ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

Russia uses dirty tricks despite U.S. ‘reset’

Amplify’d from www.washingtontimes.com

Russia uses dirty tricks despite U.S. ‘reset’

Intelligence agents tell of intimidation, smears of American officials, diplomats


-Former Sen. Christopher S. Bond, (right) who served as the vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence between 2007 and 2010" width="384" height="242"/>
“We are concerned about the acts of intimidation as well as their record on previous agreements and other activities. It’s a real concern, I’ve raised it. It’s not the intelligence committee that fails to understand the problem. It’s the Obama administration.”

-Former Sen. Christopher S. Bond, (right) who served as the vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence between 2007 and 2010
The Washington Times

In the past four years, Russia’s intelligence services have stepped up a campaign of intimidation and dirty tricks against U.S. officials and diplomats in Russia and the countries that used to form the Soviet Union.

U.S. diplomats and officials have found their homes broken into and vandalized, or altered in ways as trivial as bathroom use; faced anonymous or veiled threats; and in some cases found themselves set up in compromising photos or videos that are later leaked to the local press and presented as a sex scandal.

“The point was to show that ‘we can get to you where you sleep,’ ” one U.S. intelligence officer told The Washington Times. “It’s a psychological kind of attack.”

Despite a stated policy from President Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev of warm U.S.-Russian ties, the campaign of intelligence intimidation - or what the CIA calls “direct action” - has persisted throughout what both sides have called a “reset” in the relations.

They have become worse in just the past year, some U.S. officials said. Also, their targets are broadening to include human rights workers and nongovernmental organizations as well as embassy staff.

The most brazen example of this kind of intimidation was the Sept. 22 bombing attack on the U.S. Embassy in Tbilisi, Georgia. A National Intelligence Council assessment sent to Congress last week confirmed that the bombing was ordered by Maj. Yevgeny Borisov of Russian military intelligence, said four U.S. officials who have read the report.

False rape charge

One example of such intimidation occurred in 2009 against a senior U.S. official in the Moscow office of the National Democratic Institute (NDI), the congressionally funded nongovernmental organization that promotes democracy throughout the world. The Times has withheld the name of the official at the request of NDI.

According to a Jan. 30, 2009, cable from U.S. Ambassador John Beyrle disclosed by WikiLeaks, USAID employees received an email with a doctored photo of the NDI official reclining with an underage girl.

The email from someone purporting to be a Russian citizen accused the official of raping her 9-year-old daughter.

In the cable, Mr. Beyrle said the embassy thought the Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) was behind the smear attack, which also appeared in Russian newspapers. The FSB is the successor agency of the Soviet-era KGB.

Kathy Gest, the NDI director of public affairs, said, “The allegations recounted in the WikiLeaks memo are all false and were protested at the time. We consider the matter closed and NDI, which is legally registered in Russia, continues its programs.”

Former Sen. Christopher S. Bond, who served as the vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence between 2007 and 2010, said he had raised the issue of Russian intimidation of U.S. diplomats with the Obama administration.

“We are concerned about the acts of intimidation as well as their record on previous agreements and other activities,” Mr. Bond said. “It’s a real concern, I’ve raised it. It’s not the intelligence committee that fails to understand the problem. It’s the Obama administration.”

Yevgeny Khorishko, a spokesman for the Russian Embassy in Washington, said accusations that Russian diplomats have stepped up intimidation of U.S. officials were false.

“Those are absolutely false insinuations that are not worth any comments. Such kind of ‘information’ is disseminated by those who are not pleased with the new state of the Russian-American relations,” he said.

Recent escalations

Since 2007, according to two U.S. intelligence officials, American posts in Belarus, Russia, Georgia and Kyrgyzstan have complained about instances in which junior Foreign Service officers have come home to find jewelry rearranged, cigarette butts stubbed out on the kitchen table, defecations in the bathroom, and break-ins with nothing of value stolen.

More recently, visiting congressional staff on official delegations have complained of having their hotel rooms broken into and seeing their things rearranged, according to these officials.

David A. Merkel, who served as deputy assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs in 2008 and 2009, said he had seen an escalation in these kinds of direct actions starting in the last two years of the George W. Bush administration.

“It’s meant to limit a diplomat’s ability to meet with individuals by aggressively demonstrating that they are being watched. If you are a political officer and you are cognizant your actions are being watched, you are less willing to meet with people, even if this is a normal activity for a political officer,” said Mr. Merkel, who also served as director for European and Eurasian affairs on the National Security Council from 2005 to 2007.

Other U.S. officials said the intimidation campaign escalated even more in 2010 after the Obama administration expelled 10 Russian “deep cover” agents as part of a spy swap.

