|
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
|
|
|
Bush boasts about
his support for embryonic stem cell research, while vetoing new
legislation
President Bush
vetoed legislation Wednesday passed by both the House and Senate
that would have allowed federal funding for expanded embryonic stem
cell research. In his veto message, Mr. Bush said, “If this
bill were to become law, American taxpayers for the first time in
our history would be compelled to fund the deliberate destruction
of human embryos. Crossing this line would be a grave mistake and
would needlessly encourage a conflict between science and ethics
that can only do damage to both and harm our Nation as a whole.”
His spokesman,
Tony Snow, took the argument one step further, stating, "The
simple answer is he thinks murder's wrong. The president is not
going to get on the slippery slope of taking something living and
making it dead for the purposes of scientific research."
Five days later
Mr. Snow recanted that assessment, saying his characterization was
"overstating the president's position...He would not use that
term."
But if embryonic
stem cell research is tantamount to murder, then one might think
that any president who approves of such research would be considered
an accessory to the crime.
Thus it was
ironic that in the same speech, Mr. Bush pointed out that, “When
I took office, there was no Federal funding for human embryonic
stem cell research.” As he had in his first presidential debate
with Senator John Kerry in September 2004, Mr. Bush then boasted
that he was the first president to approve funding for embryonic
stem cell research. “My Administration has made available
more than $90 million for research of these lines. This policy has
allowed important research to go forward and has allowed America
to continue to lead the world in embryonic stem cell research without
encouraging the further destruction of living human embryos,”
he added. "The president is not opposed to stem cell research,
he's all for it," Snow said earlier in the day.
The sponsors
of the legislation, Representatives Michael Castle (R-Del) and Diana
DeGette (D-Col), specifically restricted the funding to research
on stem cell lines derived from early embryos created by in
vitro fertilization clinics and otherwise destined for destruction.
The Catholic
Church forbids in vitro fertilization under any circumstances,
a view not shared by at least half of American Catholics in several
polls. A 1987 document issued by the Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith, called Donum Vitae, said that use of in
vitro fertilization creates a "dynamic of violence and
domination." But Mr. Bush and the Republican Platform have
never called for the banning of in vitro fertilization.
The number of “embryo adoptions” in the US is fewer
than 300, a tiny fraction of the more than 400,000 early embryos
currently stored across the country. Most of these embryos could
never practically be implanted, and Senate Majority Leader Bill
Frist has likened stem cell research on these early embryos to cadaveric
transplantation of hearts to save the lives of people in heart failure.
Several polls of American Catholics have now shown approval of embryonic
stem cell research at between 60-72%.
An analysis
of some numbers may provide a helpful perspective on the debate.
An estimated 440 million fertilization events occur around the world
every year, which works out to 1.2 million zygotes created every
day leading to about 350,000 babies born daily. Thus 60-70% of these
early embryos are lost, most prior to implantation. This is a daily
early embryo death rate of roughly 844,000 per day worldwide. (This
compares with about 71,000 legal abortions daily around the world,
and 55,000 illegal abortions). On average, about 820 early embryos
are implanted in women each day in the US for purposes of assisted
reproduction, and 710 of them are lost (with 109 live births per
day). The number of new stem cell lines being created every day
globally is thought to be fewer than one, with 22 lines currently
available for federally funded research under Mr. Bush’s 2001
plan, and fewer than 200 available in private repositories after
five years of unfunded research.
No public discussion
has taken place about how to save the 844,000 early embryos that
die each day around the world. No public advocacy by the Republican
Party or by religious leaders has been made for an investment of
research dollars in saving the embryos lost to “natural causes.”
If the early embryo has the same moral worth as an adult human,
then saving these lives would seem to take on an immense moral urgency.
By comparison, one-sixth as many people--155,000—will die
today worldwide of all other causes. 46,500 will die from heart
disease or stroke. 19,000 will die of cancer today, one-third of
the deaths preventable. 16,480 people will die today of starvation.
6,800 children will die from diarrhea today. 100 people today will
die violently in Iraq. One or fewer embryos will be diverted today
from storage or death to the creation of a new stem cell line.
American taxpayers
are being compelled to pay every day for the killing in Iraq, most
against their will, but Mr. Bush is not concerned about their moral
reservations on this issue.
