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The
Catholic Democrat view
On Opportunity and Discrimination
We
wish to call attention to the persistent presence of racism and
in particular to the relationship between racial and economic justice.
Racism and economic oppression are distinct but interrelated forces
which dehumanize our society. Movement toward authentic justice
demands a simultaneous attack on both evils. Our economic structures
are undergoing fundamental changes which threaten to intensify social
inequalities in our nation. We are entering an era characterized
by limited resources, restricted job markets and dwindling revenues.
In this atmosphere, the poor and racial minorities are being asked
to bear the heaviest burden of the new economic pressures.
—Brothers and Sisters to Us, U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops Pastoral Letter on Racism, 1979
Faith
in the one God, Creator and Redeemer of all humankind made in his
image and likeness, constitutes the absolute and inescapable negation
of any racist ideologies. It is still necessary to draw out all
the consequences of this: "We cannot truly pray to God the
Father of all if we treat any people in other than brotherly fashion,
for all men are created in God's image. This obedience to God and
love for man must lead us to respect human rights, those rights
which are the expression of God's will and the requirement of human
nature just as God created it."
Quoting Pope John Paul, “The Church and Racism,”
Pontifical Commission on Justice and Peace, 1988.
Bishops stand up to Republican
legislation imposing harsh penalties on Catholic service providers
A million
people marched in Los Angeles, and millions more joined protests
around the country, to contest immoral legislation passed by the
US House of Representatives last December and now being advanced
by Majority Leader Bill Frist in the Senate that would penalize
Catholic charities that help immigrants. Entitled the “Border
Protection, Antiterrorism and Illegal Immigration Control Act,”
this bill would criminalize the most basic forms of assistance
to people from other countries. To their great credit, our bishops
have stood up defiantly to this Republican initiative. Roger Cardinal
Mahoney, archbishop of Los Angeles, wrote in the New York Times
on March 22, “This situation affects the dignity of millions
of our fellow human beings and makes immigration, ultimately,
a moral and ethical issue. That is why the church is compelled
to take a stand against harmful legislation and to work toward
positive change.”
Some Republicans
have broken ranks with their party over the punitive nature of
the proposed immigration legislation. Sen Sam Brownback (R--Kansas)
was quoted as saying, "This is also about the hallmark of
a compassionate society, what you do with the widows, the orphans
and the foreigners among you," after he and South Carolina
Senator Lindsey Graham advanced legislation in the Judiciary Committee
providing an avenue for the nation's 12 million illegal immigrants
to legitimize their status here and earn citizenship contingent
on their holding jobs, being free of a criminal record, and paying
back taxes.
But conservative groups and legislators that have frequently invoked
the views of the bishops on abortion have been harshly critical
of them for their stance in support of immigrants. House Majority
Leader John Boehner, who frequently invokes his Catholic ties,
continues to advocate building a 700-mile Berlin-style wall on
the Mexican border in defiance of the bishops. Fr. Richard Neuhaus,
editor of the pro-Republican Catholic journal First Things,
all but dismissed the bishops’ credibility on the immigration
issue by saying their authority had been diminished by the sex
abuse scandal. ''This is the left wing of the Catholic Church
-- these are the frustrated social workers,'' said Catholic Rep
Peter King (R—Long Island), quoted in the Times. ''They're
giving an incentive for more illegals to come here. I don't think
it's right.''
The Catholic
League has been utterly silent on the issue of immigration, only
issuing a press release condemning two major newspapers for supporting
Cardinal Mahoney in his comments about the House bill. The limp
Catholic League response indicates once again that it has been
reduced from a proud defender of Catholics in public life to a
docile partisan organ of the Republicans.
Meanwhile,
the bishops have found strong allies among the Democratic Catholics
in the Senate, especially Sen Edward Kennedy who has proposed
legislation taking more constructive measures to deal with the
immigration crisis. The Bishops’ Department of Social Development
and World Peace has launched a campaign in which they argue that
advocacy for immigrants “based on Catholic teachings is
an important part of helping the poor and vulnerable around the
world.” The Church’s national collection theme this
year is "Jesus in Disguise" and asks Catholics to see
Jesus in the faces of the hungry, the poor and the disadvantaged.
29 March 2006
The
Bush record on Opportunity and Discrimination:
-
Murder based on nationality—The Bush Administration
has killed thousands of Iraqi citizens in the interest of making
Americans “safer.” This represents the most fundamental
selective devaluation of life: the killing of one nation’s
citizens for the benefit of another’s, and this in retrospect
without any real justification for the belief that Iraq posed
any real threat to the wellbeing of Americans.
-
Administrative neglect for civil rights in the U.S.—Numerous
instances of neglect for worker and minority rights are evident
in the public record over the past three years. Some examples:
-
-
Massive disenfranchisement of Black men,
particularly in Florida. Administration officials supported
the State of Florida in litigation intended to overturn
the odious disenfranchisement of former inmates from the
political process. Mr. Bush’s brother and the Florida
State leadership have again come under scrutiny for knowingly
circulating to local voting officials “felon’s
lists” that excluded predominantly Republican Cuban-American
voters but sought to restrict voting rights of Black men,
thousands of whom were not actually ex-convicts.
- “Responsible
Contractor” rules proffered by the Clinton
Administration would have assured that federal contracts
for more than $200 billion were only awarded to companies
that comply with laws governing civil rights, worker safety,
and the environment. The Bush Administration moved quickly
to repeal these rules, announcing it quietly during the
Christmas holiday in 2001.
-
Repetitive motion injury ergonomics regulations
developed by the Clinton Administration and disproportionately
affecting women in clerical positions were revoked by the
Bush Administration.
- Office
of Federal Contract Compliance Programs in the
Department of Labor, an agency empowered to punish worker
discrimination among federal contractors, has been dramatically
scaled back in its budget, scope of enforcement actions
(including implementing new Federal Acquisition Regulations),
and data gathering capabilities.
Goals
for a future Democratic Administration:
-
A first priority must be a meaningful increase in the minimum
wage and in funding for job training. In his remarks to the Democratic
Convention, Senator John Edwards said, “We can also do something
about 35 million Americans who live in poverty every day. Here's
the reason we should not just talk about it, but do something
about millions of Americans who still live in poverty—because
it is wrong. We have a moral responsibility to lift those families
up. The
very idea that in a country of our wealth and our prosperity,
we have children going to bed hungry. We have children who don't
have the clothes to keep them warm. We have millions of Americans
who work full-time every day for minimum wage to support their
family and still live in poverty—it’s wrong. These
are men and women who are living up to their part of the bargain:
working hard and taking care of their families. Those families
are doing their part; it’s time we did ours.”
- Strong
support for enforcement of civil rights laws, support for affirmative
action, and opposition to measures intended to weaken the Americans
with Disabilities Act signed into law by the first President Bush.
-
Reform of immigration law so that immigrants are not vilified,
that there is a clear path to permanent residence status, and
that families can be more easily unified.
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