ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

Islamic terror? This is worse

Amplify’d from www.wnd.com

Islamic terror? This is worse

Attackers warn they will strike 'again and again'

FROM JOSEPH FARAH'S G2 BULLETIN

© 2011 WorldNetDaily

A new threat is emerging – or re-emerging – that moves terror beyond even what has been created by blood-thirsty radical Islamists who want a worldwide caliphate under control of the Shariah and the Quran, says a report from Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin.

The new multi-national threat comes from those who want a stateless society – no government, no rules, no police, no authority – and have emerged partly along with Europe's growing financial crisis.

They are anarchists.


Often tied to leftist organizations as well as more traditional terrorist groups such as the Red Army Faction, they stunned the world four decades ago when known as the Baader-Meinhof Group with their allegiance to violence for the sake of violence alone.

Security experts note they've been around ever since: clogging streets outside meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank and the G-20. They march, destroy storefronts and vehicles, then confront police and lose the battle.

But now analysts confirm they've seen an increase in the intensity and violence in the anarchists' arsenal of weapons.

Just in recent days they planted an explosive device on a motorcycle, blowing up and damaging portions of a courthouse in Athens. No one was injured. Shortly before that, letter bombs sent over the Christmas holidays to several embassies in Rome did explode, causing casualties.

"We're striking again, and we do so in response to the appeal launched by our Greek companions," according to the Italian group known as the Informal Anarchist Association.

Antonio Marini, chief prosecutor in Rome investigating anarchism in Italy, has raised the prospect that anarchist groups in other European countries could increase the level of violence or merge with other, more aggressive entities.

In addition to Italy, anarchist groups have been set up in France, Germany, Greece, Spain, Austria, Holland, Switzerland, Sweden, Portugal, and in the Eastern European countries such as Bulgaria, Belarus, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Ukraine and even Russia.

As these groups spread, there are signs that they are coordinating their activities, such as the French Alternative Libertaire, the Swiss Organisation Socialiste Libertaire which is politically close to the French AL, and the Italian Federation of Anarchist Communists, or FdCA.


According to the European Union's Europol, attacks by anarchist militant groups increased by 43 percent in 2009, a level which more than doubled from 2007.

"We will organize internationally and take aim at the enemy," one anarchist group's statement recently said. "We can't wait to see the subversive elements flooding the streets and the guerrilla groups striking again and again."


Keep in touch with the most important breaking news stories about critical developments around the globe with Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin, the premium, online intelligence news source edited and published by the founder of WND.

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UP scientists blast raid on Bt eggplant test site

Amplify’d from www.philstar.com
UP scientists blast raid on Bt eggplant test site
The Philippine Star

MANILA, Philippines - The forcible uprooting of Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) eggplant planted at the UP Mindanao campus has earned the ire of academics and scientists who were appalled at what they describe as an “invasion,” saying it amounts to an “assault on the quest for truth.”


The raiders justified their action on the ground that there was no consultation with the local government when the test sites were planned and experiments set up in the UP Min’s Bago Oshiro campus.


UP scientists noted that Mayor Sara Duterte may have been misled into allowing the raid, “which was carried out to the complete surprise of biotechnology advocates who were working on environmental safety and risks assessments associated with cultivation of Bt eggplant.”


Dr. Candida B. Adalla, chief of the Biotechnology Program Office (BPO), said she was dumbfounded when she learned about the raid, which was pushed by Greenpeace and other purported environmental groups opposed to any form of test on Bt eggplant, also known as Bt brinjal in India.


Adalla said six Indian scientific institutions have affirmed the safety of Bt eggplant and dismissed allegations that it is a “monster crop.”


Dr. Eufemio Rasco of UP Mindanao, an academician at the National Academy of Science and Technology (NAST), had been engaged in a bitter debate with rabid opponents of Bt eggplant, which is now on field trial in seven sites nationwide.


He had supported the tests and said those who oppose it should remember that Bt is the same organic bacterium used in their Bt sprays commonly used in Mindanao and is also the same bacterium that is present in the soil.


Bt has been used to fortify the local eggplant variety to allow it to manufacture a protein that can protect the eggplant fruit by killing the dreaded fruits and stem borer that feeds on the country’s most popular vegetable

.