As a moral
community, we should decide if bringing an additional 844,000 people
into the world each day is a priority, virtually tripling the number
of children who would be born every day. If these lives have the
same moral value as any adult, as Mr. Snow’s remarks suggest,
then they should be saved as urgently as we seek to keep our elderly
from dying unnecessarily of stroke. But if saving elderly people
from “natural causes” when stroke attacks is in fact
a far greater priority for our society than saving the 844,000 embryos
dying of natural causes (as current research priorities would suggest),
then it might be worth investing our moral outrage more properly
in providing food to the hungry, clean water to the world’s
children, and peace to the war-ravaged countries of Iraq, Lebanon
and Israel than in villainizing stem cell research scientists seeking
cures for chronic debilitating diseases.
Patrick Whelan MD PhD, 25 July 2006
Bishops again seduced into
attending Republican political event honoring President Bush
President Bush
was honored by Republican Catholics again last week for the second
year in a row at an event in Washington DC called “The
National Catholic Prayer Breakfast.” Mr. Bush
offered self-deprecating humor and lavish compliments for Pope Benedict
and the leadership of the Catholic Church. To his credit, he had
the good taste to avoid the praise he offered last year for his
war effort in Iraq, intimating (erroneously) that Pope John Paul
had supported the killing there.
The event was again a purely partisan spectacle,
with one of the organizers (Leonard Leo) being a co-chairman of
the Republican National Catholic Outreach for the mid-term elections.
Senator Rick Santorum’s candidacy was promoted, despite his
pro-war, pro-death penalty, and pro-poverty legislative voting record.
The surprise
this year was not Mr. Bush’s need to further ingratiate himself
to Catholics, but the fact that Cardinal Theodore McCarrick and
other Church dignitaries again attended the event despite the pledge
of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops in a 2004 statement
condemning events like this. “The Catholic community and Catholic
institutions should not honor those who act in defiance of our fundamental
moral principles. They should not be given awards, honors or platforms
which would suggest support for their actions,” read the statement
that was published just prior to the 2004 presidential election.
The organizers
of the event cheerfully honored Mr. Bush despite new evidence of
plans to launch military action in Iran, dramatic cuts in social
services planned for the coming fiscal year, and new abortion data
showing that the Bush Administration is overseeing the first abortion
increases since 1990.
In
a piece this week by Seymour Hersh in the New Yorker, the
Administration's plans are detailed for a possible bombing campaign
against Iran--with the potential loss of tens of thousands
of lives. Donald Rumsfeld responded to this news, which included
credible reports of planning for the use of tactical nuclear weapons,
in the same fashion that the Administration responded in June 2002
to similar reports about their planning for an attack on Iraq. They
called it "a fantasy."
On the domestic
front, Republicans sought dramatic cuts this past winter from social
service programs in the current budget, while further boosting military
spending above the $600 billion mark (including the "emergency"
allocations for Iraq and Afghanistan). These distorted, anti-Christian
spending priorities, were apparently of no concern to the event
planners.
Lastly, the
organizers of the Communion Breakfast seem blissfully unaware of
new
CDC data showing the first increases in abortion since
1990 on this Administration's watch--correlating with economic policies
that have dramatically driven up the number of Americans below the
poverty line, escalated the medical uninsurance rate, and stagnated
the real income among average Americans. All the anti-abortion rhetoric
in the world cannot make up for these pro-abortion policies that
are the result of the unqualified Republican advocacy for the moneyed
interests that have benefited so richly from the Bush tax agenda.
The Bishops' 2004 statement was directed primarily toward dealing
with the issue of politicians' stances on abortion, and all the
evidence would suggest that Mr. Bush has now distinguished himself
as the most pro-abortion president in recent history. He mouths
the right words, but the proof of his failure on the abortion issue
is unfolding in the data that will be marching out over the next
six years.
