I read the linked article, and this entire thread and, quite frankly, I don’t see where the woman’s opinion is an anti-Catholic rant. Her charge in the column, which is an opinion, not straight news, is that she feels the Boston archdiocesan hierarchy is using anti-abortion “zealots” as the columnist calls them, to counter the clamoring of the “reformers”, who want to change the hierarchical structure of the Church in the wake of the clergy sex abuse scandals.
Now I don’t really believe that the Boston archdiocese is promoting any such activity, but if it were taking place, it certainly would deflect attention from the impact of the scandals that have rocked the Boston archdiocese, as well as, those in Los Angeles, Philadelphia, and elsewhere.
It appears to me that she is suggesting that real answers to the future of that diocese and the Church will come from neither the “fanatical” faithful Catholics, nor the “dissident” faithful (I know, I know, it’s an oxymoron), both seeking attention, but from, as she puts it, those “sincere people in the pews [who] are struggling with how best to rebuild the trust that was shattered by revelations of official complicity in the clergy sexual abuse scandal.”
In as much as I believe this is the point she is trying to make, I agree, in large part, with this general proposition and but not necessarily her characterizations of any person or group of people. In my opinion, those charging anti-Catholic bias are looking for things that aren’t there.