Mr. Merkel said these acts of intimidation were reported throughout what Russia calls its “near abroad,” or the independent states that used to be part of the Soviet Union.

“It’s mainly focused on people whose jobs are domestic politics and human rights reporting,” he said. “You have to appreciate how much courage it takes for a foreign national, a Russian or a Belarusian to meet with our diplomats because they know they are being watched.”

Another diplomat who was targeted for embarrassment was Kyle Hatcher, who served at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow as a political officer responsible for tracking religious freedom in Russia.

In August 2009, two Russian newspapers printed stories based on spliced video footage of Mr. Hatcher at a hotel room, claiming he was employing the services of a prostitute.

Two U.S. officials familiar with the incident, who asked not to be named, said the U.S. intelligence community saw this as the work of the FSB.

“They intercepted some phone calls he made and spliced them in a way that made them look strange. Then they took footage of him in a hotel room or something. They made it all look like they had footage of him in sex acts with prostitutes in a hotel,” one of those officials said.

Long history

Moscow’s intelligence services long have played dirty tricks on U.S. diplomats. In the “Spy vs. Spy” world of the Cold War, operations known as “honey traps” - a young, attractive woman woos a U.S. Foreign Service officer into state of semi-undress where he can be photographed and blackmailed later - were commonplace.

The KGB-trained services also on occasion would deliberately break into the hotel room or residence of visiting dignitaries. In some cases, these incidents escalated and U.S. diplomats found their pets killed.

These kinds of tactics largely quieted down after the Cold War, but a spike in such incidents at the end of the 1990s prompted the Clinton administration to form a special bilateral committee to look into them. Moscow’s representative at the time was Vladimir Putin, a former KGB officer who would later become president of the Russian Federation.

The spike in these incidents, described by one U.S. intelligence official as “discreet acts of intimidation,” has been raised discreetly by members of Congress with the Obama administration since 2009.

But the issue became public last month after The Times published a series of stories about the bombing attempt in Georgia.

After The Times published an interview with a Georgian interior ministry official laying out evidence that Mr. Borisov was behind the bombing attempt, five senators led by Republicans Jon Kyl of Arizona and Mark Kirk of Illinois asked the Office of the Director of National Intelligence to provide a briefing on the incident.

In response to that query, the Obama administration released an assessment from the National Intelligence Council, the analytic arm of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.

That report, four U.S. officials said, concluded that two bombs were placed outside a parking lot that abuts the U.S. Embassy compound. One bomb exploded outside the parking lot, another unexploded bomb was tossed over the parking lot wall.

The CIA concluded that Mr. Borisov was acting on orders from Russian military intelligence headquarters, according to these officials. The State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research assessed that Mr. Borisov was acting as a rogue agent, these officials said.

Jamie Fly, executive director of the Foreign Policy Initiative who also served on the National Security Council staff in 2008 and 2009, said the incidents of intimidation of U.S. officials were evidence that the “reset” policy had failed.

“These types of Russian activities directed against U.S. officials, combined with Russian policies pursued by Moscow against U.S. allies, show the concept of a reset in relations with Russia is a joke,” Mr. Fly said.

Internal Russian politics

Mr. Obama was far more optimistic last week in an interview with Russia’s official ITAR-Tass news agency.

“Well, first of all, I think it’s important for us to look back over the last two years and see the enormous progress we’ve made. I started talking about reset when I was still a candidate for president, and immediately reached out to President Medvedev as soon as I was elected. And we have been, I think, extraordinarily successful partners in moving towards reset,” he said.

An administration official who defended Mr. Obama’s reset policy stressed that the political leadership of Russia was sincere in wanting to improve ties with the United States.

“There are most certainly some in the Russian government - nationalists, hard-liners, KGB folks, etc. - who don’t like the reset and are doing whatever they can to derail it,” this official said.

The official compared the Russia situation to domestic U.S. political divisions.

“We also have our critics/skeptics here within the U.S. government who are also still busy fighting the Cold War. And in these matters, they have good justification since certain elements of the Russian establishment are also still fighting the Cold War,” the official said.

This official pointed to Russia’s willingness to help supply U.S. troops in Afghanistan and their support for U.N. sanctions against Iran, North Korea and Libya as evidence of the reset policy’s success.

“The Kremlin seems to be a willing partner, even if maybe some in that regime don’t like this new trend and are doing what they can to derail it,” he said.

However, on Tuesday, Mr. Putin, now Russia’s prime minister and widely seen as its real leader, made some belligerent comments about the U.S., calling it a “parasite” on the world economy.

At a conference of the Nashi and Young Guard youth associations, Mr. Putin also suggested that his country would invite the Georgian breakaway province of South Ossetia into the Russian Federation, effectively annexing land taken in a war three years ago.