If policies
that promote poverty, war, environmental degradation and abortion
aren’t enough to constitute “defiance of our fundamental
moral principles,” then Church directives like that articulated
by Cardinal George, Archbishop Chaput and Bishop Wuerl in their
2004 letter have no meaning. We applaud what our bishops sought
to do in their letter, namely calling our lawmakers to a higher
standard of defense for the dignity of human life. We are working
to assure that Republicans are held to the same standard that seems
to be applied so often now to Democratic lawmakers, in order to
avoid letting our Church fall further prey to the manipulation of
the Religious Right. Karl
Rove is smiling this week at how beautifully he is playing the Republicans'
tune on the Catholic harp. 10 April 2006
The
Catholic Democrat view
On Mr. Bush's Manipulating
Christianity for Political Gain
“If
you want to avoid judgment, stop passing judgment. Your verdict
on others will be the verdict passed on you. The measure with which
you measure wil be used to measure you. Why look at the speck in
your brother’s eye when you miss the plank in your own?”
—Matthew 7:1-3
So
if there is any encouragement in Christ, any incentive of love,
any participation in the Spirit, any affection and sympathy, complete
my joy by being of the same mind, having the same love, being in
full accord and of one mind. Do nothing from selfishness or conceit,
but in humility count others better than yourselves. Let each of
you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests
of others.
—Philippians 2:1-4
For useful views and commentary
on issues related to Catholics in public life, see these webpages
in America, the Jesuit weekly news magazine:
Articles
on Catholic politicians in the United States
Commentary
on American political life
RNC Chair declares free enterprise and militarism
to be Catholic values
The Republican
National Committee has formally announced their national Catholic
outreach effort for the election year, and the outlines of their
strategy are a master stroke of focus group sculpting and psychological
manipulation. Chairman Ken Mehlman appointed Leonard Leo and John
Kelly to serve as National Co-Chairs for the RNC’s Catholic
Outreach. He wrote, “These two Catholic leaders will work
with my full confidence to solidify the growing relationship between
the Republican Party and Catholic voters all across our great nation.
We will count on Jack and Leonard to take a leading role as our
entire Catholic grassroots effort is advanced by millions of Catholics
who share the GOP's compassionate conservative agenda of traditional
values, free enterprise and a strong national defense.”
The Republicans
are fully aware of the contradictions their strategy portends. No
serious scholar of Christianity would contend that “free enterprise
and a strong national defense” are Christian values. As practiced
under the Bush Administration, the pursuit of free enterprise means
the enrichment of a few at the expense of the many, which is antithetical
to the most frequently repeated invocations of scripture regarding
poverty. Self-enrichment, however desireable from an economic standpoint,
is not a Christian value.
As importantly,
the reference to “strong national defense,” in the hands
of the Bush Administration, signifies their commitment to preemptive
war, the construction of new classes of nuclear weapons, and the
weaponization of space. The Bush approach to defense is a profane
violation of everything that Christianity stands for, as captured
in the single phrase that all Biblical scholars agree can be directly
attributed to Jesus: love your enemies. There is no love
for our enemies in this Administration, and their combativeness
toward enemy and ally alike has made all Americans less safe.
Mr. Kelly was
quoted in Mr. Mehlman’s press release as saying, “Working
through the RNC's Political Division we are committed to an expansive
outreach program that will not just maintain but increase the support
shown by Catholics in 2004. The Republican principles of a strong
commitment to a culture of life and to the economic and national
security of our country resonates with active Catholics. Our goal
is to let Catholics know they are the key to the future success
of the Republican party."
These Republican
efforts represent a brilliant self-serving electoral strategy at
the expense of American Catholicism, given the huge role that Catholic
voters played in serving up the presidency to George Bush in 2004.
More than that, however, the attempt to pass off Republican militarism
and greed as if they were Catholic values is subversive to Catholicism
itself. However one may feel about having a strong military and
cutting the tax burden on wealthy Americans, let us agree that these
are not Christian values. We will continue working with Catholics
across America to advance a simple message: the power of Christ’s
call to peace, reconciliation, and concern for others must not be
used to advance the self-serving political agenda of the radical
Republican right.
26 January 2006
Bush Treasury Dept Vendetta:
IRS chases California church
for moral stance on the war in Iraq
An Episcopal
church in Pasadena, California has been under investigation with
threats to their tax-exempt status because their emeritus pastor
gave a sermon just before last year's presidential election that
criticized the Iraq war as immoral. The church has a tradition of
anti-war sentiments dating back to their opposition to Japanese
internment camps during WWII, the killing in Vietnam, and the Reagan-sponsored
wars in Central America during the 1980s. The IRS letter does not
hide the political nature of the accusation, stating that the sermon
in question "given on October 31, 2004 to a congregation of
3500, delivered a searing indictment of the Bush administration's
policies in Iraq, criticism of the drive to develop more nuclear
weapons, and described tax cuts as inimical to the values of Jesus."
