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SoCalRC
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In another thread, I quoted something from the Catechism that I have read many times:
Our obligation to truth is repeated many times in the Catechism and Church documents. Which made me wonder, are we really such horrible Christians, or are we just, by and large, stupid?
Perhaps we do not know that we are spreading falsehoods maliciously. But the Church seems to be saying that ignorance is not bliss. If we do not seek the truth, then we are “culpable” for the evil consequences of our actions.
As fate would have it, someone sent me a Guardian article, which is basically a quiz of 20 things that Editor Michael Tomasky would like his next president to know. It is a scattered and ecclectic list, but touches on many topics covered here. I wouldn’t expect the average person to know every answer. But, frankly, think that if someone struggles with more than a few, they really should make an effort to educate themselves before, say, voting and certainly before offering moral guidance on the same issue to other Catholics.
Here it is:
guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/jul/23/johnmccain.barackobama
Personally I wish it hadn’t included even an ‘answer guide’. Each question in the article contains a link to a related article and one key to being legitimately knowledgable about a subject is to actually learn something beyond the bare minimum. Even if one just skimmed the linked articles looking for the answer, they would at least pick up some stray facts.
Too often we play ‘phone line’, acting as parrots and simply repeating what we here. But as Catholics involved in Political Life, that is not acceptable, as Rome has explained:
vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20021124_politica_en.html
1790
A human being must always obey the certain judgment of his conscience. If he were deliberately to act against it, he would condemn himself. Yet it can happen that moral conscience remains in ignorance and makes erroneous judgments about acts to be performed or already committed.
1791
This ignorance can often be imputed to personal responsibility. This is the case when a man “takes little trouble to find out what is true and good, or when conscience is by degrees almost blinded through the habit of committing sin.” In such cases, the person is culpable for the evil he commits.
1792
Ignorance of Christ and his Gospel, bad example given by others, enslavement to one’s passions, assertion of a mistaken notion of autonomy of conscience, rejection of the Church’s authority and her teaching, lack of conversion and of charity: these can be at the source of errors of judgment in moral conduct.
In glancing at just today’s threads, it struck me that there is an amazing disregard for simple truth here. I’m not talking about disagreements of opinion, but the rote repitition of things that are demonstrably false specifically for the purpose of attacking others.Catechism of the Catholic Church, quoting GUADIUM ET SPES
Our obligation to truth is repeated many times in the Catechism and Church documents. Which made me wonder, are we really such horrible Christians, or are we just, by and large, stupid?
Perhaps we do not know that we are spreading falsehoods maliciously. But the Church seems to be saying that ignorance is not bliss. If we do not seek the truth, then we are “culpable” for the evil consequences of our actions.
As fate would have it, someone sent me a Guardian article, which is basically a quiz of 20 things that Editor Michael Tomasky would like his next president to know. It is a scattered and ecclectic list, but touches on many topics covered here. I wouldn’t expect the average person to know every answer. But, frankly, think that if someone struggles with more than a few, they really should make an effort to educate themselves before, say, voting and certainly before offering moral guidance on the same issue to other Catholics.
Here it is:
What follows are 20 facts that I would like my president to know, offered to you, my perpetually disgruntled readers, in the form of a quiz. Give it a whirl. It’s by definition a little idiosyncratic and not comprehensive, but I’d hope that most of us would agree that it’d be a good idea if the American president knew most of these things without having to be briefed on them. Sources are provided in the links embedded in the questions, but don’t cheat. The answers are at the end.
Global knowledge
- The split between Sunni and Shia, the two main branches of Islam, is approximately how many years old?
a. 700 years
b. 1,100 years.
c. 1,400 years.
d. 3,200 years.
- The gross domestic product real growth rate of China for 2007 is:
a. 5.5%
b. 11.4%
c. 16.1%
d. 20.7%
- Roughly speaking, the respective populations of Palestinians and Jews in the West Bank are:
a. 1.9 million and 700,000
b. 2.3 million and 275,000
c. 2.75 million and 540,000
d. 3 million and 300,000
- Scientific experts were “stunned” in 2007 to learn that the rate at which the Arctic polar ice cap is melting could leave the north pole completely ice-free as soon as:
a. 2018
b. 2060
c. 2121
d. 2030
Domestic Knowledge
- By what year are Medicare expenditures expected to surpass Social Security expenditures?
a. 2028
b. 2014
c. 2082
d. 2525
- In what percentage of the roughly 3,100 counties in the United States is there at least one legal abortion provider?
a. 31%
b. 28%
c. 13%
d. 56%
- Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have a hand in about what percentage of mortgages in the United States?
a. 30%
b. 65%
c. 40%
d. 50%
- How many Americans live below the official poverty line?
a. 26 million
b. 37 million
c. 42 million
d. 53 million
Everyday life
- At the end of 2007, what was the average price in the US of a gallon of milk?
a. $3.87
b. $3.35
c. $4.26
d. $4.41
- What’s the manufacturer’s suggested retail price for a Chevrolet Malibu LS Sedan (base model)?
a. $23,385
b. $27,138
c. $19,345
d. $17,211
- What’s the average annual cost of in-state tuition and fees at a typical state university – say, the University of Missouri?
a. $14,380
b. $16,050
c. $24,700
d. $20,600
- In 2007, the average yearly premium for an employer-sponsored healthcare plan for a family of four was what?
a. $12,100
b. $9,900
c. $18,450
d. $14,200
American history
- List these four historical incidents in chronological order from earliest to latest:
a. The Monroe Doctrine
b. The Indian Removal Act
c. The Treaty of Ghent
d. The Missouri Compromise
- Who wrote the Federalist No 10?
a. John Jay
b. Gouverneur Morris
c. Alexander Hamilton
d. James Madison
- When Truman secretary of state Dean Acheson told senator Arthur Vandenberg that he wanted the case made to the American people to be “clearer than truth”, he was referring to the case for what?
a. The Berlin Airlift
b. The Truman Doctrine
c. The formation of Nato
d. The Korean war
- Affirmative action in the United States was initiated by:
a. An act of Congress
b. A supreme court decision
c. A presidential executive order
d. A policy enacted by a consortium of state university systems
General well-rounded human being-ness
- In the Old Testament, who was changed into a pillar of salt?
a. Job’s wife
b. Job
c. Lot’s wife
d. Esau’s wife
- Who is credited with the discovery of double-helix DNA?
a. Difford and Tilbrook
b. Watson and Crick
c. Sly and Robbie
d. Marsters and Gellar
- Which of these teams has never won a Super Bowl?
a. The Minnesota Vikings
b. The Kansas City Chiefs
c. The St Louis Rams
d. The Pittsburgh Steelers
The full article is here:
- Simon, Randy and Paula are:
a. The Kingston Trio
b. The real names of Peter, Paul and Mary
c. The judges on Dancing With the Stars
d. The judges on American Idol
guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/jul/23/johnmccain.barackobama
Personally I wish it hadn’t included even an ‘answer guide’. Each question in the article contains a link to a related article and one key to being legitimately knowledgable about a subject is to actually learn something beyond the bare minimum. Even if one just skimmed the linked articles looking for the answer, they would at least pick up some stray facts.
Too often we play ‘phone line’, acting as parrots and simply repeating what we here. But as Catholics involved in Political Life, that is not acceptable, as Rome has explained:
vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20021124_politica_en.html