Bishops and Political Action

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All of you guys who are harping against our bishops on social justice issues, here are my questions for your?
  1. Have you read Leo XIII’s Rerum Novarum.
  2. Have you read John Paul II’s Laborem Exercens
  3. Have you read Benedict XVI’s Caritas in Veritate.
  4. Do you own a copy of “COMPENDIUM OF THE SOCIAL DOCTRINE OF THE CHURCH”?
All of these come out of Rome, not our USCCB. John Paul II thought social justice so important he had the Vatican issue an entire book on the subject, just like with the catechism. Before you come down too hard on the US Bishop’s on this issue (and there is valid criticism to be made, IMO), you should at least educate yourselfs about church teaching on the subject.
It is unfortunate that the topic of immigration has driven a wedge between the faithful and a proper understanding of social justice. We went through a horrible period where every liberal notion in the book was adopted by the church leader’s in the name of social justice. Thanks to the teachings of our last two popes and a swing in the pendelum in all things Catholic, we were making strong headway in recovering authentic social justice teachings. Now, due to one issue, the conservative catholics in this country are trashing everything that is described as social justice and in the process adopting some very bad positions and forfeiting the topic to the left. The Bishops rightly know that the church has a place on social justice issues, but all the help they will have will be the political left. It is really an instance of people following their political allies blindly. The other day I actually heard a priest on EWTN radio say “social justice has become a euphemism for liberation theology”. That is completely absurd and JPII would turn over if he heard it.
Yup, read them all. Your compassion filter on them, is much different than my logic filter on them. So I come up with different ideas than marching in lockstep with Obama. Proposing programs, based on compassion that have not worked in the past, cause more harm than good, and cannot possible work based on the application of the simplest element of logic, is not compassion. It is foolishness.
 
Yup, read them all. Your compassion filter on them, is much different than my logic filter on them. So I come up with different ideas than marching in lockstep with Obama. Proposing programs, based on compassion that have not worked in the past, cause more harm than good, and cannot possible work based on the application of the simplest element of logic, is not compassion. It is foolishness.
I can assure you I do NOT march in lock step with Obama. I have never voted for a democratic candidate in my entire life. The extreme dichotomies raised around this place are truly astonding at times. I believe I said that there is valid criticism on the Bishop’s stances on social justice. I am simply trying to make the point that the idea that the bishops should be quiet on these issues is absurd and that it seems rather apparent that people have not read many of the church’s documents on the subject before they spout off.

Wow, either we condemn the bishops carte blance or we are died in the wool followers of Obama. Absurd.
 
At the risk of being accuse again of a Obama supporter, I will defend the Bishop’s involvement in poltical affairs with some references:

“To the Church belongs the right always and everywhere to announce moral principles, including those pertaining to the social order, and to make judgments on any human affairs to the extent that they are required by the fundamental rights of the human person or the salvation of souls.” COMPENDIUM OF THE SOCIAL DOCTRINE OF THE CHURCH, paragraph 71.

“the Church’s social doctrine “belongs to the field, not of ideology, but of theology and particularly of moral theology” COMPENDIUM OF THE SOCIAL DOCTRINE OF THE CHURCH, paragraph 72

“This social doctrine also entails a duty to denounce, when sin is present: the sin of injustice and violence that in different ways moves through society and is embodied in it[120]. By denunciation, the Church’s social doctrine becomes judge and defender of unrecognized and violated rights, especially those of the poor, the least and the weak” Paragraph 81

"
The teachings of Pope John XXIII,[314] the Second Vatican Council,[315] and Pope Paul VI [316] have given abundant indication of the concept of human rights as articulated by the Magisterium. Pope John Paul II has drawn up a list of them in the Encyclical Centesimus Annus: “the right to life, an integral part of which is the right of the child to develop in the mother’s womb from the moment of conception; the right to live in a united family and in a moral environment conducive to the growth of the child’s personality; the right to develop one’s intelligence and freedom in seeking and knowing the truth; the right to share in the work which makes wise use of the earth’s material resources, and to derive from that work the means to support oneself and one’s dependents; and the right freely to establish a family, to have and to rear children through the responsible exercise of one’s sexuality. In a certain sense, the source and synthesis of these rights is religious freedom, understood as the right to live in the truth of one’s faith and in conformity with one’s transcendent dignity as a person"
" Paragraph 155
 
The authority of the national conference of bishops is not represented by comments emanating from a committee of the USCCB. National conferences have authority only when their decrees are voted on by a sufficient (2/3? 3/4?) majority of its members. Beyond that, I am aware of no specific actions that have been demanded of us. If you believe we have been instructed otherwise you need to cite the document.
Yes, sometimes they are, as when they go off suggesting specific solutions to political problems.

