|
home
in
the news
about
us/weekly Mass readings
The positions:
on war
on the death penalty
on poverty & greed
on opportunity & discrimination
on energy & environment
on abortion
on family & health
on manipulating christianity
for political gain
God
is Love--papal encyclical
In
hope we are saved--NEW papal encyclical
democrats.org
catholic
charities USA
catholics
in alliance
choose
adoption
pax
christi
human
rights watch
sojourners
network
(catholic social justice)
register
to vote
contact
us
get
a free window sticker
|
|
|
POPE
BENEDICT XVI AND CLIMATE CHANGE
Posted
8 Sept 2007
Pope Benedict
has become increasingly concerned about environmental issues, particularly
climate change.
On Sunday, September 2, 2007, the Holy Father addressed hundreds
of thousands of young people in the Italian city of Loreto urging
world leaders to make courageous decisions to save the planet "before
it is too late."
Intentionally wearing green vestments, he said in a homily that,
“a decisive 'yes' is needed in decisions to safeguard creation
as well as a strong commitment to reverse tendencies that risk leading
to irreversible situations of degradation." The occasion of
his remarks was the Italian Catholic Church’s annual Save
Creation Day.
These remarks come just five weeks after the Holy Father, in answer
to a question from a priest in Northern Italy said:
“Today, we all see that man can destroy the foundations of
his existence, his earth, hence, that we can no longer simply do
what we like or what seems useful and promising at the time with
this earth of ours, with the reality entrusted to us. On the contrary,
we must respect the inner laws of creation, of this earth, we must
learn these laws and obey these laws if we wish to survive. Consequently,
this obedience to the voice of the earth, of being, is more important
for our future happiness than the voices of the moment, the desires
of the moment. In short, this is a first criterion to learn: that
being itself, our earth, speaks to us and we must listen if we want
to survive and to decipher this message of the earth. And if we
must be obedient to the voice of the earth, this is even truer for
the voice of human life.”
Finally, this past Wednesday, Benedict XVI reiterated his concern
for the environment, especially for the just distribution of water.
Addressing the participants of the symposium titled "The Arctic:
Mirror of Life"—a conference to be held in Greenland
and begun by Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople—the
Pope greeted “all the participants -- various religious leaders,
scientists, journalists and other interested parties” to assure
them of his prayers and support.
"Care of water resources and attention to climate change are
matters of grave importance for the entire human family," he
said. "Encouraged by the growing recognition of the need to
preserve the environment, I invite all of you to join me in praying
and working for greater respect for the wonders of God’s creation!"
"Man
can destroy the foundations of his existence"
Gore
receives Nobel Peace Prize for advancing the moral urgency of global
warming debate
~
~ ~
New moral
urgency following IPCC Report:
US
Bishops call for immediate action on global warming
19 Feb 2007
The
Catholic Democrat view
On Energy & Environment
True
stewardship requires changes in human actions—both in moral
behavior and technical advancement. Our religious tradition has
always urged restraint and moderation in the use of material goods,
so we must not allow our desire to possess more material things
to overtake our concern for the basic needs of people and the environment.
Pope John Paul II has linked protecting the environment to "authentic
human ecology," which can overcome "structures of sin"
and which promotes both human dignity and respect for creation.
Technological innovation and entrepreneurship can help make possible
options that can lead us to a more environmentally benign energy
path. Changes in lifestyle based on traditional moral virtues can
ease the way to a sustainable and equitable world economy in which
sacrifice will no longer be an unpopular concept. For many of us,
a life less focused on material gain may remind us that we are more
than what we have. Rejecting the false promises of excessive or
conspicuous consumption can even allow more time for family, friends,
and civic responsibilities. A renewed sense of sacrifice and restraint
could make an essential contribution to addressing global climate
change.
