C
Cojuanco
Guest
It’s what is taught in the schools. A lot of American history as taught in the schools emphasizes how America is uniquely free historically and generally morally better, unlike the oppressive Old World, and imply oftentimes this is due to the difference in religion (American Protestantism being less hierarchical in polity than the episcopal system of Catholicism, there is an implication that this means that Catholicism is antithecal to democracy, and Americans tend to be very, very big on democracy and liberty, even when it comes to doctrine)Exactly. It never ceased to amaze me the anti-European sentiment of many American Protestants. I just don’t understand that logic at all. I’m Asian and our community has no problem that the Catholic Church is so foreign from Eastern culture. That shouldn’t matter.
If I were you, I’d buy some of the books written by former Protestants who have converted to Catholicism. Those people explain their logic in converting and it’s quite interesting.
If you are conservative, furthermore, a lot of the press you read denounces how Europe are a bunch of degenerate, secularist abortion-lovers, never mind its most consistent crtics are European. So Europeans, in addition to not being seen as truly democratic, are also seen as stereotypically morally degenerate, and if Catholicism is “European”…