Ender
I’m not only concerned about what is demanded (a small subset of our faith) but rather what is taught. I refuse to be a minimalist and only do what the Church currently teaches is the minimum requirement for living the Catholic faith.
 
I’m not talking about a handful of bishops. I am talking about a national conference of bishops. We are all members of political states/nations, like it or not. As Catholics, we have a role in those nations and states.

Bishops’ teaching are not personal opinions.
When people respond to your posts, you disregard the info they give you. Here it is, one more time:

An Episcopal conference is not a teaching conference (per two popes.)
The Vatican has made it clear that Bishops Conferences like the USCCB do NOT speak for the Church in an official capacity. These conferences are administrative and bureaucratic in nature and the letters they publish carry no weight with regard to the teaching of the faith and morals of the Catholic Church.

We must not forget that episcopal conferences have no theological basis, they do not belong to the structure of the Church as willed by Christ, that cannot be eliminated; they have only a practical, concrete function…The collective, therefore, does not substitute for the persons of the bishops, who are the authentic teachers and instructors of the faith for the faithful entrusted to their care…No episcopal conference as such, has a teaching mission; its documents have no weight of their own save that given to them by individual bishops…it must once again become clear that in each diocese there is only one shepherd and teacher of the faith in communion with the other pastors and teachers and with the Vicar of Christ.
Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger - 1985, and affirmed in Apostolos Suos in 1998 by Pope John Paul II.
 
All of you guys who are harping against our bishops on social justice issues, here are my questions for your?
  1. Have you read Leo XIII’s Rerum Novarum.
  2. Have you read John Paul II’s Laborem Exercens
  3. Have you read Benedict XVI’s Caritas in Veritate.
  4. Do you own a copy of “COMPENDIUM OF THE SOCIAL DOCTRINE OF THE CHURCH”?
All of these come out of Rome, not our USCCB. John Paul II thought social justice so important he had the Vatican issue an entire book on the subject, just like with the catechism. Before you come down too hard on the US Bishop’s on this issue (and there is valid criticism to be made, IMO), you should at least educate yourselfs about church teaching on the subject.
It is unfortunate that the topic of immigration has driven a wedge between the faithful and a proper understanding of social justice. We went through a horrible period where every liberal notion in the book was adopted by the church leader’s in the name of social justice. Thanks to the teachings of our last two popes and a swing in the pendelum in all things Catholic, we were making strong headway in recovering authentic social justice teachings. Now, due to one issue, the conservative catholics in this country are trashing everything that is described as social justice and in the process adopting some very bad positions and forfeiting the topic to the left. The Bishops rightly know that the church has a place on social justice issues, but all the help they will have will be the political left. It is really an instance of people following their political allies blindly. The other day I actually heard a priest on EWTN radio say “social justice has become a euphemism for liberation theology”. That is completely absurd and JPII would turn over if he heard it.

**That priest is dead on the mark! JPII himself told the priests to “get out of politics!” and he was a champion for fighting this particular brand of marxism in the 60’s.

A Latin American priest by the name of Gutierrez was the father of Lib Theology. He was quoted as saying, “liberationists interpret sin not primarily from an individual, private perspective, but from a social and economic perspective. Gutierrez explains that “sin is not considered as an individual, private, or merely interior reality. Sin is regarded as a social, historical fact, the absence of brotherhood and love in relationships among men.”

Sorry but this is heresy! Here’s what our current pope has to say about lib theology:**

christendom-awake.org/pages/ratzinger/liberationtheol.htm
Read ‘em all except for #3 which I’m still mulling over. You left out an important one: Centissimus Annus (written after Rerum Novarem.) Let us ask you a couple of questions. Why, in their desire for universal healthcare did the American bishops disregard the fundamental principle of subsidiarity which appears again and again in the earlier church encyclicals. Why, in their desire for “immigration reform” (code name) for amnesty, are they ignoring the principle of solidarity which appears again and again in earlier church encyclicals.

