to Zambia Nicola Girasoli
IT is unfortunate that the gap between the rich and the poor is noticed more during great feasts like Christmas, says the Vatican envoy.



In his Christmas message, Vatican Ambassador to Zambia Nicola Girasoli said more concrete steps and actions needed to be taken in order to reduce the gap between the poor and rich people.



Archbishop Girasoli said this was so considering the favourable economic trends that had benefited Zambia this year and the consistent GDP growth the country had achieved.



“Especially during the great feasts like Christmas we notice more how this gap is becoming even larger. A serious commitment is required to create new and long-term jobs. In fact the happiness of the successful economic growth of Zambia, it seems that does not really benefit and touch all levels of Zambian society,” he said.



He said development should benefit all citizens.



Archbishop Girasoli (left) said there was need to increase the labour force and have more people access an affordable credit system.



He said the public economic sector should always consider the benefit of all Zambians as the main priority for developing the country.



Archbishop Girasoli said the natural resources belonged to all Zambians and a stronger commitment should be put in place by public institutions so that the resources are used for the benefit of all.



“Most of the natural resources are not renewable so when they are taken they disappear forever. That is why natural resources should benefit all Zambian citizens and should be aimed at producing a durable impact for improving the socio-economic conditions of poor urban and rural areas,” he said.

Archbishop Girasoli urged people never to despair as Christmas should strengthen people’s hopes and expectations.



He said for those who were suffering, those without a stable income, the unemployed, the sick and those who had lost their jobs, it would be a Christmas full of worries for their future.



“But all Christians know that life is a passage under a tunnel; at the end there is always the light, the light of Christmas. During these holidays when families gather together to celebrate Christmas, we all shall encourage each other: The Child Jesus lets us know that the future for those who are now suffering will be radiant,” he said.



Archbishop Girasoli said Christmas should also be an occasion to balance what happened during this year in people’s lives and in society.



He said Christmas was the feast of the poor, because God had chosen to be born as a poor.

He said only unity and peace could assure a sustainable development which could benefit the poor and the marginalised classes of society.



“Let us work together in proclaiming One Zambia, One Nation. While the country is preparing for the general election next year let us pray that different political views and the legitimate aspirations of all those involved in the political arena will be presented and defended in a peaceful way,” said Archbishop Girasoli.



Archbishop Girasoli said religion should keep the role of a unifying pillar of society particularly during the coming elections.
Read more at www.postzambia.com
 

What the Military Must Learn from the Church

Another attack on the separation of church and state! This is the whole plan behind repealing "don't ask, don't tell."

Amplify’d from www.ncregister.com

What the Military Must Learn from the Church

by Tim Drake

Yesterday, our Commander in Chief – the man whose most central oath is to strengthen and defend our country and its military – signed into law an action that will do more to damage U.S. military strength than any bombs or tanks of our enemies. With all due respect to separation of Church and State, the U.S. military could learn some valuable lessons from the Roman Catholic Church.

        The combat forces of the U.S. military, like the Catholic priesthood, have always been built on a distinctly masculine bond of obligation. Both bands of brothers gather to protect something Sacred. The priestly gathering is most visible whenever two or more gather around the altar to celebrate Mass, with Jesus Christ in the Eucharist, at the Sacred Center.

        Just as the military bands together in its collective duty to protect the nation and her citizens, so the priestly fraternity bands together in its duty to spiritually protect the Church and her members.

        This week, our elected officials voted to repeal the military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy. By so doing, for the first time in this nation’s history, they’ve opened the U.S. military’s combat forces to practicing homosexuals. It would behoove the military to take a look at how such an open policy toward homosexuals worked in another male fraternity, that is, the Catholic priesthood.

       

Been There, Done That       

        In Michael Rose’s 2002 book Goodbye! Good Men: How Catholic Seminaries Turned Away Two Generations of Vocations From the Priesthood, he explores the Church’s own period of openly accepting homosexual seminary candidates. Many seminaries celebrated the intimacies of homosexual relations, which are directly opposed to true “brotherhood.”

