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reggieM
Guest
I’m grateful for the students and organizers of ND Response. I don’t agree that they would have been successful at all without publicity from Keyes and Terry. I don’t think, for example, ND Response was organized until after Randall Terry issued a call-to-action.This is patently false. Have you heard of ND Response? Did you see students from this group being interviewed on FoxNews, among other stations, multiple times in the weeks leading up to graduation?
Yes, certainly. But the protest was directed against that very thing – namely, “what was permitted on it’s own private property”. If we’re going to say that “Notre Dame can do whatever it wants on it’s private property and we should accept and respect that” – then why protest? We’d be saying that we agree that Obama should get an award because it “fits in the guidelines”. In other words, the protest was supposed to have some meaning and purpose.If they were part of the official, permitted protest that falls within University guidelines for what is acceptable on its private property,
That is good, but it’s a two-edged sword. I think I said elsewhere that the Terry-Keyes protest shouldn’t complain about getting into trouble because it was desgined to show how far the University would go to defend their pro-abortion award. They will arrest people who support life and give an award to a man who promotes the killing of children.But really, as someone who participated in the ND Response activities and Prayer Vigil during Commencement at the Grotto, it really was clear to me that the University bent over backwards to accomodate ND Response’s peaceful protest. No one gave us any trouble!
The bishops who opposed this award could see the problem. Unfortunately, they really did nothing about it except offer feeble statements. Again, it shows their administrative and governing weakness. Anti-Catholic speakers can receive awards, students can praise a pro-abortionist on Catholic property - and the bishops merely make a “statement” that carries no weight or real meaning.
Well, you may be right that the official protest was in the best location. But arresting people who simply protested in other locations is extreme and absurd. It cannot be shown that they were doing something wrong. The university has to explain why they were not doing something seriously wrong in giving Obama an award – and I never saw that happen, even with 90 bishops opposing it.Why a “peaceful pro-life protester” would feel the need to venture off and trespass in other areas of campus when this great outlet was there is beyond me…. What could be more important and more urgent than celebrating the Mass and praying the Rosary for the conversion of the President?
Ok, you’re making a different point. I was pointing out that even the official protest was a “slap in the face” to the University. It was an insult. Bp. D’Arcy refused to attend – that was a slap right there. Then Mary Ann Glendon declined the Laetare Medal – that was even a bigger slap. So how could protesting on a different part of the campus be a bigger insult? The bishop did not respect the decision of the University to award Obama.Again, this is false. Bishop D’Arcy fully supported ND Response’s official protest and said so on multiple occasions.
Yes, exactly. That is great. This was all in opposition to the ND administration.He also participated in many of ND Response’s events, from Eucharistic Adoration on Saturday evening to the Rally for Life on Sunday, where he made an unexpected appearance and speech. Check out the ND Response website and multiple news accounts for more information about Bishop D’Arcy’s actions with ND Response. The students acted with full support of their local bishop.
This is debatable and I see your point. Actually, I agree with you here although I’m mixed in opinion. Some will say that only by getting arrested can we show how deeply embedded the pro-abortion mentality is in our culture and even in Catholic institutions. Prayer alone, they say, is not sufficient to show the depth of the problem.Not true at all! The sad fact of the matter is that all of these ‘illegal’ protests that resulted in arrests distracted from the great good that was happening at the official, peaceful, on-campus demonstration–to the point that not many of those outside of Notre Dame are even aware that this prayerful witness took place!
Again, I have mixed opinions on this. My starting point is that ND is so far gone that is not a Catholic institution. So, this event merely showed that. I also believe that our bishops are paralyzed by fear and human respect so that they are ineffectual in stopping various evils that are promulgated in Catholic universities across the U.S.
With those two points in mind – is getting arrested something that will change things for the better? It might. We disagree that the arrests brought more good publicity (I think they did), but I more readily agree that prayer and reparation are far better weapons – in theory.
If we had the spiritual foundations and if the students and faculty had them – then this never would have happened.
With prayer we can work the miracles needed and win battles without “firing a shot”.
I do agree that some pro-life activists give very short shrift to prayer as the solution.
Again, I’m grateful to the ND students who stood up and made peaceful offerings to God to stop this. In the end, that is the right way – so I do agree there.