Oh, and about that Compendium? Perhaps you’d like to take a look at this.

acton.org:80/publications/mandm/mandm_article_33.php

Do you believe that social justice equates with encouraging the faithful to embrace the largest expansion of the welfare state since the New Deal by extending social services to illegal aliens when such a burden cannot be met by taxpayers? Can you not see the political ramifications of illegal immigration and how our government is allowing this by their unholy alliance with big business and to further their own political agenda?

Do you believe that authentic social justice teaching encompasses regard for a justice and freedom for ALL of God’s people (not just the poor?) Can you not see that the term social justice is now interpreted as meaning tax-payer funded government assistance programs that cause a continual dependency upon welfare. This is contrary to the message given by Pope Leo and is how our God-given liberties are lost to a secular state which only desires control over the populace and wants to be the Arbiter of the common good, usurping God’s sovereign domain.
 
I’m not only concerned about what is demanded (a small subset of our faith) but rather what is taught. I refuse to be a minimalist and only do what the Church currently teaches is the minimum requirement for living the Catholic faith.
You have not grasped the point that what the Church teaches is generic; it is about the ends toward which we should strive, but there is nothing about the means we must use to achieve those ends. She teaches that we must be fair to immigrants, that they have rights and that we have duties toward them … but she says not one word about what that means in practice.

There are a number of people who have called for a Catholic political party since (in their minds) neither the Democrats nor the Republicans follow the teaching of the Church, but such a party is impossible as there is no Church position on most political issues. There is a Church position on moral issues - those things that are intrinsically evil - but the Church has no position defining the best solutions to political problems.

I oppose illegal immigration and illegal immigrants. I would seal the border tomorrow. I support the new Arizona law. I oppose granting citizenship to children who just happen to be born on American soil. If you (or anyone else) can show me anything the Church teaches in opposition to any of these particulars I’ll change my position, but pointing to stack of Church encyclicals that speak only in general terms and require interpretation in their implementation does not meet that requirement. It is not sinful to hold any of those positions.

Ender
 
I can assure you I do NOT march in lock step with Obama. I have never voted for a democratic candidate in my entire life. The extreme dichotomies raised around this place are truly astonding at times. I believe I said that there is valid criticism on the Bishop’s stances on social justice. I am simply trying to make the point that the idea that the bishops should be quiet on these issues is absurd and that it seems rather apparent that people have not read many of the church’s documents on the subject before they spout off.

Wow, either we condemn the bishops carte blance or we are died in the wool followers of Obama. Absurd.
Well then I apologize for misunderstanding your point. However in my opinion, the USCCB has been absolutely wrong and in lockstep with Democratic Socialism most of the time when they deal with political issues. Thankfully there are a few Bishops who don’t agree with the USCCB.
 
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Tigg:
Read ‘em all except for #3 which I’m still mulling over. You left out an important one: Centissimus Annus (written after Rerum Novarem.) Let us ask you a couple of questions. Why, in their desire for universal healthcare did the American bishops disregard the fundamental principle of subsidiarity which appears again and again in the earlier church encyclicals. Why, in their desire for “immigration reform” (code name) for amnesty, are they ignoring the principle of solidarity which appears again and again in earlier church encyclicals.
Well, you guys who have read them all are definitely part of the .0001% of catholics who have. Question #1, From what I could tell, most of the Bishops’ actions in the healthcare debate was trying to promote right-to-life issues. I do know they acknowledged the need for health care reform in this country, and I have no problem with that. We do need valid healthcare reform critically since our healthcare system is likely to bankrupt us in the next decade or so. As to how they ignored the principal of subsidiarity on this issue, I can’t say. I do know it was totally ignored by Obama, Pelosi, and Co and we will pay dearly for it in the future. But I did not think this was a debate about Obama.