Mr. Putin, a former FSB director, is widely regarded as the real man in charge of Russia’s elite establishment of current FSB and former KGB officers.

In 2006, sociologist Olga Kryshtanovskaya produced a study that found 78 percent of Russia’s current elite had ties to the KGB or FSB.

Read more at www.washingtontimes.com
 

Facial recognition in use after riots

Amplify’d from hosted.ap.org

APNewsBreak: Facial recognition in use after riots

PAISLEY DODDS and RAPHAEL G. SATTER
AP Photo
AP Photo/NIGEL HOWARD

LONDON (AP) -- Facial recognition technology being considered for London's 2012 Games is getting a workout in the wake of Britain's riots, a senior police chief told The Associated Press on Thursday, with officers feeding photographs of suspects through Scotland Yard's newly updated face-matching program.

Chief Constable Andy Trotter of the British Transport Police said the sophisticated software was being used to help find those suspected of being involved in the worst unrest London has seen in a generation.

But he cautioned that facial recognition makes up only a fraction of the police force's efforts, saying tips have mostly come from traditional sources, such as still images captured from closed circuit cameras, pictures gathered by officers, footage shot by police helicopters or images snapped by members of the public. One department was driving around a large video screen displaying images of suspects.

"There's a mass of evidence out there," Trotter said in a telephone interview. "The public are so enraged that people who wouldn't normally come forward are helping us - especially when they see their neighbors are coming back with brand new TVs."

Prime Minister David Cameron acknowledged Thursday that police were overwhelmed by rioting that began over the weekend in London and spread across the country over four days. Mobs of youths looted stores, set buildings aflame and attacked police officers and other people - a chaotic and humbling scene for a city a year away from hosting the Olympic Games.

At an emergency session of Parliament summoned to discuss the riots, Cameron said authorities were considering new powers, including allowing police to order thugs to remove masks or hoods, evicting troublemakers from subsidized housing and temporarily disabling cell phone instant messaging services. He said the 16,000 police deployed on London's streets to deter rioters and reassure residents would remain through the weekend.

A press officer with Scotland Yard - who also spoke anonymously, in line with force policy - confirmed that facial recognition technology was at the police's disposal, although he gave few other details. He said that generally the technology would only be used to help identify those suspected of serious crimes, such as assault, and that in most cases disseminating photographs to the general public remains a far cheaper and more effective way of finding suspects.

The facial-recognition technology used by police treats the human face like a grid, measuring the distance between a person's nose, eyes, lips and other features. It has recently been upgraded, according to an article published last year in Scotland Yard's bimonthly magazine, "The Job."

The March 2010 article said that the new program has been shown to work far better than older versions of the technology, with one expert quoted as saying that it had shown promise in identifying people from high-quality, face-on shots taken off of surveillance photographs, mobile phones, passports or the Internet.

A law enforcement official told the AP that to use the technology "you have to have a good picture of a suspect and it is only useful if you have something to match it against. In other words, the suspect already has to have a previous criminal record."

He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss ongoing investigations.

In another effort to identify suspects, police have released two dozen photos and videos to the picture-sharing website Flickr, where they've already gathered more than 400,000 hits. Some of those photographs have also been published by Britain's brash tabloid press. The Sun recently plastered them across its front page, along with a headline urging readers to report looters to the police.

The photographs on Flickr are mainly grainy images pulled from cameras, which may not be of much use to face-matching software. But detectives are already scanning the Web for pictures of high-quality photographs of rioters' faces, according to photojournalist Guilherme Zauith, who witnessed some of the disturbances in London and later posted images of clashes to the Internet.

Zauith said he was recently contacted by a London detective "saying that they saw my photos online and if I could send it to them to help to identify the people."

"They were looking for all kind of photographs showing faces," he said. Zauith, a 30-year-old Brazilian national, said he turned the photos over to the detective.

The West Midlands police were trying another approach: driving a van equipped with a large screen displaying 50 images of suspects through Birmingham.

Police said the "Digi-Van" will stop at key locations around the city to give shoppers and commuters a good look at the photographs in hopes they can help identify suspects.

Facial recognition technology is already widely employed by free-to-use websites such as Facebook and Google Inc.'s Picasa photo-sharing program.

Such programs have been of increasing interest to authorities as well. A person with the Olympic planning committee, speaking to the AP on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of security preparations, said that facial recognition software was being considered for use as a security measure during the Olympic Games.

Meanwhile, detectives are employing a host of other tactics to take aim at the rioters. Police departments across the country have made arrests linked to riot threats and boasts posted to social networking sites.

