Undoubtedly, although that said, bishops tend to be a bit more cautious these days about picking up waifs and strays from other dioceses (once bitten and all that…)
(Please Note: This uploaded content is no longer available.) Gorgias:
Hey, there’s only been one case in our local RC parish in which an imported priest hit a parishioner over the head with a bottle of wine (while helping at the RC parish), became an interstate fugitive from justice, and tied the diocese up with the resultant litigation!


For some reason, the next priest his church sent met with a
rather chilly reception . . .
And I’ve been told that there’s a group of something like a dozen priests in another country that
want to come here (and the diocese needs priests desperately; it has something like 18 parishes where the norm would her 99), but the bishop isn’t convinced that they’re “stable” . . .
There would need to be a canon law adjustment to handle this class of priests, and in a way that would prevent their reception by any bishop of a diocese in which such provisions were not in place.
While I’m a firm supporter of the Eastern notion of married priests (and the priest for the other parish in town from our Eparchy has his son in our parish’s preschool where my wife worked!), and think it would be a good idea in the West, I
certainly see how this would open the doors to abuse if not handled cautiously . . .
Because the discipline is one of the universal Church?
Of what “universal Church” do you speak?
Certainly not the one of those in communion with the Bishop of Rome, as
almost all of those churches have had married priests
since they began . . .