In spite of the fact that the insecticidal properties of Bt had been known since 1901 and it had been used in a number of products spanning several decades, Greenpeace and other still would not want any developing country to avail itself of the benefits from the bacterium, which inhabits the soil and is not pathogenic.


Adalla stressed that the field tests of Bt eggplant have been approved by the Bureau of Plant Industry (BPI) and subjected to rigorous assessments by the appropriate regulatory bodies and independent scientists before the tests were carried out.


As such, she argued, the test is legitimate, consistent and compliant with government-issued set of guidelines which is considered “one of the strictest in the world” and is being used as reference by nearby Asian countries as they develop their own policy for GM testing.


She expressed regret that “UP’s academic freedom to do independent research was assaulted/violated, a tradition that UP holds so dearly. The uprooting of a scientific experiment is an assault to scientific inquiry and independence of responsible scientists in quest for truth. This is the first time it happened to the university, touted as the bastion of scientific research and technological innovations.


Sometime ago, Rasco (also a UP professor and scientist) had been criticized by the rabid opponents of Bt eggplant and any other genetically modified organism (GMO) but stood his ground and secured the support of UP students who had lauded his principled stand.


“Why are they so afraid of these tests? Even the Vatican itself had expressed support for research into biotechnological options to improve the quality of crops, raise the food inventory and assure farmers of better incomes. It seems they do not want facts. They only want superstition to rule the food chain. Are we back to the Dark Ages?” he asked.


Since Bt was first used in 1901, there has never been a single case in which the friendly bacterium contaminated anything nor did it cause any disease.


In fact, organic farmers use Bt for their sprays but Greenpeace and other groups did not raise any howl, biotechnologists complained.


Going by their meterstick, the environmentalists want no intervention on plant genetics, Rasco said, but they should also train their guns on Fr. Gregor Mendel, the geneticist who opened the door to durable crops that they eat today.


He expressed fears that if these environmental groups can resort to the rule of the mob without being sanctioned, “then there would be no hope for science in agriculture and we might as well return to the rule of the jungle.”

Read more at www.philstar.com
 

The Pope, Interreligious Leader

Amplify’d from www.americamagazine.org

Cambridge, MA. Austen Ivereigh’s most recent blog very helpfully draws our attention to the Pope’s New Year’s Day - World Day of Peace – message, Religious Freedom, the Path to Peace, just as he did a week ago to the Pope’s BBC broadcast and its welcome message.

Given the religious violence that is in the news these days, it is timely that the Pope is speaking out and challenging his peers in other traditions to work together for respect and human rights. And it is good that the Pope uses these public occasions to make broad, general appeals that we live together in peace, and work with our sisters and brothers in other religious traditions to ensure freedom of religion and make religious commitment a source of respect for all people. (In this regard, it is striking that he plans now to honor John Paul II’s bold initiative in gathering religious leaders for prayer in Assisi in 1986, by an anniversary event there this fall.

As readers know, I enjoy teasing out themes of interreligious significance from this Pope’s writings and pronouncements, as I did recently with respect to his book-length interview, The Light of the World.

But in this case, it is easy, and a pleasure, to add this blog in support of Mr. Ivereigh’s, since the Pope's Religious Freedom, the Path to Peace, is rich in statements about the mutual cooperation and mutual respect required today, not just of individual believers, but of religious communities — in all faiths, large and small. See the quotes I highlight at the end of this blog — and of course, go and read the Pope’s entire message.

I close my part of this reflection with just a few further observations. First, again, it really is true that this Pope is now taking the lead in pushing the Church to take religious diversity seriously as a positive reality. Second, it is important to notice that he is not speaking simply of individuals with good faith and sincerity, but of entire traditions, with their own leadership structures, as counterparts to the Church. Nor does  there seem to be any thought in the Pope’s remarks of “the Church plus the great religions” — rather, the Church is one among these religions today, however we understand that fact.

But three harder points also need to be made. First, it is not so easy to mark off the “great religions” as our counterparts. It would not be easy, nor useful, to decide which traditions are great or little, so the door is open to taking seriously many small and more local traditions that don’t fit neatly onto the Judaism-Christianity-Islam-Hinduism-Buddhism-Confucianism-Taoism-Shintoism list. It would be very far from the logic of the Pope’s appeal to ignore small traditions, even if he does not refer to them. Nor, of course, do religions’ most prominent and powerful clerics necessarily speak adequately for their communities, so the conversation on religious liberty envisioned by the Pope cannot be merely a top-down enterprise.