Trotter said that while investigations had been helped by looters "who publicize their actions on things like Facebook," a lot of arrests have come the old-fashioned way, through officers simply spotting suspects they'd seen before.

"It's not just the face that is recognizable," Trotter said. "It's been in the way they walk, or the clothes they're wearing or even tattoos."

London police department's Flickr gallery of riot suspects: http://flic.kr/s/aHsjvBtGtF

Paisley Dodds can be reached at: http://twitter.com/paisleydodds

Raphael G. Satter can be reached at: http://twitter.com/razhael

Read more at hosted.ap.org
 

Pastor Brad Brandon, of the Word of Truth radio program, interviews author David W. Daniels on AM 980 KKMS

A list of questions David W. Daniels answers in this interview can be found below.

Masonry Discussion (mp3 file)

Host: Pastor Brad Brandon

Guest: David Daniels




  1. What is the origin of freemasonry?


  2. What is the harm of freemasonry?


  3. Explain the hierarchy and the degrees of Masonry.


  4. Do all masons know the extent of freemasonry or is it just those at the top?


  5. Are the masons really behind a vast global conspiracy?




Pastor Brad Brandon and the Word of Truth airs Monday through Friday on AM 980 KKMS in the Twin Cities from 3:00 until 6:00 Central Time. The Word of Truth Radio Program looks at the world through a biblical perspective. Topics include; personal salvation, false religions, Christian living, Radical Islam, the leftist agenda, and much more. The wide range of topics and Pastor Brandon's "shoot it straight" attitude make this program both exciting and fun. You can listen to the Word of Truth live or podcast and listen back to the show at www.kkms.com.

Electronic skin measures heart rate, brain waves, and muscle activity

Chip and skin: How hi-tech 'tattoo' will monitor patients' vital signs

Amplify’d from www.dailymail.co.uk

Chip and skin: How hi-tech 'tattoo' will monitor patients' vital signs

Monitoring a patient’s vital signs - such as temperature and heart rate - could soon be a simple as sticking on a tiny, wireless patch similar to a temporary tattoo.

Eliminating the bulky wiring and electrodes used in current monitors would make the devices more comfortable for patients, according to an international team of researchers who report their findings in today’s edition of the journal Science.

The researchers embedded electronic sensors in a film thinner than the diameter of a human hair, which was placed on a polyester backing like those used for the temporary tattoos popular with children.

Skin deep: The sensor is so thin it can be worn comfortably on the skin without the patient noticing it

Skin deep: The sensor is so thin it can be worn comfortably on the skin without the patient noticing it

The result was a sensor that was flexible enough to move with the skin and would adhere without adhesives.

The researchers said the test devices had remained in place for up to 24 hours.

Although normal shedding of skin cells would eventually cause the monitors to come off, the team believe the new device could remain in place for as long as two weeks.

'What we are trying to do here is to really reshape and redefine electronics to look a lot more like the human body, in this case the surface layers of the skin,' said John A. Rogers of the University of Illinois.

'The goal is really to blur the distinction between electronics and biological tissue.'

In addition to monitoring patients in hospitals, other uses for the devices could include monitoring brain waves, muscle movement, sensing the larynx for speech, emitting heat to help heal wounds and perhaps even being made touch sensitive and placed on artificial limbs.

Changing face of electronics: the research team believe their new device merges electronics with the human body

Changing face of electronics: the research team believe their new device merges electronics with the human body

The device will help fill the need for equipment that is more convenient and less stressful for patients, permitting easier and more reliable monitoring, said Zhenqiang Ma, an engineering professor at the University of Wisconsin, who was not part of the research team.

The electronic skin can simply be stuck on or peeled off like an adhesive bandage, he noted in a commentary on the report.

The team declined to speculate on how soon the electronic skin would be ready for market or what it would cost.

The monitor resembles a bandage and contains an antenna that could be used to transmit data, though a radio to do that transmitting has not yet been tested.

The current design has a small coil and could be powered by induction - by placing it near an electrical coil. This would permit intermittent use, and for longer-term monitoring a tiny battery or storage capacitor could be fitted.

The monitor does not use an adhesive, relying on a weak force that causes molecules and surfaces to stick together without interfering with motion. For longer-term use the electronic skin could be coated with an adhesive.

