Posted on 08/17/2004 12:58:23 AM PDT by cpforlife.org
And again -- particularly in the current climate -- I'm confident the Bishops are only begging to be stripped of their tax-exempt status by hitting candidates instead of sticking to issues.
At least if they stick to issues, they don't deform the conscience in the process by accustoming it first to the Exceptions to the rule or the pragmatic acceptance of certain wrongs in order to make a right.
=== The major media will block it.
We'll see about this. Yesterday's Picayune had the Catholic voting block (per the abortion issues) on the front page above the fold.
Catholic vote is key for Bush, Kerry
Many faithful fit in undecided group
The Times-Picayune - Monday, August 16, 2004
By Bruce Nolan
Staff writer
When President Bush scored an enormous hit with a campaign appearance this month before a Catholic men's organization, he was preaching to the choir as he basked in the approval of an enthusiastic subset of Catholic voters that both he and Sen. John Kerry covet.
But neither can definitively claim those voters.
In an election year in which voters appear closely divided and a remarkable number have already chosen their candidates, polls show there are fewer "undecideds" than usual.
But "look at any good study of undecideds, and there's a big hunk of Catholics in that group. They're up for grabs," said John Green, a political scientist at the University of Akron and an expert on the relationship between religious affiliation and voting.
Moreover, Catholics are thickly settled in key battleground states such as Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, where a swing of relatively few popular votes can reap a rich reward of electoral votes.
Both candidates -- Bush, a Republican and a Methodist, and Kerry, a Democrat and Roman Catholic -- are trying to woo them.
Pollsters diagnosed a powerful dynamic at work in recent national elections: The degree to which a voter is religiously devout is a strong predictor of political preference.
Specifically, people who worship somewhere weekly -- where is less important than how often -- are much more likely to vote Republican than those who worship less frequently, or whose religious expression is more private, Green and other pollsters say.
There are several sizable exceptions to that rule: African-Americans, Hispanics and Jewish voters, religiously observant or not, are solidly Democratic.
But elsewhere the pattern holds.
A recent Time magazine poll found that likely voters who considered themselves "very religious," regardless of faith, favored Bush over Kerry by 59 percent to 35 percent. Those who considered themselves "not religious" favored Kerry 69 percent to 22 percent.
Those figures also held in the last presidential election, when so-called "frequent attenders" at worship favored Bush over Al Gore by 20 points, according to the Voter News Service.
As Green and Mark Silk put it late last year in "Religion in the News," a journal published by Trinity College in Hartford, Conn., "The Republican alliance of white Protestant and committed other Christians will once again face off against the Democratic coalition of minority faiths and the less committed."
White, non-Hispanic Catholics, who make up the majority of the church's 62 million members, follow that pattern.
Regular Mass-goers like those in the Knights of Columbus, which comprised Bush's appreciative audience two weeks ago, are already in his camp.
They are cemented there by Bush's stand on critical cultural issues such as opposition to abortion and same-sex marriage, Green said.
Catholics who attend Mass irregularly or rarely have a preference for Kerry.
"But you've got a lot of Catholics in the middle," Green said. "Independent Catholics are sometimes described as quintessential swing voters. Many feel conflicted. On social issues they're pulled toward Bush. On economic and social welfare issues, they're pulled to Kerry and the Democrats."
Some measures indicate that Catholics overall are now closely divided between Bush and Kerry. At least one national pollster, John Zogby of Zogby International, gives Kerry a small but significant lead.
Among those still up in the air are many moderate Catholics, perhaps churchgoing, who feel conflicted about both candidates, Green said.
They don't like Kerry on abortion (he says he personally opposes it but supports a woman's right to have one), but they note that his economic plans and opposition to the death penalty fit better in the Catholic church's social justice teachings. At the same time, they don't like Bush's economic world view, but they back his position on big cultural issues, like his opposition to abortion and gay marriage.
"I have a lot of friends who are 'social justice' Catholics, and they're really conflicted," said Wayne Parent, a political scientist at Louisiana State University.
This was not always so.
Politically, Catholics used to be solidly Democratic. After their arrival from Ireland and other parts of Europe, they helped define the American immigrant experience. Coming of age as blue-collar families in big cities, they adopted traditional Democratic politics and became a pillar of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal coalition formed in the 1930s and '40s.
Their high point as a cohesive voting group came in 1960, when 80 percent to 85 percent voted for Democrats in the election that made John F. Kennedy the nation's first, and so far only, Roman Catholic president, Green said.
But later years brought prosperity and upward mobility. As Catholics continued to make their way in significant numbers into the professions, corporate life and the suburbs, Republicanism became increasingly attractive, Green said.
Today Catholics overall -- including Hispanics and black Catholics -- remain slightly Democratic. Most recently they voted for Bill Clinton twice, and then Al Gore in 2000.
But the Catholic monolith shattered long ago.
The "Catholic vote" is now so diverse "I deny the existence of such a thing as the 'Catholic vote,' " Zogby said. "For me, all the evidence points to being a Catholic is not a major identifier for people when they take a stand on an issue or when they vote."