Question #2, I am not for sure how the principal of subsidiarity comes into play below the federal government level with respect to immigration. Since we are talking about a nation’s border that needs protected and a nation’s immigration policy, the lowest level it can truly be addressed is at the federal level. So I don’t think the Bishop’s are ignoring that with respect to immigration.
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Tigg:
Do you believe that social justice equates with encouraging the faithful to embrace the largest expansion of the welfare state since the New Deal by extending social services to illegal aliens when such a burden cannot be met by taxpayers? Can you not see the political ramifications of illegal immigration and how our government is allowing this by their unholy alliance with big business and to further their own political agenda?
Question # 1) I don’t see the Bishops doing so #2) no/yes. But what does that question have to do with the Bishops?

[QUOT=Tiggs]I oppose illegal immigration and illegal immigrants. I would seal the border tomorrow. I support the new Arizona law. I oppose granting citizenship to children who just happen to be born on American soil. If you (or anyone else) can show me anything the Church teaches in opposition to any of these particulars I’ll change my position, but pointing to stack of Church encyclicals that speak only in general terms and require interpretation in their implementation does not meet that requirement. It is not sinful to hold any of those positions.

Did a Bishop say it was sinful?
 
Well then I apologize for misunderstanding your point. However in my opinion, the USCCB has been absolutely wrong and in lockstep with Democratic Socialism most of the time when they deal with political issues. Thankfully there are a few Bishops who don’t agree with the USCCB.
Apology accepted, but next time try to read my point of view. I suspect, with the exception of immigration, I would agree with you guys on almost all political issues. And with immigration, I simply do not think your solution (ie simply seal the border and enforce disfunctional laws) will work. I think we need to step back and take a look at some of Bush’s proposals from the early part of the decade.

As to the Bishops being in lockstep with Democratic socialism, I think that pretty much used to be the case. As I stated clearly in my first post on this thread, there is valid criticism of the Bishops on social justice issues. But like many problems in the church caused by the progressive fractions, this has changed and even the USCCB has been getting more and more right. As I said in my previous post, almost all of the “headline” positions and active lobbying the USCCB did in the healthcare debate concerned abortion funding and end-of-life care issues. And they almost won that battle. So I for one was glad they were speaking out in politics.

At the end of the day, as the quotes I provided make perfectly clear, the church has responsibility to speak out on social justice issues. SThis does not mean they will always get it right. We know that is not the case. But as catholics, we are obligated to honestly consider their views.
 
Tiggs:
That priest is dead on the mark! JPII himself told the priests to “get out of politics!” and he was a champion for fighting this particular brand of marxism in the 60’s.

A Latin American priest by the name of Gutierrez was the father of Lib Theology. He was quoted as saying, “liberationists interpret sin not primarily from an individual, private perspective, but from a social and economic perspective. Gutierrez explains that “sin is not considered as an individual, private, or merely interior reality. Sin is regarded as a social, historical fact, the absence of brotherhood and love in relationships among men.”

Sorry but this is heresy! Here’s what our current pope has to say about lib theology
Sorry, both JP II and Benedict XVI issued social justice encyclicals. Social justice was key to them and to equate it with liberation theology is WRONG. One of Liberation theology many faults was an abandonment of many of the church’s long held social justice teachings. Catholic conservatives would serve themselves much better by coming to a better understanding of some of the principals of the church’s social justice teachings and applying their conservative principals to make them become a reality. Instead, you guys think the game plan should be to reject the whole idea of social justice, and in the process cede the whole lot of it to the liberal catholics, with very bad results.
 
Yup, read them all. Your compassion filter on them, is much different than my logic filter on them. So I come up with different ideas than marching in lockstep with Obama. Proposing programs, based on compassion that have not worked in the past, cause more harm than good, and cannot possible work based on the application of the simplest element of logic, is not compassion. It is foolishness.
mark, I know you apologized for misreading my original post, but considering the nature of your response, I think I am somewhat justified in making at least one rather cynical response and here it is.

I went back and reread my post that prompted this. It was very plainly written IMO. Due to the facts 99% of catholics don’t even know these documents exist and your poor reading abilitiy, I really have to doubt your claim to have read them all.
 
In the US, over 80% of all baptized Catholics do not attend Sunday Mass on a regular basis.

Then xcommunicate the lot and tell them if they want to come back, the confessional is ready and waiting. We must take a stand here, and those that claim the faith, must adhere to it, otherwise, let them join the protestant denominations…because they are doing just that, protesting the Catholic faith by not attending mass. We need church leaders that are not afraid to make a stand, this politically correct, luke warmness within them must come to and end now…
Why is it lukewarm to advocate for the tenants that Jesus taught?

