miguel:
I gave my reasons, based on specific facts, for why I think the allegation of reprisal has more merit than the allegation of misbehavior. Instead of calling me un-Christian, mean, unintelligent, and a malicious gossiper, how about dealing with the specifics of what I said, and giving some of your own.
Fair enough.
You provided one link in your post, to an article on
Catholic Exchange. According to that article:
Katelyn Sills… noted an uncanny resemblance between one of the escorts at the abortion center and a teacher…she mentioned it to her mother Wynette Sills. Her mother took photos of Bain escorting women into the abortion center and sent them in an email to Bishop Weigand September 19.
This article indicates that Bain was working as an escort
after she took the job at Loretto (e.g., daughter ID’s teacher, tells mom. Mom takes pictures). Yet, another source, the
Sacramento Bee, states:
The teacher, Marie Bain of Sacramento, who ceased volunteering before taking the Loretto job, was fired Oct. 14.
Right off, we have discrepancies about the facts of the case.
It has been stated in this thread that Bain was a last-minute replacement hire. Loretto’s fall semester started August 26th. Within about three weeks of the opening of the semester, according to the article you linked, Katelyn had recognized Bain as somebody she had seen escorting women at a clinic, and reported this to her mother. Wynette Sills obtained photographs of Bain in action (curious, given that Bain was reportedly not doing this at the time. I suspect that W. Sills had photos from an earlier time – but that has not been reported, much less documented, to my knowledge.), and forwarded these to Bishop Wiegand. All in three weeks, at the start of the semester.
There’s not a lot of time here for investigation by the school. I don’t know when Wynette Sills brought her concerns to the school’s attention – but the timeline here is so short that iI don’t get the impression of a stonewalling principal who needed to be forced to do something.
Much of your post is not “factual” at all. You wrote:
Why? We know the school failed to act when it was brought to their attention that a “deathscort” was on their staff. Only after the matter was brought to the Bishop’s attention, did the school act, by order of the Bishop.
We know that the schood did not take action before Wynette Sills e-mailed the Bishop on September 19th. But given the timeline, we don’t know that Mrs. Sills gave the school time to act. How many days elapsed between the time Mrs. Sills brought the matter to the attention of the school and September 19?
The act of going over the principal’s head would not endear her to the parent. The firing itself, could not have been pleasant.
These statements are opinion - not factual.
We also know the Bishop used this as a teaching moment for the whole diocese, which brought the flap out in the open.
Yes he did. This is a factual statement
It’s not unreasonable to conclude that the principal was embarrassed by this.
Again, opinion. Your conclusion, but based on arguments that are largely non-factual.
Then on the heels of all this embarrassment, the pro-life daughter is booted.
Partially factual; Katelyn was expelled, but the “embarrassment” is something you posited, not something you documented as fact.
The allegation of reprisal has merit, and plenty of it. And the school’s allegation of bad behavior is suspicious to say the least.
Again, your conclusions – but most of your arguments in support of the conclusion are themselves suppositions, not facts.
I disagree that it is appropriate to draw a negative conclusion, and to publicly condemn somebody, based on a string of suppositions and “reasonable conclusions.” More facts and fewer suppositions are needed, in my opinion – because public condemnations of people are serious matters in themselves.
As for my broader comments about the tendency of folks here to engage in such weakly-supported condemnations (which, by the way, was not really directed at you, miguel, but rather something that had been building up as I spend time reading on these forums), well, I stand by that. Even when we feel strongly about something, we all need to try to remember to be charitable, and not to project our views onto events when our real knowledge is very limited. That’s not easy – giving somebody who is most likely a philosophical and moral adversary the benefit of the doubt – but I think it’s something we’re called to do, nonetheless, in charity.