Catholic Church in Spain fights Franco-era image

  • Thread starter Thread starter LemonAndLime
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
Compared to 50 million dead babies, those ‘rights’ are worth about as much as dog **** scraped off the bottom of my shoe.
What do dead babies have to do with individual rights? .

…Unless you support Roe v. Wade? 🤷 [Not meant directed at you, personally, I assume you do not.]
 
Wait, I’m confused.

Do the Franco supporters here contend that Franco respected individual rights, e.g. freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, protections from searches and seizures, due process, etc.?
He was preferable to the only other choice facing the Spanish-a communist dictatorship.
 
Are you contending the Spanish would been better off had the Communists won the Civil War? Although you may find it hilarious that was the choice -Franco or a communist dictatorship. But then I suspect you believe that Castro was a godsend for Cuba.
They were all swine. I find it appalling that any Catholic could approve of Franco, who waged war on the United States by sending an army to fight a critical ally of ours.

And, as a Polish-American, I find the resistance of the Poles and the Catholic Church in Poland to communism and its dictators admirable and something to be proud of, at the same time that the Spaniards and their clergy were bootlicking fascist Franco.
 
He was preferable to the only other choice facing the Spanish-a communist dictatorship.
There was another choice - fight Franco and fight the communists. The Spaniards were apparently not up to it.
 
Bravo to the Spanish Catholic Church! I’m so sick of the TradCatholic/fascist Catholic glorificiation of Franco. The man was a tyrant. And to the poster who brushed off individual rights when compared to abortion… you can be Catholic and believe in God given individual rights and liberties and be opposed to abortion.

Fascists, communists - born to lose.
 
you can be Catholic and believe in God given individual rights and liberties and be opposed to abortion.
Well hey, if you are Catholic and against abortion, you’re by definition pro-individual rights. The rights of the baby! 👍
 
Both sides were uniformly evil. On the one hand, you had a Nazi-lover who slaughtered thousands of dissenters, on the other, bloodthirsty Reds who tried to destroy the Faith in Spain and LIKEWISE slaughtered thousands of dissenters. Neither side is worthy of anyone’s support. To say otherwise is relativism, which stands condemned just as much as communism and fascism.

Though, I will admit it sickens me that the Spanish Reds who ruled the “Republic” are lionized by today’s liberal media and left-wing activists. Sad 😦
 
Though, I will admit it sickens me that the Spanish Reds who ruled the “Republic” are lionized by today’s liberal media and left-wing activists. Sad 😦
They deserve no more lionization than do the Fascists by ultra right-wing or “traditionalist” Catholics. The end result, in any case, is a wholly secular Spain.
 
They were all swine. I find it appalling that any Catholic could approve of Franco, who waged war on the United States by sending an army to fight a critical ally of ours.

And, as a Polish-American, I find the resistance of the Poles and the Catholic Church in Poland to communism and its dictators admirable and something to be proud of, at the same time that the Spaniards and their clergy were bootlicking fascist Franco.
The end of communism in Poland has a lot more to do with Ronald Reagan that it does the Polish people. They tolerated communism for 50 years
 
The end of communism in Poland has a lot more to do with Ronald Reagan that it does the Polish people. They tolerated communism for 50 years
It was the Poles who endured and fought against the forces of communism. Solidarity and the Pope and the workers of Poland did it. It was the boots on the ground, or shoes on the ground in this case, that turned the tide. It was the Poles, not Reagan who faced tanks and armed soldiers. No rifles were aimed at him. It was Fr. Popieluszko, not the rightwing apparachiks in the White House who was martyred and who was beatified.

If I said the half of what I think of Reagan, it would get me banned for life from this Forum. But, I won’t say anything and invite you to believe what you want - the Easter bunny, the Tooth Fairy, Ronald Reagan as Savior of Western Civilization, Santa Claus, Batman, and such.
 
They deserve no more lionization than do the Fascists by ultra right-wing or “traditionalist” Catholics. The end result, in any case, is a wholly secular Spain.
That’s another one for the “don’t [pee] in my ear and tell me it’s raining” file.

Secularism in Spain is the result of Modernism, socialism and liberalism. Both from the enemies of the Church, and from within it.
 
That’s another one for the “don’t [pee] in my ear and tell me it’s raining” file.

Secularism in Spain is the result of Modernism, socialism and liberalism. Both from the enemies of the Church, and from within it.
AND, a disgust with the role the right wing Church and the clergy played in their recent history - unlike the role the Church played in recent Polish history. Tell me about the modernism and liberalism in Poland - there, yes, but not much of an influence.
 