        Rose describes the “lavenderization” of seminaries such as Chicago’s Mundelein Seminary and the Catholic University of Louvain in Belgium, and the homosexual culture present there even into the 1990s. 

        It is this culture that gave rise to the ordination of homosexuals who later went on to become serial abusers, men like Daniel McCormack, who reportedly had engaged in homosexual relations prior to and during his time at Mundelein. After his ordination, Father Daniel McCormack molested at least 23 boys.

        The connection between homosexuality and abuse was clearly demonstrated in 2004’s The Nature and Scope of the Problem of Sexual Abuse of Minors by Catholic Priests and Deacons in the United States, otherwise known as the John Jay Report, which was conducted by the John Jay College of Criminal Justice and commissioned by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.

        According to the John Jay Report, 81% of the victims of clerical sexual abuse were males, the majority of whom were between the ages of 11-17.

Dr. Paul McHugh, former psychiatrist in chief at Johns Hopkins Hospital, has said that the report shows that the Catholic abuse crisis was “homosexual predation on American Catholic youth.”

Psychiatrist Dr. Rick Fitzgibbons has echoed that.

        “The John Jay report has revealed clearly that the crisis in the Church is not one of pedophilia but of homosexuality. The primary victims have not been children but adolescent males. Fitzgibbons told Catholic News Agency that “every priest whom I treated who was involved with children sexually had previously been involved in adult homosexual relationships.”

        It has always been the policy of the Church not to accept homosexuals as priests.  For three decades that policy was egregiously disregarded. Following the sexual abuse crisis in the Church, and the results of the John Jay Report, the Church reaffirmed its policy in the 2005 statement, “Instruction Concerning the Criteria for the Discernment of Vocations with Regard to Persons with Homosexual Tendencies in View of their Admission to the Seminary and to Holy Orders.”

        That statement indicated that “the Church…cannot admit to the seminary or to holy orders those who practice homosexuality, present deep-seated homosexual tendencies or support the so-called ‘gay culture.’” Furthermore, the statement went on, “Such persons, in fact, find themselves in a situation that gravely hinders them from relating correctly to men and women.”

        In an accompanying Vatican commentary on the statement, Monsignor Tony Anatrella argued that theologically, homosexual priests cannot effectively incarnate either the “spousal bond” between God and the Church, or “spiritual paternity.”

        “He must, in principle, be suitable for marriage and able to exercise fatherhood over his children,” wrote Monsignor Anatrella. Because the priest acts in the “person of Christ,” Anatrella said that the Church calls only “men mature in their masculine identity.”

        “The Church has the right to refuse holy orders to those who do not have the requested attitudes or who, in one way or another, are not in harmony with the teaching it has received from its divine master,” he added, saying that the homosexual tendency was actually a “counterindication to the call to holy orders.”

        Homosexual relationships caused a deep fracture in the priestly male fraternity. Pseudo-intimacy and intrigue replaced the outward looking evangelization of apostolic brotherhood. Bishops were unwilling to discipline the abusive priests under their charge. The Communio became divided. Religious leaders hid their own homosexual proclivities. The worst priests desacralized the liturgy and their vows and their priestly identity, while good priests often became isolated, fearful, and rigid. All priests were maimed.



The Consequences of Eroticizing Philia       

        What will be the result once the military has been compromised by disordered love? What will happen when an 18-year-old recruit finds himself in an unequal power differential with a superior officer who wants something more than push-ups? What’s likely to happen when brotherhood is tested on the field in the midst of battle?

        Albert Einstein once said that doing the same thing, yet expecting different results, is the definition of insanity.

        Is there some relationship that all of us can understand, which is deeply harmed by eroticization? That relationship, of course, would be the family. This is why the incest taboo is universal. The relationship of brothers in a family is powerful because there’s absolutely a sexual taboo which disallows eroticizing that relationship. Just as incest destroys the family as a body, the eroticization of male-male relationships destroys true brotherhood – the kind of brotherhood that is necessary for group strength and unity.