—Global Climate Change: A Plea for Dialogue, Prudence
and the Common Good. U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, June 2001
The
gradual depletion of the ozone layer and the related "greenhouse
effect" has now reached crisis proportions as a consequence
of industrial growth, massive urban concentrations and vastly increased
energy needs. Industrial waste, the burning of fossil fuels, unrestricted
deforestation, the use of certain types of herbicides, coolants
and propellants,: all of these are known to harm the atmosphere
and environment. The resulting meteorological and atmospheric changes
range from damage to health to the possible future submersion of
low-lying lands. While in some cases the damage already done may
well be irreversible, in many other cases it can still be halted.
It is necessary, however, that the entire human community—individuals,
States and international bodies—take seriously the responsibility
that is theirs.
—Pope John Paul II, World Day of Peace, 1 January 1990
Goals
for a future Democratic Administration:
-
A new pursuit of energy independence from Middle
Eastern oil, rather than policies that enrich energy companies
in the United States at the expense of consumers in America. Catholic
Democrats has joined with a bipartisan coalition (http://www.setamericafree.org)
to break the Bush Administration's addiction to petroleum politics
that put us at the mercy of despots in the Middle East.
-
New automobile fuel efficiency standards that
will decrease both U.S. fuel consumption and the destructive production
of greenhouse gases.
-
New investment in alternative fuels that will
be environmentally friendly.
-
Cleaner air—strengthening the Clean Air
Act initially signed into law by President Nixon, to create reasonable
limits on mercury emissions and acid rain by power plants.
- Cleaner
water—without the fealty the Bush Administration
has shown to megaslaughter house polluters, and the gutting of
the Superfund legislation that has stalled in cleaning up the
most polluted industrial sites around the U.S.
-
Preserve the remaining forest land in U.S. National
Parks, rather than essentially giving away timber and mineral
resources to major campaign contributors.
-
Elevating the Environmental Protection Agency to a Cabinet-level
status.
-
Not stacking environmental regulatory agencies with former lobbyists
and lawyers for the polluting industries they will be regulating.
Facts
regarding Bush policy on energy and environment:
-
Mr. Bush acknowledged during his first year in office that he
had no intention of honoring his campaign promise to seek ceilings
on industrial production of greenhouse gases.
- Without
consultation in Congress or with other nations, Mr. Bush unilaterally
withdrew the U.S. from the first major international convention
on global warming (the Kyoto Protocol) in 2001,
which has since taken effect without United States participation.
- Mr.
Bush is now responsible for the deaths of more than 3700
U.S. servicemen and women in pursuit of his policy of
permanent occupation of oil-producing countries in the Middle
East.
- Delayed
Clinton-era regulations that would have dramatically decreased
mercury emissions from U.S. power plants into
the air, promoting instead the “Clear Skies” initiative
in 2002 that provided for trivial reductions in mercury, nitrogen
dioxide and sulfur dioxides.
- Initially
proposed delays in implementation of new cancer-preventing standards
for arsenic contamination of drinking water.
- Has
significantly decreased Superfund toxic cleanup
implementation through underfunding and enforcement.
- Has
undermined meaningful fuel efficiency standards
for SUVs or other vehicles, in part through new Corporate Average
Fuel Economy Standards announced under cover of the Christmas
holidays last year that give automakers new incentives to make
heavier vehicles.
Moral
scorecard:
-
The craven quid pro quos of so many former energy industry
executives in the Bush Administration to the economic interests
of their friends and campaign contributors has raised to new heights
the tradeoff between greed and the public good.
- The
ostrich-like Bush approach to Global Warming
should be anathema to any Catholic who believes in wise stewardship
of the earth.
- The
insistence on keeping petroleum products at the center of Bush
energy policy has directly thrust the U.S. into a position of
further dependence on Middle East and Caspian Sea oil, resulting
in foreign policy decisions that have left thousands of people
dead in Iraq and in Israel. This focus on materialism over human
life is among the greatest affronts to Catholic sensibilities.
- “It
is manifestly unjust that a privileged few should continue to
accumulate excess goods, squandering available resources, while
masses of people are living in conditions of misery at the very
lowest level of subsistence. Today, the dramatic threat of ecological
breakdown is teaching us the extent to which greed and selfishness
- both individual and collective - are contrary to the order of
creation, an order which is characterized by mutual interdependence.”
Pope John Paul II, ibid. (1990)
|