Rev.George Regas, who was only a visiting preacher, actually began
his homily by saying, "I don't intend to tell you how to vote."
This apparently did not protect the church from the Administration's
retribution.
The pastor of
the church, Rev.
Ed Bacon, delivered a sermon November 13, 2005, that
outlines the dark side of a disrespect for church-state separation
that results in tolerance toward conservatives who politicize Christianity
while chastening progressives who actually preach the Gospel.
26 Nov 200
Facts
regarding the Bush Campaign's approach to manipulating Christianity
for political gain:
- Even
as the Bush Campaign began a massive effort to register
voters at Catholic churches after masses across the country,
their chief advisor for Catholic outreach resigned from the Campaign
on August 18 because of a personal indiscretion with a student
when he was a philosophy professor at Fordham University. Summarized
at http://www.beliefnet.com/story/151/story_15158_1.html
- Every
Catholic should grieve the grave dishonor brought
on our faith by one who claims that Christ has “changed
my heart,” and then did so much to throw the world into
a state of violence and turmoil.
- By
his prolific use of Christian language, this Christian-in-Chief
more closely identified his Administration’s policies with
his supposed religious beliefs than any previous
President. Like a rude driver who prominently displays his college’s
name on the back window of the car, Mr. Bush has done more to
stain the Christian message than any major leader of the last
century.
-
People around the world now equate Christianity with pre-emptive
war, with public vengeance in the form of a haphazardly-implemented
death penalty, with widening of the gap between the wealthy and
the rest, and with the despoilment of the environment for personal
profit.
-
Mr. Bush tacitly endorsed anti-Catholic bigotry
by speaking at Bob Jones University prior to the South Carolina
Primary in 2000. One measure of the philosophy of BJU are the
published remarks of Bob Jones on the death of Pope Paul VI, whom
he called “the archpriest of Satan, a deceiver and an anti-Christ,
(who) has, like Judas, gone to his own place." Mr. Bush offered
no public apologies for his actions.
-
Meeting with the Pope on June 4, 2004, Mr. Bush
asked a top Vatican official to compel American bishops to speak
out more about political issues, including same-sex marriage and
abortion, according to an article in the National Catholic Reporter.
- “The
campaign, and the Republican National Committee, has hired denominationally
specific "outreach" organizers. They
have targeted Catholics in key battleground states,” according
to Joe Feuerherd writing in the National Catholic Reporter (7/28/04).
-
Mr. Feuerherd had reported a week earlier, “The Republican
National Committee (RNC) is urging Bush-supporting Catholics to
provide parish directories and membership lists to the GOP. Martin
J. Gillespie, Director of Catholic Outreach at the RNC, made the
request earlier this year. "We … want to work with
you to identify active Catholic voters throughout the country.
In this respect, we need your help in requesting parish
directory and membership lists of Catholic groups and
associations," wrote Gillespie. "Access to these directories
is critical as it allows us to identify and contact those Catholics
who are likely to be supportive of President Bush's compassionate
conservative agenda. Please forward any directories you are able
to collect to my attention," wrote Gillespie.
- He
added that Mr. Gillespie had written, "At the March for Life
… and the adjoining Conservative Political Action Conference,
we enlisted an estimated one thousand new [Catholic] Team
Leaders." …Republicans are particularly interested
in targeting Catholics who use collection envelopes to make their
Sunday contributions, said a source familiar with the campaign's
thinking. …Meanwhile, the Republican Party is seeking "Catholic
Field Coordinators," according to a June e-mail from the
RNC's Martin Gillespie. "Each Catholic field coordinator
will be responsible for implementing our plan of organizing a
vibrant and efficient network of Catholics in each target state,"
wrote Gillespie. The job pays $2500 a month, "with up to
$500 per month allotted for expenses." Those field coordinators
presumably played a role in organizing the "RNC Catholic
Outreach national surrogate tour" where prominent conservative
Catholics (Sen. Sam Brownback of Kansas, Congressman Patrick Toomey
of Pennsylvania, and former baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn among
them) recently rallied the faithful to the Bush cause.