        According to the report of the Pentagon’s Comprehensive Review Working Group, 62% of service members predicted potentially negative effects from the repeal. 67% of U.S. Marine combat forces said that putting homosexuals in their units would hurt their effectiveness in the field. 48% of Marines said that it would hurt their effectiveness in “intense combat situations.”

        General James Amos, commandant of the Marines, told reporters that the distraction of having homosexuals in the ranks could cost Marines their lives.

        When the loyalty of a brother soldier is corrupted – whether in barracks, cockpits, or foxholes – the strength of a nation’s military is severely compromised.

        Disordered love leads to disordered loyalties.

        Take, for example, the case of open homosexual, Army specialist Bradley Manning. As reported by the U.K.’s “The Telegraph,” Manning is the soldier who was demanding “equality on the battlefield,” and spent more than eight months downloading hundreds of thousands of classified documents and cables, which he later leaked to Wikileak.org creator Julian Assang.



Modeling Properly Ordered Male Love

        Just as society can learn about marriage from the Church, the U.S. military can learn from the properly ordered male protective duty.

        How ironic, that at the same time that Congress was voting to impose its morality on the American military, Pope Benedict XVI spoke with the Vatican Curia about the disastrous results of a corrupted priesthood.

        In his Christmas message, Pope Benedict said that the Church’s garment has been torn by the sins of her priests.

        “We must ask ourselves what was wrong in our proclamation, in our whole way of living the Christian life, to allow such a thing to happen,” said the Pope, citing the reigning philosophy of the sexually derelict 1970s. “It was maintained – even within the realm of Catholic theology – that there is no such thing as evil in itself or good in itself…Morality is replaced by a calculus of consequences, and in the process it ceases to exist. The effects of such theories are evident today.”

        Yet, the Church bears, in herself, the answer. The Church already possesses a robust anthropology of male love. We, as a Church, have a sacramentalized male bond. We’ve been informed by the institution we are in that there is a proper way for men to love one another. The priestly fraternity images brotherly love, properly ordered. Homosexual behavior images disordered affection.

        In the priesthood, the priest unites with the spotless Bride – the Church. The priest sacrifices his own desires, giving up the love of another, for a far greater love. He surrenders his own singular needs and desires for the good of the many – Christ’s Body, the Church.

        A soldier makes this same archetypal masculine sacrifice for the nation. He sacrifices personal freedom and family for the good of the nation. In both cases, it’s a sacrifice that, in different times and places, requires the shedding of blood – for God and country. And, in both cases, it’s a peculiarly masculine sacrifice.

        The Church has an intimate understanding of the human person and properly ordered love. When the brotherhood is perverted, the institution breaks down. The breakdown in fraternity is a fissure that threatens to corrupt the entire institution.



A Deeper Conversation is Necessary

        We have been promised that the gates of Hell will never prevail against the Church, instituted by Christ. The Armed Forces, however, carry no such divine promise. This radical disruption of the Armed Forces of the world’s most reliable Christian nation represents a desacralization of the male military bond. The center may not hold.

        Christian intellectuals and journalists have been woefully inarticulate in expressing our need for a properly ordered brotherhood to form our cities, our nation, our Church. Have we been lulled to sleep by the lies of the homosexual lobby? Don’t we think that our authentic love for each others as brothers is worth defending? Is there no one left to fight for the integrity of the institution which most protects our nation? Where is the discourse? Where is the moral outrage?

        In his Letter from a Birmingham Jail, Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. said that we would have to repent in this generation “for the appalling silence of the good people.”

        It is not enough to debate “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” vs. open homosexuality in the military. Our conversation must be centered on our categories. What is the nature of military obligation for all male citizens? What should be the structure of our service academies, military training, and combat to fortify the strength of our nation in the face of our enemies?

        Our Commander in Chief, instead of rallying people together to defend the nation, the widow, and the orphan, has rallied the Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to weaken our Armed Forces under the guise of civil rights. By doing so, the president has betrayed the legitimate civil rights movement by equating it with homosexuality, an idea that most of the African-American base that elected him strongly disagree with.