Second, the quotes I selected below from paragraph 11 appeal to Vatican II’s Nostra Aetate (and not, for instance, Dominus Iesus) to ground a Catholic openness to other faiths. This is fine, but there is work to be done in dealing with the widespread opinion among people of other faith traditions, after 45 years, that Nostra Aetate offers only a good start, a cautious, limited, partial, even condescending respect for the world’s religions. The Pope and the Vatican very much need to work with theologians and those with long experience in actual interreligious dialogue to bolster with credibility the appeal made in Religious Freedom, the Path to Peace and the new Assis gesture. Unless it is clear that to its deepest core the Church is thoroughly serious about working with people of other traditions and in not predetermining the conversation, it seems unlikely that real cooperation will take place.

Third, it is rather early to ponder the issue, but what kind of spiritual exchange will take place at the proposed Assisi 2011 meeting? It is well known that many, including Joseph Ratzinger, hesitated at the idea that religious leaders could or should pray together at Assisi in 1986. But it seems necessary today that we ambition more: if we do not pray together, can we really work together as religious persons? Speeches and declarations and photo ops will not suffice; dare I say that God will not be satisfied with leaders who insist on praying only separately from one another? In his last book, Christianity and the Religions, Jacques Dupuis, SJ, reflected on Assisi 1986 and discussed the ways in which we can think about praying together with people of other faith traditions. I hope there is still a copy of this good book at the Vatican, since it will be a good reference in the months to come.

Selections from what the Pope said in his New Year's Day address:

7. "How can anyone deny the contribution of the world’s great religions to the development of civilization? The sincere search for God has led to greater respect for human dignity. Christian communities, with their patrimony of values and principles, have contributed much to making individuals and peoples aware of their identity and their dignity, the establishment of democratic institutions and the recognition of human rights and their corresponding duties.

10. "In a globalized world marked by increasingly multi-ethnic and multi-religious societies, the great religions can serve as an important factor of unity and peace for the human family. On the basis of their religious convictions and their reasoned pursuit of the common good, their followers are called to give responsible expression to their commitment within a context of religious freedom. Amid the variety of religious cultures, there is a need to value those elements which foster civil coexistence, while rejecting whatever is contrary to the dignity of men and women.

"The public space which the international community makes available for the religions and their proposal of what constitutes a “good life” helps to create a measure of agreement about truth and goodness, and a moral consensus; both of these are fundamental to a just and peaceful coexistence. The leaders of the great religions, thanks to their position, their influence and their authority in their respective communities, are the first ones called to mutual respect and dialogue.

11. "For the Church, dialogue between the followers of the different religions represents an important means of cooperating with all religious communities for the common good. The Church herself rejects nothing of what is true and holy in the various religions. “She has a high regard for those ways of life and conduct, precepts and doctrines which, although differing in many ways from her own teaching, nevertheless often reflect a ray of that truth which enlightens all men and women.”

"The path to take is not the way of relativism or religious syncretism. The Church, in fact, “proclaims, and is in duty bound to proclaim without fail, Christ who is the way, the truth and the life (Jn 14:6); in Christ, in whom God reconciled all things to himself, people find the fullness of the religious life”. Yet this in no way excludes dialogue and the common pursuit of truth in different areas of life, since, as Saint Thomas Aquinas would say, “every truth, whoever utters it, comes from the Holy Spirit.”

"The year 2011 marks the twenty-fifth anniversary of the World Day of Prayer for Peace convened in Assisi in 1986 by Pople John Paul II. On that occasion the leaders of the great world religions testified to the fact that religion is a factor of union and peace, and not of division and conflict. The memory of that experience gives reason to hope for a future in which all believers will see themselves, and will actually be, agents of justice and peace.

12. "Politics and diplomacy should look to the moral and spiritual patrimony offered by the great religions of the world in order to acknowledge and affirm universal truths, principles and values which cannot be denied without denying the dignity of the human person."