It was the Poles who endured and fought against the forces of communism.
Was Auschwitz an example of the Poles enduring?. How many death camps did Franco allow on Spanish soil? How many Spaniards worked in death camps? Perhaps the Polish people would have been much better off had Franco been in charge.

If not for Ronald Reagan Poland would still be a puppet of the Soviet Union’s. My former pastor was raised Poland and came to the United States in 1998 to go to the seminary. You criticized Reagan in his presence at your own risk
 
Was Auschwitz an example of the Poles enduring?. How many death camps did Franco allow on Spanish soil? How many Spaniards worked in death camps? Perhaps the Polish people would have been much better off had Franco been in charge.

If not for Ronald Reagan Poland would still be a puppet of the Soviet Union’s. My former pastor was raised Poland and came to the United States in 1998 to go to the seminary. You criticized Reagan in his presence at your own risk
Forced labor camps in franco’s spain
“Ticket for two bottles of milk for a sick prisoner from a red camp on doctor’s orders”. So reads the brief, anodyne note, stamped with the seal of the military command at Fraga prison, in Huesca. The date: February 23, 1938.
It reveals nothing of the fate of the unknown Republican prisoner or whether the two bottles of milk were enough to save his life.
Instead, the note forms part of the accounts kept on one of the 132 concentration camps and 541 forced labour battalions over which General Franco presided during and after the Spanish Civil War.
Today, for the first time, relatives of those held in the camps will discover how an army of faceless civil servants made sure that the books were balanced — evoking comparisons with the efficiency of their Nazi counterparts — when hundreds of files go on display at the Historical Memory Documentary Centre, in Salamanca.
If I were RC, I’d be doing my best to keep the words “Catholic” and “franco” as far apart as possible.
 
Are you really comparing forced labor camps to gassing 12 million people? Do you believe that Spain would have been better off if the Communists had won?
Spain under the Second Republic – a constitutional government, by the way, and of total irritation to you only because of the anti-clerical articles, – 20 and 21, but you’d have to look them up – probably wouldn’t have murdered the upwards of 200,000 that franco killed off in the White Terror. That’s a worthwhile trade off.

I’m not following your “only” argument. Are you claiming that franco’s slave labor camps and penal battalions weren’t so bad as hiter’s therefore they are or should be Church Approved?

You Catholics get in bed with the strangest people.
 
Spain under the Second Republic – a constitutional government, by the way, and of total irritation to you only because of the anti-clerical articles, – 20 and 21, but you’d have to look them up – probably wouldn’t have murdered the upwards of 200,000 that franco killed off in the White Terror. That’s a worthwhile trade off.

I’m not following your “only” argument. Are you claiming that franco’s slave labor camps and penal battalions weren’t so bad as hiter’s therefore they are or should be Church Approved?

You Catholics get in bed with the strangest people.
Would Spain have been better off if the Communists had won the Civil War?
 
Would Spain have been better off if the Communists had won the Civil War?
Don’t know, but one of the things some posters are missing is that the reaction isn’t simply about the civil war era but about the following decades of unrelieved tedium and bureaucracy that any dictatorship brings to the fiesta.

Freedom tastes sweeter than wine but after thirty years of democracy the Church here still hasn’t managed to throw off its association with an authoritarian past. In that sense the thread’s title is inaccurate – maybe it’s just me but the Church here seems to have gone into a bunker rather than fighting to change either itself or its image. I’m not a Catholic but Benedict’s theology is excellent and possibly his latest chart topper Verbum Domin, rallying the Church around a living God and a living scripture, may do the trick but I’m not holding my breath!
 
Would Spain have been better off if the Communists had won the Civil War?
Hard to say what course the coalition government of the Second Republic would have taken, it might have repealed the secularization articles on its own, it might have stayed neutral in WW2 or taken an active role against the Axis powers, it probably wouldn’t have raised the 50,000 soldiers, airmen and SS exterminators that franco contributed. The White Terror was bad*, and surely the Church did not approve.

You really need to ask yourself why anti-clericalism was such as strong movement. Did the Spanish Church ally itself with the prior military dictators? Did it oppose political and agrarian reform? Hated doesn’t suddenly erupt for no reason.

I don’t follow this franco lovefest. He had a human rights record that’s appalling. Does or did the RCC approve of this? Isn’t it a rule in your church that someone can excommunicate himself by his actions? How much carnage are you willing to ignore?

  • This estimate ranges up to 400,000 killed by franco. Richards, Michael. A Time of Silence: Civil War and the Culture of Repression in Franco’s Spain, 1936-1945. Cambridge University Press. 1998. p.11
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top