← Autodidact Archive · Original Dissent · Blond Knight
Thread ID: 20728 | Posts: 10 | Started: 2005-10-23
2005-10-23 04:11 | User Profile
VDARE.COM - [url]http://www.vdare.com/guzzardi/051022_abuse.htm[/url]
October 22, 2005 In Americaââ¬â¢s Struggle for Immigration Reform, Is The Catholic Church Public Enemy #1?
By Joe Guzzardi
For the Roman Catholic Church, the chronicle of sexual abuse of young boys by priests keeps getting uglier. For Catholics like me who were trusting young altar boys during that period, the news is especially disheartening.
Last weekââ¬â¢s story in the New York Times, Los Angeles Files Recount Decades of Priestsââ¬â¢ Abuse, John M. Broder, [October 12, 2005] revealed that incidents of predatory child molestation date back as far as 75 years.
In many cases, as reported by Broder, the Los Angeles diocese was warned about the on-going perversions but failed to act. Instead Cardinal Roger Mahony urged the priests to seek counseling and later reassigned them to other parishes. Sadly, their behavior often continued.
The case files, said by defense attorneys to be edited of much of the most damaging material, were released in anticipation of a civil suit involving 560 accusers.
(The documents are posted here: Archdiocese of Los Angeles Assistance Ministry and here: LaClergyCase.com.)
Since the Archdiocese of Los Angeles is the nationââ¬â¢s largest, the settlements will likely exceed any of those awarded since the sex scandals first came to light in 2002. To date, monetary awards range from $7 million paid by the Diocese of Springfield, MA. to $120 million by the Diocese of Covington, Ky.
However, these continued nauseating revelations have not shamed the Catholic Church into maintaining a lower profile.
In fact, just the opposite is true. With various amnesty and guest worker bills floating about Congress, the Catholic Church is gearing up to lead the charge for more immigrationââ¬â as it always does.
When I read the Times story, the church had already been much on my mind. During a recent trip to Washington, D.C. I had an opportunity to spend some time with Dr. James C. Russell, one of Americaââ¬â¢s foremost scholars on the impact of American churches on immigration policy.
Russell, who narrowly lost the Republican Congressional primary race in New Yorkââ¬â¢s 18th District, is the director of Christians for Immigration Reform. [e-mail him]
While I was with Russell, who authored the indispensable book Breach of Faith: American Churches and the Immigration Crisis, he brought me up to date on the role the Catholic Church will play in the upcoming Congressional fight for amnesty for millions of illegal aliens.
Russell emphasized the sheer power that the Catholic Church brings to the table. Through Catholic Charities, the single largest U.S. charity that lobbies for aliensââ¬â¢ rights, the church operates more than 1,600 local agencies. In 2002, the Catholic Charities revenue base totaled nearly $3 billion dollars.
Government grants and contracts account for 61% of all revenue. [e-mail Catholic Charities]
In addition to its massive financial muscle, Catholic Charities operates with relentless precision regarding its immigration agenda.
According to Russell, and as detailed in his book, Catholic Charities divides political issues into four advocacy levels. Not surprisingly, among the highest priority issues is pushing immigration legislation that will accomplish the following: bullet Help ââ¬Åundocumented workersââ¬Â adjust to legal status.
bullet Restore 245 (i) toward family reunification.
bullet Support due process for legal and illegal immigrants.
bullet Support comprehensive immigration reform.
Now, despite its current abysmally low standing in the publicââ¬â¢s eyes, the Catholic Church is ready to ratchet up its efforts to legalize illegal aliens and increase the numbers of refugees.
In what can only be described as a devious plan well outside the realm of its true mission, the Church will use its parishioners to lobby for more immigration.
As unveiled on a new website Justice for Immigrants, conceived by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops Committee on Migration and the Catholic Legal Immigration Network, INC. (CLINIC), the church has officially made ââ¬Åcomprehensive immigration reform, with special emphasis on legalizationââ¬Â a major public policy priority.
The ââ¬ÅCatholic Campaign for Immigration Reformââ¬Â will:
ââ¬ÅProvide tools and information for diocesan and community-based organizing, education, and advocacy efforts.ââ¬Â
Furthermore, the campaign:
ââ¬ÅEncourages you to visit this site often, as we will be updating it frequently, with resource materials, action alerts, and other information we hope you find useful.ââ¬Â
To help parishioners ââ¬Åto oppose harsh and restrictive immigration measures,ââ¬Â a ââ¬Åparish kitââ¬Â will be provided that will include:
ââ¬ÅHints for homilies, prayer petitions, talking points, and curriculum for adult study on the topic of immigration in light of Catholic social teachings as well as different tools to organize within your dioceses such tools will enable you to lead focused dialogue, build sustainable coalitions, and provide you with resources for working with the media.ââ¬Â
And, making it easy to ââ¬Åwork with the media,ââ¬Â the Justice for Immigrants site will provide a database of newspapers and reporters.