Read more at www.dailymail.co.uk
 

Electronic skin - short video

Vatican grants 'indulgence' for Madrid pilgrims

Definition: Indulgences



The Roman Catholic Church claims the power to excuse or release persons from all or part of the suffering coming to them in purgatory. This is done for good acts performed or prayers said. In the middle ages, indulgences were granted in exchange for donations to the church. Thus the scandal of the selling of indulgences, which was a primary factor in bringing about the Protestant reformation. While the practice of the selling of indulgences has been condemned, the Roman Catholic Church still grants indulgences for deeds and prayers. If a devout person gains more indulgences than they need to wipe out their own time in purgatory, they may assign the excess indulgences to persons (usually deceased) of their choosing. Certain prayers take three years off one’s sentence in purgatory. Other actions, usually performed over a period of days, carry a "plenary indulgence." That is, they release a soul from all their purgatorial sentence, no matter how long. Some Roman Catholics make a practice of collecting as many plenary indulgences as they can. They assign them first to their deceased relatives, and then to the souls in purgatory with the longest sentences. Such practices are incomprehensible to Christians outside the Roman Catholic Church (and to many within it as well).

Amplify’d from www.expatica.com

11/08/2011Vatican grants 'indulgence' for Madrid pilgrims

The Vatican on Thursday granted a "plenary indulgence" -- forgiveness from temporal penance for sins -- for attendees at the Catholic World Youth Day celebrations later this month.

Anyone who is not able to attend but prays "for the spiritual aims of this meeting and for its successful outcome" will get a partial indulgence, said the Sacred Apostolic Penitentiary -- a Vatican court for the forgiveness of sins.

Indulgences are an arcane Roman Catholic Church practice administered by the Vatican that helped inspire Martin Luther's Protestant Reformation in the 16th century.

The Catholic Church traditionally grants indulgences on World Youth Days.

Pope Benedict XVI will travel to Madrid on August 18 for the last four days of the six-day World Youth Day festival at which around a million young Catholics from around the world are expected.

The Vatican said the indulgences would be conditional on pilgrims going to confession and taking communion and will be granted only following attendance at the final mass in Madrid on August 21.

Even then pilgrims will only receive the indulgence if, "having gone to confession and truly repented, they receive Holy Communion and pray in accordance with the intentions of the Holy Father," the Vatican added.

Read more at www.expatica.com
 

Cloyne Report: Kenny Still Covering for Clergy

Amplify’d from www.swp.ie

Cloyne Report: Kenny Still Covering for Clergy

Enda-Kenny-005.jpg




Author: 

Peadar O’Grady


After the Cloyne report the praise for Enda Kenny’s Dail speech criticising the Catholic Church is hard to justify.

No-one now doubts the Pope and the bishops covered up child abuse and protected paedophile priests from arrest and prosecution to preserve their own power.

Pope Benedict had been personally responsible for the cover up but Kenny only referred to ‘Vatican’ responsibility.

Cloyne’s Bishop Magee went on the run but still no DPP or Garda is trying to arrest him.

Kenny promised no resources of any kind in implementing legislation for the ‘Children First’ guidelines!

It is obvious the Church should not be running children’s services.

However, the majority of primary and secondary schools in Ireland are still under the authority of the local bishop and parish priest.

Again Kenny had no comment.

Some people may have been relieved to hear a politician finally acknowledge the Church cover-up but Kenny himself is still covering for the Church hierarchy.

Any Bishop or Pope who covered up child abuse should be prosecuted for child abuse.

All children’s services, especially schools and childcare should be immediately removed from any church authority.

Childcare emergencies like child abuse and neglect require Emergency Childcare services.

Urgent assessments by Social workers are required, including out-of-hours provision. Child protection care plans often require direct provision of childcare services.

These include family support workers, preschool and school supported placements, respite and full-time fostering and adoption services as well as trained family and individual therapists and counsellors.

Support from other health and education services means cut-backs must also be reversed.

Labour and Fine Gael cuts in services show their support for ‘Child Protection’ is a lie.

Fighting for decent children’s services is the best way to honour the victims of Cloyne.
Read more at www.swp.ie
 

Vatican to display Martin Luther's excommunication ruling

Amplify’d from www.google.com
Vatican to display Martin Luther's excommunication ruling

A hand turns pages of a replica document found in the secret archives of the Vatican (AFP, Alessia Giuliani/File)

(AFP)

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican will display the papal ruling to excommunicate Germany's Martin Luther dated January 3, 1521 in an exhibition of hundreds of priceless documents from its secret archives from February 2011.

A website for the exhibition said Pope Leo X's famous decree entitled "Decet Romanum Pontificem" -- which sealed a schism with Protestants and sparked a series of religious wars -- will be one of the most important objects on display.

Organisers of the exhibit -- entitled "Lux in Arcana" -- said more rare documents to go on display would be revealed soon. The Vatican has said it wants to include documents that do not necessarily reflect well on its history.

Among the displays will be Gregory VII's "Dictatus Papae" from the 11th century in which the pontiff affirmed the supremacy of popes over any power on earth as well as documents linked to Pius XII's pontificate during World War II.