But if mere religious affiliation is not a strong shaper of political opinion, the intensity of religious commitment is, Zogby and others say.
And of the two candidates, Kerry is having a more difficult time reaching out to audiences who are more openly religious.
Part of that is perhaps Kerry's own preference in religious expression. Although he is a practicing Catholic who regularly attends Mass, he rarely talks about faith and rarely uses religious language to describe how he comes by his political philosophy.
"He is a man of faith. He just doesn't wear it on his sleeve," said Renee Lapeyrolerie, Kerry's spokeswoman in Louisiana.
In speeches last month before the NAACP and a gathering of African Methodist Episcopal church officials, however, Kerry did quote the Epistle of James to the effect that faith without works is dead.
Moreover, under a voluntary agreement that United States bishops reached earlier this summer, Kerry is not welcome to make a campaign appearance at a Catholic university, hospital or other setting, owing to his position in support of abortion.
Even so, several organizations of grassroots Catholics have pulled themselves together to work for Kerry, said Lapeyrolerie, and a "Catholics for Kerry" button is offered at www.catholicsforkerry04.org.
Bush, by contrast, enjoys a tactical advantage.
Although Catholic bishops believe that his economic policies do not reflect the church's regard for the poor, they have decided that abortion and the life issues are of paramount importance.
Thus Bush was able to address the Knights of Columbus, and receive a standing ovation, with two Catholic cardinals with him at the head table.
That said, Zogby, Green and others believe that some Catholics -- churchgoing or not -- remain in play.
Zogby sees evidence that Catholics' recent preference for Democrats is still holding, thus Bush's appearance before the conservative Knights of Columbus.
"He has to energize that base. He has to get every vote he can out of them," he said.
Tell me Askel what else would you have me do? What is your alternative for me?
Below are two passages that I think answer your frustration on this, which I have as well. Let me know what you think.
A Brief Catechism for Catholic Voters
--Fr. Stephen F. Torraco, PhD
http://ewtn.com/vote/brief_catechism.htm
8. What if none of the candidates are completely pro-life?
As Pope John Paul II explains in his encyclical, Evangelium Vitae (The Gospel of Life),
when it is not possible to overturn or completely abrogate a pro-abortion law, an elected official, whose absolute personal opposition to procured abortion was well known, could licitly support proposals aimed at limiting the harm done by such a law and at lessening its negative consequences at the level of general opinion and morality. This does not in fact represent an illicit cooperation with an unjust law, but rather a legitimate and proper attempt to limit its evil aspects. Logically, it follows from these words of the Pope that a voter may likewise vote for that candidate who will most likely limit the evils of abortion or any other moral evil at issue.
I would have you do nothing else ... you're the perfect example of the ONLY sort of effective action there is.
And it's your dedication in this regard which informs you -- better than most Catholics -- of the true nature of the allegedly "pro-life" GOP AND Catholic Church.
I think it's a pity that all those who wish to "reduce" abortions by clinging to whatever appears rational in the way of hard and fast exceptions to the rule where Human Life's concerned simply followed those convictions through on a regular basis.
For example, it makes perfect sense that BOTH secular and Catholic hospitals and medical schools MUST require ALL physicians to perform abortions. If the exception exists in any defensible fashion, it clearly must be supported at all times.
It is dead wrong to support it strictly politically but not in practice.
In fact, I think it would go a long way toward engendering real respect for the "compromises" of the Pro-Lifers if they took the front seat where requiring all doctors to be prepared for "some" abortions and thus evidenced their genuine ability to compromise the issue so long as "most" abortions were deemed morally illegitimate.
Likewise, it's absolutely illogical for the Pro-lifers to pretend there should be ANY restrictions on manufacturing embryos (cloned or otherwise) for ANY purpose whatsoever so long as those lives are terminated within the window of statutory Non-Personhood our Pro-Life President established with his somewhat limited human experimentation on stem cells provided to him "already killed" by the private sector who's intensely interested in keeping it a Clean Hands operation.
ProLife Ping!
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I don't agree with you here.
For many decades the vast majority of Amchurchers voted for the Babykiller party. There is no sign that it is going to change anytime soon. And the Amchurch clergy is staunchly in the pocket of the Babykiller socialists.
It's a fact, my friend. Your argument is with hard demographic trends, not with me.
Peace
I 've already been beaten up once today on FR about a similar message/point about Jews, but it applies to all of us....
if Catholics would obey their tenets,and Jews would , theirs, and Mormons, theirs, and Baptist, and even Muslims, then our world, let alone our country, would be in good hands....
afterall, most solid religions are against abortion and gay marriage and promiscuity and drug abuse.....
if only we actually did what our beliefs tell us to do, if only....
but that's the problem....we are fake Catholics, and fake Jews, and fake Mormons, and fake Baptists, and fake Muslims, and on and on....
we might talk the talk but we don't walk the walk, by and large.....
It not only applies to Catholics, most other denominations are equally guilty.
Yes, I suppose, but I would rather keep it in house and not blame others for our failings.
All of this was forseen, BTW. It is the fault of the Church.
Do you know who the two cardinals were?
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