I’m not outraged at “unlawful entry,” so the rest of your post is basically meaningless.
That was only one of the questions I posed. What about:
Do you consider yourself, family, friends, coworkers who you suspect of having at any time in their life driving 10mph over the posted speed limit illegals?
Is your silence about their illegality condoning their actions?
What about all those companies who make and sell radar detection devices to not only encourage driving over the speed limit and avoid getting caught, but give material help for people to break the law?
I realize it’s a loaded question and as such not really fair to ask, but you and I both know what I’m really getting at so I’ll just go ahead and shoot straight from the hip:
Is it just when foreigners break criminal misdemeanor laws that you call them
illegals?
What bothers me is Christians who encourage lawbreaking. How illegal aliens are treated by some employers outrage me, but the actual act of unlawful entry, while illegal and therefore sinful…
What about Christians who encourage breaking immoral laws? Does it bother you that Fr. Groeschel not only broke a law (blocking the entrance to an abortuary for which he was arrested) which according to your criteria = sin, but encourages others to do the same?
What about what the Catechism says about the distinction between serving God and serving the political community?
The citizen is obliged in conscience not to follow the directives of civil authorities when they are contrary to the demands of the moral order, to the fundamental rights of persons or the teachings of the Gospel. Refusing obedience to civil authorities, when their demands are contrary to those of an upright conscience, finds its justification in the distinction between serving God and serving the political community.” (Catechism of the Catholic Church 2242)
It does appear that your definition of “encouraging lawbreaking” is very, very loosely defined and you’re painting with a very broad brush if you think that juliamajor and puzzleannie are “encouraging lawbreaking”.
In the cases I’ve seen on this thread juliamajor and puzzleannie are not “encouraging” one single person to break the law. They are stating their opinion as to whether or not 1) we are to blindly obey all laws 2) whether the current immigration law is a just law and 3) the unjust classification and judgment of an entire group of people as
illegals.
Here’s a definition of “encourage” if that helps:
1 a: to inspire with courage, spirit, or hope : hearten b: to attempt to persuade : urge
2: to spur on : stimulate
3: to give help or patronage to : foster
Now according to the definition I haven’t seen anyone here inspiring, spurring on, stimulating, persuading, giving help or patronage to one single person from another country to enter this country without proper documentation, have you?
I have seen people giving their opinion as to whether the immigration laws are moral and just and thereby to be opposed, but it is those of us in the US who should oppose them rather than blame the immigrant who is unjustly subject to them. If anything we are trying to encourage other Catholics in the US to oppose the injustice being done to these immigrants.
…like President Bush encouraged and for which the Kennedy/McCain bill was a decent solution
From what I’ve little I can recall of this Bill (that unfortunately failed) I can certainly agree with you on that one.

Let’s hope there’s something even better to come this next go 'round.