The exhibition will run for seven months in the Capitoline Museums.

Read more at www.google.com
 

Vatican announces INDULGENCES for World Youth Day

Definition: Indulgences



The Roman Catholic Church claims the power to excuse or release persons from all or part of the suffering coming to them in purgatory. This is done for good acts performed or prayers said. In the middle ages, indulgences were granted in exchange for donations to the church. Thus the scandal of the selling of indulgences, which was a primary factor in bringing about the Protestant reformation. While the practice of the selling of indulgences has been condemned, the Roman Catholic Church still grants indulgences for deeds and prayers. If a devout person gains more indulgences than they need to wipe out their own time in purgatory, they may assign the excess indulgences to persons (usually deceased) of their choosing. Certain prayers take three years off one’s sentence in purgatory. Other actions, usually performed over a period of days, carry a "plenary indulgence." That is, they release a soul from all their purgatorial sentence, no matter how long. Some Roman Catholics make a practice of collecting as many plenary indulgences as they can. They assign them first to their deceased relatives, and then to the souls in purgatory with the longest sentences. Such practices are incomprehensible to Christians outside the Roman Catholic Church (and to many within it as well).

Amplify’d from www.catholicnews.com
Vatican announces indulgences for World Youth Day
By Carol Glatz

Catholic News Service
VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- To help encourage prayers for a spiritually fruitful World Youth Day in Madrid, the Vatican announced Aug. 11 that Pope Benedict XVI had authorized a special indulgence for anyone who, "with a contrite spirit," raises a "prayer to God, the Holy Spirit, so that young people are drawn to charity and given the strength to proclaim the Gospel with their life," a Vatican decree said.



The decree included the offer of a plenary, or full, indulgence to all the young people who will gather with the pope in Madrid. World Youth Day runs Aug. 16-21 in the Spanish capital; the pope arrives Aug. 18.



An indulgence is a remission of the temporal punishment a person is due for sins that have been forgiven. The conditions necessary for receiving a plenary indulgence include having recently gone to confession, receiving the Eucharist and offering prayers for the intentions of the pope.



Pope Benedict decreed that World Youth Day participants can receive a plenary indulgence if they participate with prayerful devotion in any sacred event or "pious exercise" as well as attend the closing Mass, receive the sacraments of reconciliation and the Eucharist and offer prayers for the pope's intentions.



The decree, signed by Cardinal Fortunato Baldelli, head of the Vatican office that deals with indulgences, said a partial indulgence also is available to all Catholics who are contrite for their sins and offer their prayers with the pope for young Catholics.



The cardinal also asked priests around the world to make themselves available to hear the confessions of those who want the indulgence and to encourage public prayers for the success of World Youth Day.



In central Madrid's Buen Retiro Park, 200 portable confessionals will be set up for confessions that begin Aug. 14. The pope will hear confessions at the park Aug. 20.



END
Read more at www.catholicnews.com
 

Should Mental Health Providers Ask Patients About Their Views on God?

Should Mental Health Providers Ask Patients About Their Views on God?

Findings from nationally representative samples report that more than 90 percent of Americans believe in a higher power or God, and more than 50 percent state that religion is “very” (not just fairly or moderately) important in their lives. These figures are not surprising considering that religion is such a well-utilized resource when coping with life stressors. What is surprising, however, is that hardly any mental health training programs require (or even offer) coursework in how to ask patients about their religion or spirituality in clinical settings.

This educational deficit is a barrier to the provision of personalized and patient-centered treatment. Fifty years ago, we didn’t ask patients about physical pain or domestic safety, and now it’s standard of care to do so. Why shouldn’t patient spirituality be inquired about as well? If it’s not of personal importance to a patient, the patient will say so and treatment can move on to focus on other areas. However, many patients have rich religious belief systems, often of great personal significance. Just imagine their experience when providers don’t even ask about this area of life! Furthermore, recent research we have conducted has tied certain religious beliefs to lower levels of anxiety. Therefore, I believe that mental health providers must gain basic clinical competency by learning to ask patients about their religious beliefs in a professional manner. Such information may be more important than we think.

David Rosmarin is an instructor in the department of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, an assistant in psychology at McLean Hospital, and director of the Center for Anxiety.
Read more at www.scienceandreligiontoday.com
 

United Nations Affirms the Human Right to Blaspheme

United Nations Affirms the Human Right to Blaspheme
...but the UN will protect our right to freedom of conscience.

Having followed the debates on religion and freedom of expression at the United Nations over the last several years, I have become accustomed to passing on bad news, such as a decade of resolutions by the Human Rights Council and the General Assembly “combating the defamation of religions.” Now that there is some good news, almost no one has noticed.