He wasn’t about praise and worship, Jesus’ message was about saving our souls by feeding Him when He was hungry.

Is so easy to just go to church and say we believe in Him it so much more difficult to walk the talk.

Peace
 
When people respond to your posts, you disregard the info they give you. Here it is, one more time:

An Episcopal conference is not a teaching conference (per two popes.)
NO, I do not disregard their info.

Regardless of how formal the institutional teaching authority of a Bishops’ conference is, it is still teaching of Bishops. Shepherds. The Magisterium. Just because it doesn’t have the same “weight” or authority as other Magisterial teaching does not mean it’s irrelevant or optional to faithful Catholics.
 
You have not grasped the point that what the Church teaches is generic; it is about the ends toward which we should strive, but there is nothing about the means we must use to achieve those ends. She teaches that we must be fair to immigrants, that they have rights and that we have duties toward them … but she says not one word about what that means in practice.

There are a number of people who have called for a Catholic political party since (in their minds) neither the Democrats nor the Republicans follow the teaching of the Church, but such a party is impossible as there is no Church position on most political issues. There is a Church position on moral issues - those things that are intrinsically evil - but the Church has no position defining the best solutions to political problems.

I oppose illegal immigration and illegal immigrants. I would seal the border tomorrow. I support the new Arizona law. I oppose granting citizenship to children who just happen to be born on American soil. If you (or anyone else) can show me anything the Church teaches in opposition to any of these particulars I’ll change my position, but pointing to stack of Church encyclicals that speak only in general terms and require interpretation in their implementation does not meet that requirement. It is not sinful to hold any of those positions.

Ender
But the U.S. Bishops have clearly taught some things in practice. Like their response to the Arizona law. Yes, generally, the Church teaches principles, but the Church also teaches about specific applications of principles, as warranted by contemporary circumstances.

It doesn’t matter to me whether you support the Arizona law or not. I’m just wondering how the teaching of the U.S. Bishops influences your thoughts. You are free to disagree with the teaching of the Bishops.

Regarding immigration, a little history might be of help. The first Christians here were Spanish speaking. And in the 19th century, “anti-immigration” and “anti-Catholic” went pretty much hand in hand (with the influx of Polish, German, Irish immigrants in the first half of the 19th century).
 
mark, I know you apologized for misreading my original post, but considering the nature of your response, I think I am somewhat justified in making at least one rather cynical response and here it is.

I went back and reread my post that prompted this. It was very plainly written IMO. Due to the facts 99% of catholics don’t even know these documents exist and your poor reading abilitiy, I really have to doubt your claim to have read them all.
Then substitute the word “liberal” for “you” and pretend I was talking to liberals and not yourself. I only read the post I responded to. Don’t take it personal, unless you are a liberal democrat. I apologized and now you go on the attack? .

It would be better to not call me a liar, and judge my reading ability. Too bad you cannot accept an apology. I have been feverishly and personally involved in the blather from the USCCB since last January and haver read everything I can to try to get to where I can reconcile my religion with my concience.

Once more, I am sorry I misunderstood your underlying position. I was not in your head.
Now please drop the counterattack. I will accept your apology graciously when it comes.
 
Sorry, both JP II and Benedict XVI issued social justice encyclicals. Social justice was key to them and to equate it with liberation theology is WRONG. One of Liberation theology many faults was an abandonment of many of the church’s long held social justice teachings. Catholic conservatives would serve themselves much better by coming to a better understanding of some of the principals of the church’s social justice teachings and applying their conservative principals to make them become a reality. Instead, you guys think the game plan should be to reject the whole idea of social justice, and in the process cede the whole lot of it to the liberal catholics, with very bad results.
I hardly know where to start in response to your posts. BTW, you misread my comment on the immigration issue. I stated it was contrary to solidarity (or the common good), not subsidiarity. But let’s leave that for the moment and try a different approach.

