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![]() You used quotation marks Joeydb. If you use quotations, you are supposed to be quoting someone not paraphrasing. Your implication is that someone actually said exactly what you quoted. That was not the case regardless of the accuracy of your translation.
For the record, I don't think Scuds meant that "all Catholics are idiots" as you wrongly implied. I think he was just saying that the Catholic Church needs to modernize and realize that some of the expectations of the clergy are unrealistic. Unrealistic expectations aren't limited to the "idiots" of the world. Look at horse racing. Filled with unrealistic expectations from people that you would hardly classify as dumb. |
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#4
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![]() why would this require equal time as far as religion bashing? the point is, the catholic leadership is very much a problem insofar as this topic goes. abuses have been systematically ignored or swept under the table for decades. and it wasn't just on a diocesan level, it's on every level. and i doubt that anyone could successfully argue that it's catholic bashing. this is a very real and sickening issue. it's got nothing to do with islam or farrakhan. they may have their issues, but why should they get drawn into this particular fray? the fact is, this is a huge problem with the catholic church, and with the catholic hierarchy. any other leader of any type would be facing serious charges-why is the pope untouchable? he shouldn't be. this issue is one of the reasons i left the catholic church-and the problem only seems to grow; it doesn't seem to be something they have been able to take seriously after all these years.
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
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ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ |
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ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ |
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#10
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![]() LONDON (Reuters) - The leader of the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales has said he understands the attraction of arguments for the use of contraception in the developing world, in an apparent softening of the Church's line.
But Archbishop of Westminster Vincent Nichols went on to say it was not the Church's role to support such a short-term fix, adding it would continue to fight poverty, which often contributed to high birth rates. "I think when it comes to Third World poverty, and the great pressure into which many women are put by men, I can see the arguments why, in the short-term, means that give women protection are attractive," Nichols said in extracts of an interview released by BBC Radio WM before broadcast on Friday. "The use of condoms doesn't lack for champions; there are plenty of champions around giving and distributing condoms. I don't think it's the Church's role simply to add its voice to that but rather, in contrast, to keep saying, "If we solve the poverty then consistently we know the birth rate comes down'." The Catholic Church opposes contraception saying it denies the divine gift of life. Aid agencies and some within the Church have called for a change of policy, saying it endangers women's lives and contributes to the spread of HIV. But the Vatican has rejected such a move, supporting only "natural" birth control. Last year, during his first trip to Africa, Pope Benedict said condoms were not the answer to fighting HIV and AIDS, and that they could make the situation worse. Nichols recently issued a document directed at the British electorate and political parties before a parliamentary election expected on May 6 in which he opposed abortion and stressed the importance of marriage and the family. "Choosing the Common Good" was seen by some newspapers as veiled support for the main opposition Conservatives who have put marriage at the centre of their tax policy. The Conservatives are narrowly ahead in opinion polls, hoping to end 13 years of Labour rule. The Pope, who has been critical of Labour's equality legislation, is due to visit Britain in September. |
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![]() how (supposed) celibate men can make any comments and concrete statements regarding sex lives, i don't know. that would be akin to me telling a boy how to become a man. how the hell would i know?
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
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![]() It's very long, but a blogger I like wrote quite extensively on this -- the entire post is worth a read, but I've knocked out my favorite part below that really speaks to what pisses me off so much.
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![]() if you liked that, you'll love this utterly tone deaf vatican response:
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/...3A4PAD9ER3GTO0 VATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI's personal preacher on Friday likened accusations against the pope and the Catholic church in the sex abuse scandal to "collective violence" suffered by the Jews. |
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'While Cantalamessa delivered his ringing defense of the pontiff, the church in Benedict's native Germany made the unusually frank admission that it failed to help victims of clerical abuse because it wanted to protect its reputation. Archbishop Robert Zollitsch, head of the German bishops' conference, said clerics neglected helping victims because of a "wrongly intended desire to protect the church's reputation." ' the church sticks its head in the sand, pretends everything is hunky dory, and hopes it'll all just go away. well, everything but the money. ![]() i think the desire to protect the church's image is what contributed, and continues to contribute to how these abuse cases are handled-which is very, very poorly. but for that guy to compare this to the holocaust-gimme a break.
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
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