Late last month, the UN issued a new statement on the extent of freedom of speech under international law. It says that laws restricting blasphemy as such are incompatible with universal human rights standards.


The statement came from the Human Rights Committee, the body of eighteen “independent experts” mandated to monitor compliance with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, or ICCPR, the 1966 human rights treaty that provides for freedom of opinion and expression and other fundamental rights. The Committee’s general comments represent authoritative interpretations of the provisions of the ICCPR. Unlike the highly-publicized resolutions produced by the Human Rights Council and the General Assembly, the provisions of the ICCPR are legally binding to its more than 165 parties.

The detailed 52-paragraph statement, General Comment No. 34, is the outcome of two years of intense debate among representatives of governments and civil society organizations. The Committee’s previous comment on freedom of opinion and expression, in 1983, was only four paragraphs long. In addition to taking up such matters as treason, defamation of heads of state, “memory laws” enforcing an official version of history, and the rights of bloggers, Comment 34 comes down strongly against religious limitations on speech. It does so not only by asserting that the right to free speech is foundational to a free and democratic society as well as to the protection and promotion of other rights. It also appeals explicitly to the values of freedom of conscience and equality before the law.

According to paragraph 48, “Prohibitions of displays of lack of respect for a religion or other belief system, including blasphemy laws, are incompatible with the Covenant, except in the specific circumstances envisaged in article 20, paragraph 2, of the Covenant.” Article 20, paragraph 2 calls on states to prohibit “advocacy of national, racial, or religious hatred that constitutes incitement to discrimination, hostility, or violence.” The Comment is careful to require that any restrictions must not violate the Conventions’ guarantees of equality before the law (Article 26) and freedom of thought, conscience, and religion (Article 18).

Thus, for instance, it would be impermissible for any such laws to discriminate in favor of or against one or certain religions or belief systems, or their adherents over another, or religious believers over non-believers. Nor would it be permissible for such prohibitions to be used to prevent or punish criticism of religious leaders or commentary on religious doctrine and tenets of faith.

Laws against blasphemy or “religious insult” (found throughout the world, including half of all Council of Europe member states) are inherently discriminatory against secularists and religious dissenters. They are discriminatory in that secularists have no legal recourse—nor should they—when the words of believers offend their moral sensibilities, nor can gays take the publishers of Leviticus to court for the spiritual affront to them that it surely is. Skeptics and heterodox believers, on the other hand, do have an Article 18 right to live and speak according to their conscience even when it offends the orthodox.

Paragraph 32 of the new comment also cautions states against employing a narrow notion of so-called public morals to restrict speech, effectively ruling out laws that defer to a particular faith tradition: “the concept of morals derives from many social, philosophical and religious traditions; consequently, limitations... for the purpose of protecting morals must be based on principles not deriving exclusively from a single tradition.”

The implication of these recommendations is that controversies over blasphemy are not just conflicts between “free speech” and faith, but clashes between competing claims of conscience. This stance is defended by the International Humanist and Ethical Union and elaborated in my forthcoming book, The Future of Blasphemy: Speaking of the Sacred in an Age of Human Rights.

The message of General Comment No. 34 is not only a clear condemnation of the blasphemy laws of countries such as Pakistan, which despite having ratified the ICCPR in 2008, continues to impose the death sentence for blasphemy and “defiling” the name of Prophet Muhammad. The Comment equally repudiates the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, which has upheld Austrian, British, and Turkish laws against blasphemy and religious insult by invoking a sui generis right to “respect for the religious feelings of believers.”

The major disappointment in the comment, in my view, is its failure to address hate speech laws, which in many countries function as de facto restrictions on blasphemy and sacrilege. Theoretically, we can distinguish between bashing a belief and bashing its adherents. Yet, absent some precise international norm, “advocacy of religious hatred” could mean anything from provoking imminent violence against individuals (criminalized even under the First Amendment) to the effectively unverifiable standard of being motivated by religious hostility, as under the UK’s Crime and Disorder Act of 1998. Convictions against writer and activists such as Paul Giniewski in France, Lars Hedegaard in Denmark, and Elisabeth Sabaditsch-Wolff in Austria demonstrate that hate speech laws are ripe for abuse even in liberal democracies.

Civil society activists now have the final legal authority of the United Nations on their side as they press governments to come into compliance with their treaty obligations and bring an end to the criminalization of blasphemy.

