Looking for an article about a Catholic Graduate forced to apologise

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twiztedseraph

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Hi, I’m looking for an article about a Catholic Graduate forced to apologise for a speech he made in which he rightly condemned contraception as selfish and immoral. This occurred in a Catholic school.

Thanks.🙂
 
In which country and at what level of schooling was this? And roughly when did it happen? (recently or last spring or more than a year ago?)
 
Do you mean Ben Kessler of the University of St. Thomas?
 
Here’s an online news article:
startribune.com/462/story/448725.html

But if you do a Google search using these terms:
“Ben Kessler” University of St. Thomas

(and be sure to use quotes around his name), you should find several articles.
 
Here’s an online news article:
startribune.com/462/story/448725.html

But if you do a Google search using these terms:
“Ben Kessler” University of St. Thomas

(and be sure to use quotes around his name), you should find several articles.
Just watched the clip on youtube. That’s wierd - what was all the fuss about? And why did he have to apologize? I would think the yahoos disrupting his speech would have had to apologize…
 
Pax vobiscum!

This is total b.s. He should not have had to apologize for the speech he gave. These people were all graduating from a CATHOLIC college and they’re surprised to hear someone mention Catholic teaching?

In Christ,
Rand
 
There’s an aspect I can bring to this topic that I don’t think many others on this forum can–I was there when Ben Kessler gave his speech. It was the occasion of my nephew’s graduation.

Throughout his speech I had no problem at all with the truths he was trying to convey, but I did have a problem with his approach. He started off by chiding his fellow graduates for a food fight some of them had engaged in a couple of months before. And his tone didn’t improve after that.

His comments were delivered with all the zeal of the self-righteously convinced, although I thought him merely inexperienced in the, apparently, lost art of persuasion. I thought he lost an opportunity to help his fellow graduates and underclassmen see why the Church teaches what it does and why it is important for them to listen to those reasons.

The manner in which he delivered his talk was insensitive. And that is what he apologized for, and rightly so, from one who heard his speech live from beginning to end. It’s just too bad that those who really needed to hear his message were given such a poor presentation. That’s how it left me feeling. Not to excuse the rude, nasty reaction from many there, but I’m afraid all he accomplished was to harden hearts and positions instead of open them up to God’s truth. It was truly sad all the way around.
 
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