The malice is right here:
Originally Posted by anamchara
You are right, they would. The right-wingers are not happy about this document for one reason. It doesn’t come out and say in big bold red type that “Abortion is evil and if you vote for anyone who is pro-choice, you will have no salvation”
Actually that’s called making an informed prediction based upon past behaviors. Not always 100% accurate but it is the way each and every one of us conduct ourselves day to day. You could also call it “having learned after sufficient study”. In
a thread on the new bishop in Sacramento, we have direct evidence of EXACTLY the kind of reaction anamchara predicted: someone is all in a lather over Bishop Soto’s links to various and multiple social justice issues and not having a single one on abortion. I’d say anamchara nailed it. Accurate predictions of behavior is not malice. Unfounded accusations of ill-intent are.
As for my problem with “Faithful Citizenship,” it is a poorly-written, confusing document. The bishops, our religious leaders, have a duty to clearly lead – and Faithful Citizenship simply lacks the clarity and organization such a document must have.
Hmm…“must have”… Well, that depends upon the purpose of the document, does it not? If it is meant to be kind of voter’s guide–this candidate = good; this candidate = bad–then you might have a point. However, it would seem that the good bishops did not deign to break into our consciouses and mandate our thought processes. Rather, it seems, they’ve recognized and highlighted a number of goals of the Catholic Church and left it to the Church Militant to work towards those goals in whatever manner they find most expiditious.
Wait a minute here – I know children die from hunger, but how do they die of “international debt and lack of development?”
Almost everyone on these forums is in debt – home mortgages, car loans, credit card bills. How come debt doesn’t kill us?
The answer is simple, international debt and lack of development are not the killers here – they are the consequences of people living under brutal, corrupt dictators who steal the money advanced as loans (which should have been used for economic development). They use some of the money to rivet tighter the chains on their people.
And how is all that related to poverty in the United States?
The “hunger” spoken of here is not just being sent to bed without supper. It is the barren pantry and lack of clean water and facilities to prepare food. How can anyone not see the connection of poverty to indebtedness. Furthermore your comingling of personal debt and national debts is a facetious argument, especially given the level of services available in the US. (but, btw, poverty and indebtedness is killing folks in the US but more obliquely via decreased health care options among others)
I will grant you that the role of brutal regimes and internal strife is a large one in the problem of world hunger. No doubt. But these are two sides of the same coin. Exploitation both empowered brutes and impoverished the people. Geography and climate play their role as well. But we’re drifting off topic now…