- Mr.
Feuerherd, in the NCR (7/21/04), made reference to a letter from
GOP National Chairman Ed Gillespie, which read,
“Dear Fellow Catholic, President Bush had significant success
in winning Catholic support in 2000, and Republicans across America
were able to build on that success in 2002. The Republican trend
among Catholics was reflected even more strongly among church-going
Catholics. Catholics across America have responded to President
Bush's leadership and his efforts to build a more compassionate
America and ensure that human life is protected. The Republican
National Committee's Catholic Team Leader Outreach aims to build
on these historic successes, and is working with the Catholic
community to ensure that priorities important to Catholics become
a reality, including the President's faith-based initiative and
his efforts to build a more compassionate America by helping people
in need through continued job creation. The hard work and advice
of Catholics around the nation will continue to be essential in
advancing these important policy initiatives, and there's no better
way to get involved than through the RNC's Catholic Outreach.
Please join our effort today by becoming a Catholic Team Leader!"
- Widely-reported
was the role played by Dr. Deal Hudson, a Bush apologist and rightist
religious commentator, in persuading the U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops to fire one of their employees because
he had organized an online discussion group supporting Senator
Kerry. Dr. Hudson wrote in his electronic newsletter in February:
A
case in point is Ono Ekeh, the administrator of the "Catholic Democrats" internet newsgroup. You see, when he's not
working to get pro-abortion Democrat John Kerry elected president,
he can be found at his other job: program coordinator for
the Secretariat for African-American Catholics at the USCCB.
As
you probably know, the USCCB itself takes a strong pro-life
stance, saying that "the well-informed Christian conscience
does not permit one to vote for a political policy or an individual
law which contradicts the fundamental contents of faith and
morals," especially in regards to abortion.
So,
how can an employee of the conference go directly against
this clear mandate and publicly support a politician who has
said repeatedly that he will approve only pro-abortion judges
for the Supreme Court?
…
Predictably, Ekeh goes to great (sometimes downright comical)
lengths to justify support for a politician who blatantly
rejects the Church's teaching on life issues. Ekeh explains
that, instead of opposing abortion, Kerry will target poverty
and thus help eliminate the dire financial circumstances that
often drive women to abortion. In this way, Ekeh claims, "John
Kerry's vision for America is a pro-life vision that will
ultimately reduce the frequency of and need for abortions."
I
wonder if John Kerry knows that his vision is "pro-life."
After all, in my last e-letter I quoted Kerry saying that
he wants to EXPAND abortion and make it MORE available, not
eliminate poverty to reduce abortion rates. The "vision"
Ekeh describes seems to be one he's invented himself.
…
Look, it's one thing for a Catholic to be a pro-life Democrat
--
that in itself is a perfectly legitimate position and consistent
with our Catholic Faith. However, it's completely unacceptable
to follow Ekeh and trade away our pro-life responsibilities.
As
Kerry advances down the presidential campaign trail, and as
other Catholics equivocate on his blatantly pro-abortion record,
it will become more and more vital for the bishops to speak
out. And for the members of the conference itself, the issue
is getting a bit close to home.
Moral
scorecard:
-
This blatant organization of a religious community
for the political gain of a particular candidate is guaranteed
to polarize Catholics across the country if not widely denounced,
particularly because of the anti-Catholic policies of the Administration
on virtually every issue (except for the personal pocketbooks
of the most affluent Catholics).
-
The use of charitable donor lists for raising political funds
is a gross violation of the 501(c)3 status of the Church, potentially
jeopardizing our Church's tax-exemption.
-
Mr. Bush’s personal deference to the Pope while refusing
to meet with Catholic religious leaders or heed their advice prior
to the run-up to the invasion of Iraq should serve as a note of
caution to all Catholics that Mr. Bush’s central priority
is his own political wellbeing.
-
The intimidation of Senator Kerry’s Catholic supporters
as somehow un-Catholic represents the worst abuse of our faith
community, with self-annointed purist Catholics
seeking to castigate others that don’t share their precise
beliefs. This is particularly true when the object of the affection
of these aggressive rightists is the most pro-death president
in recent U.S. history.
|