Read more at www.americamagazine.org
 

British Bishop Links Traditional Catholicism to Pedophilia

Amplify’d from www.examiner.com

British Bishop Links Traditional Catholicism to Pedophilia


Getty

Photo: Is this man "extreme" and "flamboyant" in vestments and rubrics as Bp. Burns says?

Much akin to likening laws against robbing banks as the main cause of bank robberies, Bishop Tom Burns of the Diocese of Menevia, Wales, has stated from the pulpit that the homosexual rape of pre-pubescent boys by a very small percentage of Catholic priests was caused by the following liturgical attitude;

"Those who go to extremes to express the Mass in a particular way..."  by way of "Flamboyant modes of liturgical vestments and rubrical gestures."


And according to the cleric still in good standing within the Catholic Church, the reason for "extremes" and "flamboyant modes" happens to be Clericalism (the anti-priest notion that from an eccesiastical perspective, priests wield too much power);

For priests who offended [committed pedophilia], I’m not sure that their abuses grew out of the rule of celibacy; abuse happens within otherwise good families too. I’m more convinced that it grew out of the clericalism of the past. That clericalism risks raising its head today among those who again are looking for identity in status, not service. They want to be treated differently.


The Bishop's argument that Clericalism is the root cause for pedophilia fails to hold water in light of Newsweek magazine's report in April, 2010 that;

"The rate of abuse by Catholic priests is not higher than these national estimates [for the average male]."


It defies common sense that Clericalism fuels pedophilia simply because there aren't any clerics in Corporate America, family owned businesses or any other segment of American life other than that of Tradition-minded Catholics.

Bishop Burns also fails to mention that in a John Jay School of Law study commissioned by the USCCB, it was determined that more than eighty percent of the abuse at issue was of a homosexual nature.

The same John Jay study cites that the number of reported victims of male-on-male sexual abuse are as follows;

  • 353 in the 1950s. 
  • 1,264 in the 1960s.
  • 2,129 in the 1970s.

The number of priests in the 1950s was greater than it was in the 1970s, yet the number of homosexual rape skyrocketed as the number of Traditional-minded priests passed away and the number of theologically liberal-minded slowly took over the ranks of the priesthood.

And The Catalyst For The Collapse...

In a previously published Examiner article, it's been cited that just about everything Catholic, from the number of priests to the number of Faithful that attend Mass, has been swirling the drain ever since the so-called fresh breeze of Vatican II hit the shores of the United States like a Cat-5 hurricane.

Prior to the 1970s, the vast majority of those in the English-speaking world never even heard the word 'pedophilia', more or less even understood the meaning.

And not since the ultra-liberal takeover of Catholicism since the closing of the Second Vatican Council and the corresponding takeover of the seminaries by the Lavender Mafia, has there been not only a rise in homosexual misconduct and crimes, but an overall abandonment of Catholicism by a majority of the Faithful.  

What Progressive Catholics Really Want...

Bishop Burns seems to have forgotten that ordained priests are of a higher ecclesiastical state than those of the laity, no matter how badly Roman Protestants desire for the laity to be equal to (or greater than) that of priests.

The so-called Progressive Catholics have enamored themselves to anti-clericalism to such a point that they would delight in seeing priests essentially become nothing more than Eucharistic sperm donors, flitting from parish to parish, consecrating hosts and hearing the rare Confession of the relative handful of mainstream post-Vatican II Catholics who still retain the vague recollection that Penance is still a Sacrament.

Regardless if His Excellency Bishop Burns wants to admit it or not, the cause of pedophilia isn't the acceptance of Clericalism... it's the acceptance of homosexuality.

Source - The Telegraph

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Readers respond to ’The Catholic Who’s Anti-Catholic’

One person even wrote, "Nuke the Vatican ASAP.”

Amplify’d from www.pewsitter.com

Readers respond to ’The Catholic Who’s Anti-Catholic’


By Matt Abbott

Pewsitter.com


January 1, 2011 - As expected, I’ve received both angry and complimentary e-mails in response to my previous PewSitter.com commentary. One person even wrote, &idquo;Nuke the Vatican ASAP.” Nice, huh? Please be advised that I will not correspond with anyone who writes such things, although I will save your e-mails just in case I, um, happen to meet with foul play and the authorities need to know where to begin their investigation. Anyway, below are selected (edited) e-mails. Happy New Year!