That the social justice networks which the bishops support are political community organizing is without dispute. Do your own research by going to the USCCB website provided for you in the OP. Let’s take one, step by step to prove a point: The Industrial Areas Foundation which has been financially supported by the bishops through the CCHD for decades. I provide you with these facts:
IAF strives most aggressively to bring religious institutions into its fold, on the theory that church affiliations will help inject the network not only with access to large amounts of cash, but also with perceived moral credibility. As the IAF handbook states:
IAF’s mission is to “build organizations whose primary purpose is power – the ability to act – and whose chief product is social change.” Toward that end, an IAF training institute – which Saul Alinsky himself launched in 1969 as a “school for professional radicals” – trains community organizers in the tactics of revolutionary social change that its founder outlined.
Going one step further, we can now look at a group in one diocese (Santa Fe) who has one affiliate of the IAF strongly entrenched there:

lospequenos.org/CommunityOrganizing/WhyAIIsBadForTheCatholicChurch.pdf

You can do the very same thing with a group called PICO. ( Pacific Institute for Community Organizing) who also received funding from the bishops. Their mobile healthcare vans dispense health care services to the poor and often direct their pregnant clientele toward the nearest Planned Parenthood office. (Many articles on this by the California Right to Life.)

Is this the social justice you are defending? Because the reality is there for anyone with eyes to see that Alinskyian community organizing uses a Marxist ideology, promotes lib theology and networks with progressive groups opposed to moral principles and Catholic teachings.

You can take any of the funded community organizations that the bishops support under the banner of social justice and go through these same steps to understand that we are no longer striving to help the poor and oppressed…… it’s more like social engineering. No, conservatives are not against social justice, just this particular brand of political machination which is undermining the moral teaching of the church.

I simply don’t understand with all the research out there that Catholics don’t recognize this for what it is.
 
Then substitute the word “liberal” for “you” and pretend I was talking to liberals and not yourself. I only read the post I responded to. Don’t take it personal, unless you are a liberal democrat. I apologized and now you go on the attack? .

It would be better to not call me a liar, and judge my reading ability. Too bad you cannot accept an apology. I have been feverishly and personally involved in the blather from the USCCB since last January and haver read everything I can to try to get to where I can reconcile my religion with my concience.

Once more, I am sorry I misunderstood your underlying position. I was not in your head.
Now please drop the counterattack. I will accept your apology graciously when it comes.
The post you responded to was written by me and had nothing to do with liberalism. But the attack is dropped. And I do apologize for the implication of dishonesty, but when I went back and read what I wrote, you response and then the disconnect of those two posts with your subsequent apology, I thought a further challenge was due. now you just want me to pretend you were not responding to me or my original post. I don’t lknow why you quoted it at the time.
 
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Tigg:
I hardly know where to start in response to your posts. BTW, you misread my comment on the immigration issue. I stated it was contrary to solidarity (or the common good), not subsidiarity. But let’s leave that for the moment and try a different approach.
Whoops, sorry about that.

Much of the rest of your post, I tend to agree with. I acknowledge in my first post there was valid criticism of the bishops along these lines.
Code:
But the end result:
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Tigg:
No, conservatives are not against social justice, just this particular brand of political machination which is undermining the moral teaching of the church.
is completely contradictory with the statement that Social Justice should be equated to Liberatino Theology.

My posts have not defend any particular Bishop’s prosititions besides the two that I have paid a little attention to: a) immigration and b) the pro-life stance relative to the healthcare debate. We will disagree on immigration for ever, such is life. But I would think you would be thankful for the pro-life lobbying the bishops have done.

In general the message is to learn the social justice teachings of the church and use your conservative principles to affect change in that direction. But don’t condemn the church for getting involved. And it will change in the right direction.

I listed quotes from the church document that justified the church’s involvment, and listed the rights of men that the church as to defend.

Finally, it should be pointed out that a key compenent of the church teachings is a preference for the poor. And I see nothing in these threads which shows any regonition of that fact.
 
Here’s another one for you, tafan…

Regarding the bishops and their political activism as an end to achieve “social justice,” perhaps you can answer this question. No one else has been able to.
**Why Did the USCCB Join This Civil Rights Organization? **
Members of the LCCHR must pay annual dues depending on the size of the group ($1,000 minimum) and **“must share LCCHR’s principles and purposes.” **(The LCCHR lobbies Congress for abortion rights and same-sex marriage.)
 
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