But will the parish-based concept be the success that the Church anticipates or will it backfire?
A 2004 Pew Foundation Survey found that 80% of American Catholics favor restricting immigrationââ¬Â¦a strong indication that the church may meet heavy resistance in its recruiting efforts among parishioners.
And even the most highly-placed Catholics admit that the sex scandal has taken its toll on the churchââ¬â¢s standing among the lay population.
Earlier this week, Christian for Immigration Reformââ¬â¢s Russell attended a Fordham University School of Law Faith and Freedom seminar recognizing the 40th anniversary of Vatican II. Russell reported back to me that Rev. J. Bryan Hehir, formerly the president of Catholic Charities and currently a professor at Harvard Universityââ¬â¢s John F. Kennedy School of Government, reluctantly admitted that the scandal has seriously compromised the churchââ¬â¢s credibility as a source of moral teaching. (e-mail him.)
But despite Hehirââ¬â¢s admission, the church will certainly press on with its insidious efforts.
Nearly 29,000 diocesan and 15,000 religious-order priests form a mighty and influential army of immigration enthusiasts.
Letââ¬â¢s not kid ourselves. We can no longer consider the Catholic clergy as merely our spiritual advisors who have our best interests at heart.
We have to acknowledge that the cardinals, bishops and priests are daunting foes who have become leftwing, open borders radicalsââ¬âas much our enemy, and Americaââ¬â¢s, as the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Foundation, the League of United Latin American Citizens or the Southern Poverty Law Center.
Moral: Patriots who work for immigration sanity must beware the wolf in the clerical collar.
Joe Guzzardi [email him], an instructor in English at the Lodi Adult School, has been writing a weekly newspaper column since 1988. This column is exclusive to VDARE.COM.
2005-10-23 07:50 | User Profile
A 2004 Pew Foundation Survey found that 80% of American Catholics favor restricting immigrationââ¬Â¦ That's definitely a relief to hear. Hopefully their minds won't be changed by their religious leaders.
2005-10-23 08:11 | User Profile
[FONT=Times New Roman][SIZE=3]American Catholics are known to hold contrary views to the edicts of the Whore. Very often, they go their own way no matter what the Vatican thugs say (I know I did)...[/SIZE][/FONT]
2005-10-23 17:41 | User Profile
With the collapse of the post-Vatican II Church, it takes immigration to keep the pews and coffers full.
Pitiful.
2005-10-23 19:48 | User Profile
The Catholic Church leadership is strongly for more immigration. It seems a bit hypocritical if the church also isn't going to provide all the welfare and other services these poor immigrants are going to consume.
2005-10-24 01:39 | User Profile
Russell emphasized the sheer power that the Catholic Church brings to the table. Through Catholic Charities, the single largest U.S. charity that lobbies for aliensââ¬â¢ rights, the church operates more than 1,600 local agencies. In 2002, the Catholic Charities revenue base totaled nearly $3 billion dollars.
Government grants and contracts account for 61% of all revenue.
We are financing our own destruction. The government is laundering our tax money to undermine us with refugees. This government should no longer have our permission to govern. Time for secession!!
2005-10-24 03:09 | User Profile
[quote=Happy Hacker]The Catholic Church leadership is strongly for more immigration. It seems a bit hypocritical if the church also isn't going to provide all the welfare and other services these poor immigrants are going to consume.
They've got to bring in more to pay off all of the pervert priests scandals.
2005-10-24 03:43 | User Profile
Remember the story of the Good Gentile. A man is robbed and wounded, and left by the road. A jew comes by and refuses to help. Another jew comes by and refuses to help. Then a Gentile comes by and helps. He gives the man first aid and take him to a motel. He then pays for the motel room and says he'll pay any tab. Note: he didn't just bring the guy into town, the Good Gentile also paid the man's expenses.
I don't see anything Christian about helping someone immigrate, especially in violation of the law, and then have that person be someone else's problem.
2005-10-24 12:43 | User Profile
[quote=Happy Hacker]Remember the story of the Good Gentile. A man is robbed and wounded, and left by the road. A jew comes by and refuses to help. Another jew comes by and refuses to help. Then a Gentile comes by and helps. He gives the man first aid and take him to a motel. He then pays for the motel room and says he'll pay any tab. Note: he didn't just bring the guy into town, the Good Gentile also paid the man's expenses.
I don't see anything Christian about helping someone immigrate, especially in violation of the law, and then have that person be someone else's problem.
Actually, it was a Samaritan, a Hebrew descended from one of the ten northern tribes.
All the Protestant Christian denominations are in favor of loading the boats up and bringing the poor and the oh-pressed over here as well. I don't know why some people won't be happy until every US city is crawling with Third World vermin.
2005-10-24 13:59 | User Profile
[QUOTE=SteamshipTime]Actually, it was a Samaritan, a Hebrew descended from one of the ten northern tribes.[/QUOTE]
Steamshiptime, please read chapter 17 from 2 Kings.
Petr