E
Ender
Guest
You keep trying to find some way to condemn those who oppose your positions as immoral instead of merely mistaken. Frankly, this is one of my greatest objections to the involvement of bishops in political matters: they encourage just this kind of uncharitable characterization.Marginally helping those who are already comfortable while hurting those who are in great need is not a moral choice.
I think there is great harm in treating laws as optional, and that we may ignore them when we can convince ourselves that we are justified in doing so. I disagree entirely with your characterization of the problem, and I will point out yet again that our positions are morally indistinguishable. One of us may well be totally in error as to what ought to be done, but neither of us sins in reaching our respective conclusions.Do you honestly perceive that great harm is being done by letting an immigrant live here who has always paid his way, works hard, and functions as part of the community?
If you were willing to accept that others are equally as interested in justice as you, we would be having an entirely different discussion about what needs to be done, but as long as you continue to judge that your opponents positions stem from immoral motives there can be no progress. Even though you know we are forbidden to make rash and uncharitable judgments you persist in treating this as a contest between the good and the bad, the just and the unjust. Cooperation is not possible in such an environment.
Ender