        The Armed Forces, like the Church, have the right to refuse those who present themselves (because of physical limitations, poor eyesight, anti-American ideologies, etc.) for service to protect the Sacred. That’s why it’s called the “Selective Service.” This isn’t discrimination; it’s a necessary power to preserve the fundamental bond which sustains the institution.

        Let us remember this Christmas the relationship between life and protection. As soon as the Light entered the world in that Bethlehem cave, Satan and his tyrant sought to destroy Him. Without the protection offered by Joseph, the baby King and his mother never would have made it out of Bethlehem. Like the babe, our nation needs protection, now more than ever, from the enemies that assail her from both within and without.

Read more at www.ncregister.com
 

Priest played Elvis music to drown child's screams

Amplify’d from www.irishcentral.com

Priest played Elvis music to drown child's screams

Notorious Irish pedophile gets sixteen years


By
JAMES O'SHEA

,
IrishCentral.com Staff Writer




Ex-priest Tony Walsh is sentenced to 16 years

Ex-priest Tony Walsh is sentenced to 16 years

A Dublin priest who raped a seven-year-old young boy on the altar, after tying him up with cords from his vestments and playing Elvis Presley songs to drown his screams, was sentenced to 16 years for abusing young boys.

Tony Walsh, 57, was a famous member of a priests music group known for his Elvis impersonations. He was a serial molester  whose activities were known to senior figures in the Dublin archdiocese who overlooked his crimes.

Walsh's activities took up an entire chapter in the recent Murphy report on priestly abuse in the Dublin archdiocese. He was not actually named in that report as his case was continuing.

During sentencing Judge Frank O’Donnell called  Walsh a “serial offender” who had inflicted a “life sentence” on one of his victims.

“It is difficult to imagine more reprehensible circumstances than a priest in confession setting about the sexual abuse of a young boy,” the judge said. “This is a gross breach of trust, and that’s putting it mildly.”

The court was told how “David” (not his real name), was tied up  cords from his vestments before he raped him.

When the boy cried  in pain, Walsh turned up an Elvis record to drown out the noise. Afterwards  he told the kid  he would “burn in hell for all eternity” if he told anyone.

David gave evidence during a victim impact statement “Following the abuse, I turned to drink and drugs to numb the pain,” David said. “My trust was gone towards people . . . When I was around 16, I attempted suicide. It was the first of numerous attempts.”

David  admitted himself into a psychiatric hospital after the sentencing.

“I have been diagnosed as suffering from severe bouts of psychotic depression...” he said. “Because of all this, I will be on medication for the rest of my life.”

Another victim, “Noel”, stated this parents would not  believe him when said he was abused.  “My mother said: ‘How could you say that about a man of the cloth, a man of God?’ My father gave me a hiding which started in the kitchen and finished in the bedroom.”

The third victim, “Tim”, said the abuse had devastated him.

“I remember lying face-down, while Mr Walsh lay on top of me, making gyrating movements . . . I remember thinking, ‘When will this be over, when can I leave?’”

Despite being defrocked Tony Walsh turned up in 1994 at a , posing as a priest. After the Mass, he sexually assaulted he 11-year-old grandson of the deceased in the toilets.

Following the sentencing, Archbishop Diarmuid Martin said . “I can only unreservedly apologise to the victims of this man for what they endured and for the way in which the diocese failed them.”

Read more at www.irishcentral.com
 

Time to prosecute abuse cover-ups in the Catholic Church

Time to prosecute abuse cover-ups in the Catholic Church

The Sunday Tribune newspaper in Dublin reported that it was very likely a pedophile ring of at least five priests operated with impunity in Dublin during the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s.

The newspaper explained how the priest concerned divvied up the altar boys and other victims and how children suffered multiple rapes from the group’s members.

Their shocking revelation came after the jailing of Anthony Walsh, a defrocked priest who molested over 100 children during his infamous clerical career.

The jailing of Walsh finally allowed for the missing chapter in the Murphy Commission report on clerical child abuse in the Dublin Archdiocese to be made public at last.