Read more at www.religiondispatches.org
 

Vatican Phonecian Saturn

Amplify’d from www.youtube.com





Vatican Phonecian Saturn


See more at www.youtube.com
 

Ireland’s rift with Vatican deepens over child sex abuse reports

Amplify’d from www.pri.org

Ireland’s rift with Vatican deepens over child sex abuse reports

image
Pope Benedict XVI greeting pilgrims in 2004. The pope's envoy to Ireland left this week after the publication of the Cloyne Report. (Photo courtesy of flickr user Sergey Gabdurakhmanov)

The Catholic Church's cover-up of child sex abuse cases may have tarnished relations between Ireland and the Vatican forever.



Listen NowListen Now
Story from Here and Now. Listent to audio above for full report.
The pope's envoy to Dublin has been recalled to Rome this week after the recent publication of the Cloyne Report earlier this month. The report details 19 additional child sex abuse allegations by clerical members of the Catholic Church from the Diocese of Cloyne amidst an ongoing worldwide scandal of sexual abuse and misconduct. Most of the cases in the Cloyne report were never reported to the police.

The report has inspired a wave of anger among the Irish people. In a chilling speech, Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny condemned the Church for letting the abuse cases slip by unpunished.

"The rape and the torture of children were downplayed, or managed, to uphold instead the primacy of the institution, its power, its standing and its reputation," Kenny said in a speech to the Irish Parliament.

Cases from the Cloyne Report date as recent as three years ago, during a time when the Catholic Church promised the world there would be no more cover-ups. Criticism to the Church has come from within its own ranks as well.

"My reaction to the Cloyne Report was one of rage and devastation, followed by a kind of depression and a sense of shame of belonging to this clerical group," said Father Brian Grogan, a representative of the new Association of Catholic Priests, a group with over 300 members. Grogan noted that during the group's meetings, many members expressed dissenting opinions to the Church's policy, but were afraid to speak out for fear of being sent to a far-off diocese in such places as "outer Mongolia or Siberia."

Some, such as Irish Sen. Ronan Mullen, believe that the anger and shock the Cloyne Report has caused across the country could spur anti-Catholic sentiments among citizens.

"It's important the state respect the fact that, within the law, the Church has to regulate its own affairs," Mullen said. "There's almost a danger, behind the calls for separation of Church and state, there's a call for anti-Catholicism in some quarters."

Whatever the case, it is clear that relations between Ireland and the Church may be tarnished forever.

"When it comes to the protecton of the children of this state, the standards of conduct which the Church deems appropriate, cannot and will not be applied to the workings of democracy and civil society in this republic" Kenny said. "Because children have to be, and will be, put first."

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

"Here and Now" is an essential midday news magazine for those who want the latest news and expanded conversation on today's hot-button topics: public affairs, foreign policy, science and technology, the arts and more. More "Here and Now".
Read more at www.pri.org
 

Vatican Phonecian Saturn

Ireland Grows Increasingly Anti-Clerical

Amplify’d from atheism.about.com

Ireland Grows Increasingly Anti-Clerical

Ireland has long been one of the staunches Catholic countries in Europe; today, though, it's becoming one of the staunchest anti-clerical countries in Europe. The two situations are not contradictory; in fact the latter grows out of the former. The extreme deference given to churches and church leaders led to incredible abuses of power, no to mention abuses of children, and that's creating an incredible backlash -- especially given the immoral, callous manner in which the Vatican is handling things.




The airwaves are full of bitter remarks supporting Taoiseach Enda Kenny's attack on the "disgraceful" Vatican, and recommending every anti-church measure from the dissolution of the monasteries to the expulsion of the Papal Nuncio and the severing of all links with the Holy See. (The recall of the Papal Nuncio this week marks the lowest point of relations between Ireland and Rome.)
One correspondent wrote that it was his ardent hope that the Catholic Church would follow the example of the News of the World, and hold a "last Mass" before shutting down.



The Taoiseach, meanwhile, has been met with standing ovations for his salvo against the Vatican for failing to respond with sufficient concern to the clerical sex abuse scandals as described in the Cloyne report.



His justice minister, Alan Shatter, is introducing a highly controversial Bill which will compel Irish priests to disclose the secrets of the confessional where paedophilia is mentioned: failure to do so could result in a five-year prison sentence.



Source: Telegraph

The secularist movement in Ireland is growing in support, power, and influence. I expect that few Irish or even experts on Ireland would have expected such a shift a couple of decades ago, but it is happening and the momentum right now is very much with the advocates of increased secularism rather than with apologists for clericalism and for the church.

Church and state are already formally separate in Ireland -- there is no official state church and the Catholic Church has no official position within the government. However, there isn't much separation between church and culture in Ireland. That sort of separation is much harder to achieve. It can be done legislatively and through force, though that tends to have bad effects. Better, long-term separation must come from the ground up. In Ireland, there might be a chance of that happening.

Read more at atheism.about.com
 

Mystery Religion in the Vatican by Michael Hoggard