Carolyn Van Pelt wrote:






I’m not anyone of any consequence whose opinion would matter, but I frequently read your column and appreciated ’The Catholic who’s anti-Catholic.’ I was gone from the Church for 20 years. Left after a major conversion in my 20’s and because a good friend, who ’corrected’ everything I’d been taught in eight years of Catholic school, told me I needed to be ’born again.’ I wandered from one Protestant church to another like a homeless orphan until five years ago, when through the faithful prayers and rosaries of my mother, I came home to the one, true Church.



However, while I was gone, I met so many Catholics who also had left and harbored great hatred for the Church—and I do mean hatred. Sadly, because of years of my association with Evangelical fundamentalists, I became one of them. I’m still healing. It’s been a whirlwind journey. It hurts to read it, but it’s true. The bigotry is real, and I was one of them.



Now, after several great confessors and a wonderful priest who told me to get up
from the ashes, use what I’ve learned and bring those who have wandered from The Faith, home, I’ve humbly embarked on that mission, stumbling with a new blog of my own, praying that for every soul I embittered, the Lord will let me bring 10 back. I learn a great deal from you and appreciate your witness for the truth.





A.F. wrote:






Oh please Matt, I think this woman is quite centered and knows what she is talking about, because being a survivor, I have experienced the scorching indifference of the Church. No one knows in my old parish community nor do they care of what happened when I approached the Church and parish. This woman is so right about the Church blathering on about abortion and homosexuality, as though they have the right moral compass.



Your words above prove to me that you are a Catholic droid. Get educated. If you tell a woman not to get an abortion, you’d better be ready and willing to support her and her baby personally until the baby is grown. Otherwise you must not preach. I’ll never read another article by you.





Tony Loginow wrote:






Thank you once again for a poignant article about Catholics who are looking for a way out of their own turned and misdirected hearts, minds and consciences. Your articles fill an important link for those Catholics who follow the Magisterium. Happy New Year and the God bless you and your family in 2011.





Diego J. Pena wrote:






Your column was well-written, direct and to the point. I completely agree with you. While I, like other Catholics, am disappointed over the scandals, I see the scandals as an opportunity for the Church to become stronger. Sadly, the lady you quoted is very misguided. We need to pray for these fallen-away Catholics. Keep up the good work.





Helen Westover wrote:






Oh As you know, I am not anti-Catholic. But the damage done to my beloved Church by these crimes is incalculable. I was a victim of clergy abuse, from adolescence to adulthood. At my ’Cursillo,’ during a ’spiritual guidance’ encounter, the priest ran his hand up my leg.



I love the Church with all my heart, and thank God, I didn’t let these experiences (three priests and a bishop) damage my faith. But we must hold Christ’s one, true Church to a higher standard. I know it’s difficult sometimes to decipher who is using this as a sledgehammer to further damage the Church and those who have been truly wounded.





Cecilia Skudder wrote:






I have to tell you how delighted I am by your commentary on Pewsitter regarding that lady who was so vitriolic in her condemnation of the Catholic Church. As a wife, mother, grandmother, retired Macmillan Nurse (who looked after those dying of cancer), volunteer editor of my parish’s website and numerous other roles, I am so pleased you put into words what I find hard to do.



I live in Orpington, Kent, UK. It was an Australian from Mackay who alerted me to Pewsitter and I have put a link to it on my parish’s website. Thanks again for your support of the Church.








Matt C. Abbott is a Catholic columnist with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Communication, Media and Theatre from Northeastern Illinois University in Chicago, and an Associate in Applied Science degree in Business Management from Triton College in River Grove, Ill. He has worked in the right-to-life movement and is a published writer focused on Catholic and social issues. He can be reached at mattcabbott@gmail.com.
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The first Anglicans have received into the Roman Catholic Church under a scheme set up by Pope Benedict XVI

Amplify’d from www.telegraph.co.uk

First Anglicans are received into the Roman Catholic Church in historic service


The first Anglicans have received into the Roman Catholic Church under a
scheme set up by Pope Benedict XVI.