The report called Walsh the most notorious pedophile of all, and showed that he was protected completely by the church, all the way up to the Vatican, before he was finally uncovered.

This was despite the fact that the first complaint about Walsh came very early in his career as a priest and he was reported on numerous occasions afterwards.

Among other crimes, Walsh raped a 7-year-old young boy on the altar, tied him down with ropes from his vestments and played Elvis Presley music out loud to drown his screams.

When finally Archbishop Desmond Connell wrote to the Vatican asking for Walsh to be defrocked they refused and ordered him sent to a monastery instead.

The Murphy Commission reports that numerous conferences were held by all the senior clergy in the archdiocese to discuss the Walsh case, yet at no time did any clerical figure decide to report him to police for raping young boys.

This is a time in Ireland where there are many calls for the heads of bankers and others involved in the crash landing of the Irish economy.

Heinous though their crimes may be, they pale beside the sins of a pedophile ring ignored and silently approved at the very top of the Catholic Church in Ireland.

It is time that some of the priests who saw no evil in these evil men themselves feel the application of the law.  Covering up pedophilia, transferring a notorious child rapist from parish to parish, denying access to Irish police to records, are surely crimes worth prosecuting.

Yet many of those complicit continue to serve in major roles in the Irish church today, including two bishops. They use the same excuse as the Nazi collaborators that they saw no evil and were merely bystanders.

But hundreds of defenseless children were raped as a result of the blind eye turned.

It was not until Archbishop Diarmuid Martin was sent to Dublin from Rome that the scope of the issue was fully investigated and understood.

Martin did a superb job, but pretending that pedophilia was some kind of victimless crime where the enablers are without blemish is patently ridiculous.

It is time to call these men what they were, accomplices to the most sickening crimes ever committed in Ireland, and stop them hiding behind a collar.

Does the Irish state have the nerve to prosecute them? Time will tell.

Read more at www.printthis.clickability.com
 

POPE TURNS UP THE HEAT ON ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION

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TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 1190

INFO RUEHRN/USMISSION UN ROME PRIORITY 0007

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RUEHCP/AMEMBASSY COPENHAGEN PRIORITY 0001

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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 VATICAN 000119



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E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/17/2034

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SUBJECT: POPE TURNS UP THE HEAT ON ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION



REF: A. A) VATICAN 104

¶B. B) VATICAN 96



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CLASSIFIED BY: Rafael Foley, Pol Chief.

REASON: 1.4 (b), (d)

¶1. (SBU) Summary: Pope Benedict addressed the opening of the

World Food Summit urging leaders to care for the world's hungry

and protect the environment. Similarly, at the UN General

Assembly, the Vatican nuncio stressed the need for a

comprehensive international energy policy that protects the

environment and limits climate change. Meanwhile Vatican

officials remain largely supportive of genetically modified

crops as a vehicle for protecting the environment while feeding

the hungry, but -- at least for now -- are unwilling to

challenge bishops who disagree. End Summary.







¶2. (U) In remarks at the opening of the World Food Security

Summit in Rome on November 16th, Pope Benedict devoted over one

third of his speech to the link between food security and

environmental degradation. The Pope stressed that states have

an obligation to future generations to reduce environmental

degradation. Citing the probable link between environmental

destruction and climate change, he stated that protecting the

environment requires "change in the lifestyles of individuals

and communities, in habits of consumption and in perceptions of

what is genuinely needed." Benedict urged the international

community to promote development while safeguarding the planet.







¶3. (SBU) The Pope also stated that access to "sufficient,

healthy and nutritious" food is a fundamental right upheld by

the Catholic Church. Linking development with use of

agricultural technologies (i.e., biotechnologies), Benedict

stressed good governance and further infrastructure development

as essential to increasing food security over the long-term.

