D
DiscernVoc
Guest
I agree that we should respect the prudential judgement of other Catholics. I am simply saying that in this situation I am disappointed with the amount of support many Catholics in this county still give to an administration that has shown questionable ethical standards. For instance, the members of the administration have repeatedly ignored the outcry from the global community, including the Vatican and the Red Cross, over human rights issues in Guantanamo and Abu Graib. The administration has made its policy of torturous interrogation tactics no secret. The military has used the Patriot Act to detain prisoners of war indefinitely, without charging them and keeping their incarceration a secret. Now I will concede there is no direct link between the administrations motivations for this war with hegemony or economic benefits but when your sole piece of evidence (the supposed pictures of WMD) is shown to be a fake you would expect those who were fooled to be upset. The problem lies with the fact that in our current two party system to vote pro-life we have to support a president that doesn’t espouse what I believe to be Catholic values. I believe that in this day and age, the issues I have just mentioned are objectively wrong. Just the fact that they are considered necessary by the administration and these torturous methods will probably be used again really hurts the argument that this is a just war.Personally, I agree. I reached a conclusion that this war was not warranted and thus it didn’t pass my prudential judgment of a just war. I pray that more people would have a higher standard (based on how I interpret it using my prudential judgment) of a just war. I will even go so far as to assert that many (not all) reached an errant prudential judgment because of a faulty or undeveloped conscience.
But so long as I don’t have any evidence that their intent was to do evil, I have to stop short of condemning them or even their conclusion (sin requires knowledge and intent- stupidity is not inherently sinful). We need to respect the prudential judgment of other Catholics. Our capacity to judge is restricted to a narrow admonishment of objective sin (adultery, theft, etc. or direct incontrovertable evidence of intent to deny others human dignity).
I have no reason to believe that a single elected political leader supporting the war was motivated by desires of hegemony or control of economic assets of another (specifically oil). And I have no reason to believe that those in opposition were insensitive to the terror of living under an evil despot.
Another reason why this war seems unjust is that the chaos in Iraq will probably continue for many years. There are now many terrorists in Iraq. I think we can safely say there are many more than before the war started. Now don’t get me wrong, I have no love for Saddam Hussein, but I don’t even know that the middle east or the Iraqi people are better off without him in there. When he was in power he at least kept the three ethnic groups from civil war( granted it was with genocide). What makes anyone think that the Shiites, if they come into power, will be any less murderous. They will probably institue an Islamic fundamentalist dictatorship and then they will most likely be allies with Iran, their Shiite neighbor and our sworn enemy and Israel’s most dangerous nemesis. To support this end makes no sense considering we are at “war” with Islamic fundamentalists (as long as we don’t get oil from them). Correct me if I’m wrong, but isn’t one of the requirements for a war to be just is for the outcome to be achievable and more moral than before the war. You can say that the administration was dumb. You can say they had good intentions. You can’t say that this was or is a just war.
I truly believe that if more Catholics were aware of these things these politicians couldn’t get away with what they do. Unfortunately our media is more concerned with Britney Spears’ bald head and Tom Cruise’s couch gymnastics.
Can’t wait for your response,
Jim