The first Anglicans have received into the Roman Catholic Church under a scheme set up by Pope Benedict XVI.
Pope Benedict XVI leads the New Year solemn mass in Saint Peter's Basilica at the Vatican


Priests and worshippers from around 20 Church of England parishes converted to
Catholicism on Saturday at a ceremony in Westminster Cathedral.



Three former bishops were among those confirmed at the service, which saw the
first wave of Anglicans defecting to Rome to join the Ordinariate.



The Pope introduced the structure in 2009 to welcome disillusioned Anglicans
into the Catholic fold after secret meetings were held at the Vatican with
Church of England bishops, as The Sunday Telegraph revealed a year earlier.



The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, admitted the move had put him
in “an awkward position”, but more recently he said he respected the
decisions of those who decided to leave.



While around 50 clergy are expected to defect to the Catholic Church over the
coming months, it has been predicted that thousands of traditionalist
worshippers will join the exodus, particularly if they are given no
concessions once women are made bishops.


Opposition to women bishops was one of the main reasons for the priests’
resignations from the Church of England, said Bishop Alan Hopes, the
Catholic bishop who has overseen their welcome into the Ordinariate.


More importantly, he added, “most of them have been journeying, seeking the
fullness of truth, and they found it in the Catholic Church”.


The former bishops of Fulham, Ebbsfleet and Richborough, John Broadhurst,
Andrew Burnham and Keith Newton respectively, were applauded after they
received holy communion before a packed congregation at the cathedral
yesterday.


They have been key to orchestrating the exodus from the Church of England and
advocating the Ordinariate, which they described as an “answer to their
prayers”.


Fr Broadhurst has been particularly vocal in criticising the Church, accusing
it of breaking promises to opponents of women bishops and describing it as
“vicious” and “fascist”.


Two of the bishops’ wives were also confirmed as Catholics yesterday, along
with three former Anglican nuns who were forced to take refuge in a Catholic
convent after being told to leave their house at Walsingham Abbey.


Their departure devastated the community in Walsingham, leaving four older
nuns to run the priory while the younger ones faced a period of uncertainty.


One of the nuns, Sister Wendy Renata, said she felt “fantastic” after formally
being welcomed into the Catholic Church.


“I’ve wanted to do it for years. I’ve finally done it,” she said.


In the next few weeks, the next groups of clergy and worshippers are set to be
received into the Catholic Church, which is due to announce the precise
timetable for the launch of the Ordinariate this month.


The confirmations at yesterday’s service were the first step to its
establishment in this country. All of the clergy who have resigned from the
Church of England now have to be re-ordained as the Catholic Church does not
recognise Anglican orders.


It is expected that as many as 50 clergy will be ordained by Easter as the new
structure begins to take shape, but there are likely to be many disputes in
parishes torn over whether to remain in the Church of England.


The Most Rev Vincent Nichols, the Archbishop of Westminster, said in November
that he did not feel “guilty” that some Anglican parishes would be left
without vicars.


He said the Catholic Church would provide £250,000 in start-up funding for the
Ordinariate and look to raise more money from donations and sponsors to
cover running costs.


Archbishop Williams has expressed regret at the resignations of the clergy and
warned that there will be challenges as they set up their new churches.


“I think the challenge will come in working out shared use of churches, of how
we as Anglicans 'recommend’ people and also of course there will be some
parishes without priests - so we have a practical challenge here and there,”
he said.


Earlier in the process, the Vatican published its “apostolic constitution
Anglicanorum coetibus”, allowing Anglican clergy to enter into full
communion with the Catholic Church while maintaining aspects of their
spiritual heritage.


While Catholic priests are not permitted to marry, there are a small number of
former Anglican bishops with wives, who joined the Catholic clergy post the
mid-90s.


“They were given disciplinary sanction from clerical celibacy in order to be
ordained as a Catholic priest,” Bishop Hopes said.


Commenting on how the Anglican Archbishop might feel about the arrangement,
Bishop Hopes said he understood he would be feeling unhappy.


“But I know too that he understands that we are all on a journey of faith, and
sometimes our paths take standard routes.


“And if you truly believe that you have found fullness of truth in the
Catholic Church, there is nothing you can do about it.


“You have to become a Catholic.”


A former Anglican convert himself, Bishop Hopes was received into the Catholic
Church in 1994.