(Note: Benedict's mention of agricultural technologies is a

small but significant step towards more vocal Vatican support

of biotechnologies. End Note)







¶4. (C) In a separate meeting November 11, Poloff spoke with

Monsignor James Reinert, the point person on food security and

biotechnology at the Vatican's Council of Justice and Peace - a

Vatican think tank on social issues . Reinert said the Vatican

agrees that countries must be empowered to increase domestic

agricultural production and that genetically modified crops

(GMOs) have a role in this process, but not everybody in the

Church is comfortable with them. The Vatican cannot force all

bishops to endorse biotechnology, he said, particularly if their

opposition has to do with concerns over protecting profits

oflarge corporations who hold the patents for the crops, versus

feeding the hungry. In the Philippines, he noted, bishops

strongly protested GMOs in the past. (Note: South African

Cardinal Wilfrid Fox Napier's November 16 comments to a news

agency that "Africans do not need GMOs, but water" is another

example of specific Church leaders skeptical about the potential

benefits of new biotechnologies. End note.).







¶5. (U) Comment: The Vatican is publicly stressing in various

fora the need to care for the environment in the run-up to the

Copenhagen Climate Change Summit. Pope Benedict places caring

for the environment ("the creation") as a central social,

economic and moral issue to his papacy. The Pope's proposal to

curb environmental degradation is for people everywhere to

reject excessive materialism and consumerism. In the Vatican's

view, unsustainable lifestyles in developed countries--and not

population growth worldwide--is to blame for global warming.

Vatican officials claim that the planet has the capacity to feed

and sustain its expanding population, provided resources are

properly distributed and waste controlled. Until recently,

Vatican officials often noted that the countries that released

most of the greenhouse gases were not the world's most populous.

As China and India industrialize and release more greenhouse

gases, however, the Vatican may find it more difficult to blame

climate change on lifestyles only. Even as this happens,

however, the Vatican will continue to oppose aggressive

population control measures to fight hunger or global warming.







¶6. (SBU) While the Vatican's message on caring for the

environment is loud and clear, its message on biotechnologies

is still low-profile (ref. b). Quietly supportive, the Church

considers the choice of whether to embrace GMOs as a technical

decision for farmers and governments. The Vatican's own



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scientific academy has stated that there is no evidence GMOs are

harmful, and that they could indeed be part of addressing global

food security. However, when individual Church leaders, for

ideological reasons or ignorance, speak out against GMOs, the

Vatican does not -- at least not yet -- feel that it is its duty

to challenge them. Post will continue to lobby the Vatican to

speak up in favor of GMOs, in the hope that a louder voice in

Rome will encourage individual Church leaders elsewhere to

reconsider their critical views. End Comment.

DIAZ


“GREEN” POPE SUPPORTS US PATH FORWARD FROM COPENHAGEN

10VATICAN13 2010-01-21 15:03



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TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 1242

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Thursday, 21 January 2010, 15:58

C O N F I D E N T I A L VATICAN 000013

SIPDIS

DEPARTMENT FOR OES DREW NELSON, RACHEL KASTENBERG, KATE LARSEN

EO 12958 DECL: 1/20/2035

TAGS KGHG, PGOV, PREL, CU, VE, VT

SUBJECT: “GREEN” POPE SUPPORTS US PATH FORWARD FROM COPENHAGEN

REF: A. A. STATE 3080 B. B. 09 VATICAN 132

CLASSIFIED BY: Julieta Valls Noyes, DCM. REASON: 1.4 (b), (d) 1. (C) Summary: The Holy See supports USG efforts to have countries associate themselves with the Copenhagen Accord by the January 31 deadline (ref. A), and will encourage them to do so. The Pope’s recent environmental messages offer Vatican officials a strong platform to leverage the moral authority of the Church to combat climate change. While the Vatican supports the inclusion of all countries in international environmental discussions and decision-making, it is not naove about the political motives behind Cuba’s and Venezuela’s criticism of Copenhagen. End summary.

