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Sonny1954
Guest
I don’t see nor experience blatant anti-Catholicism today like I did when I was a child, 50 years ago. I remember the virulent bigotry against JFK in 1960. When I was in primary school there was a big debate in my local town about whether or not we Catholic kids could ride the school busses. It was mostly whipped up by fundamentalist preachers. Much of this was put to rest during the “era of the two Johns”, but certainly not all.
But religious bigotry is far from dead. Observe the opinion polls in which people admit that they will not vote for Mitt Romney because of his religion, which I think is descpicable. In 1988, Mrs. Kitty Dukakis received a lot of hate mail because she was Jewish and had married a Christian. (She only talked about that after the election was over.)
People older the me (are there any?
) will remember when Catholics could not join certain social clubs and some insurance companies would not cover Catholics because we were “bad risks”, etc. I am grateful for the progress that has been made.
As an aside, there is not one single Protestant currently sitting on our Supreme Court. That is a first in our country.
But religious bigotry is far from dead. Observe the opinion polls in which people admit that they will not vote for Mitt Romney because of his religion, which I think is descpicable. In 1988, Mrs. Kitty Dukakis received a lot of hate mail because she was Jewish and had married a Christian. (She only talked about that after the election was over.)
People older the me (are there any?
As an aside, there is not one single Protestant currently sitting on our Supreme Court. That is a first in our country.