Read more at www.telegraph.co.uk
 

Idolatry: Pope John Paul II statue lands in Mumbai - The Times of India

MUMBAI: A statue of the late Pope John Paul II will be installed in the compound of Holy Name Cathedral, next to the Catholic archbishop's house, at Colaba in February.



The statue, which has been sent by the Vatican, is part of a larger plan to have similar installations across the world even as the late pope is about to be canonized. A church source said the 400-kg statue had already arrived in the city but it was awaiting clearance from the Customs authorities. The statue will be installed next to the bell in the cathedral compound.



Another statue is supposed to be installed in a Catholic institution in Delhi.



Known for his leading role in known to be one of the most influential persons in the world and bringing down the Communist regime in Poland, the late pope was born Karol Jozef Wojtyla on May 18, 1920 in Poland. He became the pope in October 1978 and his tenure lasted till April, 2005. during which, the world witnessed the roll back of Communism from most of eastern Europe. Incidentally, he has been the only Polish and non-Italian pope since 1552. He passed Karol Jozef Wojtyla who later took on the name John Paul II after he become pope away on April 2, 2005.



Pope John Paul II was pope from October 1978 to April 2005 during which time he saw the roll back of communism from most of Eastern Europe. He was the only Polish Pope and was the only non Italian Pope since 1552.

The much travelled pope visited 129 countries in the world and opened the doors of the catholic church for a dialogue with the protestant churches, judaism, islam and the eastern rite churches.he however generated a controversy when he took orthodox stands on contraception and the ordination of women in the catholic church.





Church sources said that the statue of the pope will be installed next to the bell in the cathedral compound to mark the visit of pope paul vi to the city in the mid 1960's. john paul ii visited india twice during his tenure as pope, once in 1986 and again in 1992 and came out strongly against the trend among radical priests who were part of the liberation theology movement.this movement advocated the use of marxist methods for protecting the rights of the poor and the downtrodden.





Read more: Pope John Paul II statue lands in Mumbai - The Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/mumbai/Pope-John-Paul-II-statue-lands-in-Mumbai/articleshow/7202728.cms#ixzz19rqG8vC8


Good God, Bad World, Why?

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Good God, Bad World, Why? SDA (10)


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Good God, Bad World, Why? SDA (10)

Transocean tries to stop another Horizon probe

Transocean tries to stop another Horizon probe

Transocean Ltd, the world's biggest offshore rig contractor, aims to stop a seventh U.S. body from investigating the accident that sank one of its rigs while causing the largest U.S.

Reuters
Transocean tries to stop another Horizon probe
Transocean tries to stop another Horizon probe Fire boat response crews battle the blazing remnants of the offshore oil rig Deepwater Horizon, off Louisiana, in this handout photograph taken on April 21, 2010 and obtained on April 22. REUTERS/U.S. Coast Guard/Handout

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Transocean Ltd, the world's biggest offshore rig contractor, aims to stop a seventh U.S. body from investigating the accident that sank one of its rigs while causing the largest U.S. offshore oil spill.

In a letter to the Chemicals Safety Board (CSB) dated December 30, Transocean lawyer Rachel Clingman repeated a request for documents as the company tries to demonstrate that the CSB lacks jurisdiction over April's Deepwater Horizon disaster.

A ruptured well led to an explosion on the Horizon, which was drilling in the Gulf of Mexico for BP Plc, and that accident ultimately sank the deepwater rig, and caused more than 4 million barrels of oil to spew into the sea.

Clingman had argued in a December 2 letter, which was released to reporters along with the latest correspondence, that the rig was not subject to CSB scrutiny because it was not a fixed source.

Clingman went on to quote Michael Bromwich, director of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, as saying last month that CSB officials had acknowledged they "weren't sure that they had jurisdiction to do this investigation."

A CSB representative was unavailable for comment on Friday.

According to publications on its website, CSB investigations look into all aspects of chemical accidents, including physical causes such as equipment failure as well as inadequacies in regulations, industry standards, and safety management systems.

Probes of the Deepwater Horizon disaster have been opened by the Presidential Oil Spill Commission, the U.S. Coast Guard, the Department of Justice, and the Department of Interior's inspector general, as well as four Senate committees and five committees in the House of Representatives, Transocean said.

(Reporting by Braden Reddall, editing by Dave Zimmerman)

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