¶2. (C) On January 20, P/EOff met with Dr. Paolo Conversi, the Vatican’s point person on climate change at the Secretariat of State, to deliver ref. A demarche. Conversi immediately expressed the Holy See’s genuine desire to see the Copenhagen process move forward. He was aware of the January 31 deadline but did not know which countries had agreed formally to join the process. Conversi agreed to encourage other countries discreetly to associate themselves with the Accord, as opportunities arise. (Note: For practical reasons, the Holy See will not formally associate itself with the Copenhagen Accord: Vatican City State’s carbon footprint negligible. The Vatican decision is consistent with its practice of not becoming a formal party to agreements if they require substantial technical expertise and reporting commitments).

¶3. (C) Conversi was pleased overall with the process leading to Copenhagen and with the Conference itself. He said expectations were too high before the event. Regarding the group of dissenting countries, including Venezuela and Cuba, Conversi said the Vatican was sympathetic to their complaints about inclusion in decision-making but believed their criticism was largely politically motivated. Noting that Pope Benedict had firmly established his “green” reputation using his New Years’ Day Peace message to highlight environmental protection (ref. B), Conversi said he looked forward to further collaboration with the U.S. prior to Bonn and Mexico City.

¶4. (U) In a separate meeting, Monsignior James Reinert, the environmental analyst at the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace (a Vatican think tank), confirmed to P/EOff that the profile of environmental issues in the Vatican is at an all-time high. Secretariat of State officers represented the Holy See at environmental meetings now, where in the past his own office would have had the lead. (Note: Justice and Peace will continue to produce analytical documents on environmental issues for bishops around the world, while the Secretariat will have the lead on policy, particularly in multilateral fora.)

¶5. (C) Comment: Conversi’s offer to support the U.S., even if discreetly, is significant because the Vatican is often reluctant to appear to compromise its independence and moral authority by associating itself with particular lobbying efforts. Even more important than the Vatican’s lobbying assistance, however, is the influence the Pope’s guidance can have on public opinion in countries with large Catholic majorities and beyond. End Comment.

DIAZ


VATICAN HOPES FOR BETTER U.S.-CUBA TIES, IN PART TO REIN IN CHAVEZ AND HIS ACOLYTES

09VATICAN59 2009-04-22 16:04



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EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE

AMEMBASSY VATICAN



Wednesday, 22 April 2009, 16:27

C O N F I D E N T I A L VATICAN 000059

EO 12958 DECL: 4/22/2029

TAGS PREL, PGOV, KIRF, VT, CU, VE, BL

SUBJECT: (C) VATICAN HOPES FOR BETTER U.S.-CUBA TIES, IN PART TO REIN

IN CHAVEZ AND HIS ACOLYTES

REF: A. A) CARACAS 486 B. B) CARACAS 443 C. C) VATICAN 36 D. D) VATICAN 12

CLASSIFIED BY: Julieta Valls Noyes, CDA, EXEC, State. REASON: 1.4 (b), (d)

¶1. (C) Summary: The Holy See welcomes President Obama’s new outreach to Cuba and hopes for further steps soon, perhaps to include prison visits for the wives of the Cuban Five. Better U.S.-Cuba ties would deprive Hugo Chavez of one of his favorite screeds and could help restrain him in the region, according to a Vatican official. This is highly desirable for the Vatican, which is very concerned about the deterioration of Church-state relations in Venezuela. To avoid similar downward spirals elsewhere, the Vatican said Church leaders elsewhere in Latin America are reaching out to leftist governments. The recent attack on a Cardinal’s home in Bolivia may have been intended to derail such quiet rapprochement. End Summary.

Cuba: Great News. What Will You Do Next?

----------------------------------------

¶2. (C) CDA and Acting DCM on April 22 called on the Holy See’s official in charge of relations with Caribbean and Andean countries, Msgr. Angelo Accattino, to review recent developments in the region. As he had done previously (ref c), Accattino warmly welcomed recent White House policy decisions on Cuba and reviewed with interest the White House Fact Sheet on “Reaching Out to the Cuban People” which CDA gave him. Accattino also noted favorably Raul Castro’s comments that Cuba was prepared to talk to the U.S. about all topics - although “after all, he has no other options anymore.” CDA said Castro would need to reciprocate the moves from Washington with more than words - he needed to take action on political prisoners or reduce the cost of receiving remittances in Cuba.

