Well stated. I frankly did not care to respond. The anti-Catholicism oozed from every word.
I will say (as somebody who's practiced law for 30 years) that immoderate public accusations of any sort that come long after the fact, overstate both the alleged misconduct and the alleged injury, and demonize the proposed defendant, are almost always suspect.
Folks that go quietly to a defendant (whether on their own or with an honest lawyer) and say calmly, "we need to make this right," are respected, listened to, and made as whole as possible. I know this because I have personally sat on both sides of that table.
Folks that trumpet their alleged wrongs to the world, exaggerating them, running to the press, and calling the opposing party everything but a child of God, have another agenda. Think the repulsive John Edwards and his demonizing of doctors for his personal profit. And think about what sort of person HE turned out to be.