¶3. (C) Accattino said the Vatican considered intriguing the possibility of a swap of political prisoners in Cuba for the “Cuban Five” in jail in the U.S. ADCM protested that their circumstances were not parallel, as the Cuban Five were convicted spies and the prisoners in Cuba were dissidents. Accattino quickly agreed but said discussions that led to the release of the dissidents were worth pursuing regardless. The Holy See was also following the Supreme Court appeal by the Cuban Five, to see how that might affect relations between the U.S. and Cuba. As an interim measure, Accattino suggested that the U.S. allow a jail visit by the wives of two of the five Cuban spies. CDA again noted that the U.S. had taken the first step, now the Cuban government needed to reciprocate in a concrete way.

Venezuela: Chavez is Worried. So is the Church.

--------------------------------------------- -

¶4. (C) The Cuba debate, Accattino said, had cast a long shadow at the recent Summit of the Americas. Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez was clearly rattled by the thought that the U.S. and Cuba could enter into a dialogue that excluded him, and this motivated his “little scene” at the Summit. “Chavez is not dumb,” and he was playing to the other hemispheric leaders with his bombastic approach to President Obama. The Holy See believes that the U.S. and Cuba should pursue a dialogue both for its own sake and/and in order to reduce the influence of Chavez and break up his cabal in Latin America, Accattino said.

¶5. (C) The situation for civil society in Venezuela is getting worse every day, according to Accattino. The asylum request by Maracaibo Mayor Manuel Rosales in Peru was only the latest sign of the narrowing political space in Venezuela. (Asked for updates on the whereabouts or situation of the Venezuelan asylum seeker Nixon Moreno from the Nunciature in Caracas, however, Accattino answered a bit evasively.) The real concern, Accattino said, is that Venezuela is turning into Cuba, while Cuba may be ready to open up.

¶6. (C) Church-state relations are also deteriorating daily in Venezuela, Accattino said. The Venezuelan Catholic Conference of Bishops (CEV) did not check in with Rome before taking actions or making statements like its highly critical April 6 communique (ref A). The Holy See agreed with the CEV conclusions, and would defend them -- even when it believed “a less confrontational approach would be more effective.”

Bolivia: No More Venezuelas, Let’s Talk. But Who Attacked Our Cardinal?

--------------------------------------------- --------------

¶7. (C) Turning to the recent dynamite attack against the residence of Cardinal Terrazas on April 15 in Bolivia, Accattino said it had worried the Holy See greatly. There was property damage, but thankfully no-one was hurt. It could easily have been worse. The Vatican is reserving judgment, pending the government’s investigation, on who was behind the attack. It could have been radicals inside the government who want to derail the recent rapprochement between the Church and the state. The extreme right also could have been responsible - trying to make it seem like the government did it - for the same reason. Accattino said the Holy See considers either explanation equally plausible at this point. Meanwhile, it will keep talking to the government, because it has no choice.

Comment: Looking Out for the Church First

-----------------------------------------

¶8. (C) The Holy See has consistently maintained that improving U.S.-Cuba ties would greatly reduce the appeal of Hugo Chavez. It is so alarmed by the continued downward spiral in its own relations with Chavez, in fact, that Accattino said Church leaders in Latin American countries with leftist governments are rethinking their approach. Many episcopal (bishops) conferences in the region had in the past been willing to criticize excesses of these governments in an effort to protect civil society. They may be pulling back from that activism and advocacy in the short term, in order to protect their longer-term ability to minister to the Catholic faithful without interference. That attitude is what is behind the Church’s moves to improve relations with the Morales government in Bolivia. It may also explain Accattino’s ever-so-mild tone of criticism when discussing CEV decisions in Caracas. As for Accattino’s polite unwillingness to discuss the Nixon Moreno case, that may also be telling, given his considerable interest in the topic last time we spoke (ref c). End Comment.

NOYES