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What’s Killing American Catholicism – 1
Patheos.com ^ | 4/30/13 | Fr. Dwight Longenecker

Posted on 05/01/2013 6:54:27 AM PDT by marshmallow

Reading Sherry Weddell’s excellent Forming Intentional Disciples is making me think about the American church and what ails her. Can anybody deny that there is a sickness in the body ecclesia? When 50% of Catholics vote for a man who stoutly defends same sex marriage and partial birth abortion can we say that Catholics in America are okay?

I don’t think so.

Thus a series of posts on what’s killing Catholicism. All the words begin with the letter ‘C’. I can’t help it. I was brought up as a Biblical Evangelical and our pastors always used alliteration to make their points memorable.

The first problem is cultural catholicism. The Poles, Italians, Irish, French, Czech, German and more Catholics came here from the old country and the bishops reckoned the best thing to do with them all was to allow cultural parishes. So in the same town the Irish Catholics went to St Patrick’s and the Poles to St Stanislaus and the Italians to St Anthony of Padua. Geesh, a man in my parish who grew up in Reading, Pennsylvania said that when he was a boy a girl from his Czech parish fell in love with an Irish boy and the Irish priest wouldn’t marry them because it was a mixed marriage.

I’m all for cultural customs and so forth, but the problem is that the immigrant Catholics–in a foreign land–clung to their culture for security and happiness and part of that culture was their Catholicism. The didn’t distinguish their culture from their Catholicism. Then, after a few generations, when they were all really American and stopped being Italian or Irish or German they also stopped being Catholic. The Catholic faith wasn’t much deeper than Mama’s special spaghetti sauce or stories of the Blarney stone.

Of course they didn’t.........

(Excerpt) Read more at patheos.com ...


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To: marshmallow; ansel12; metmom; boatbums; caww; presently no screen name; smvoice; HarleyD; ...
"Catholics" who vote for Obama, for instance, have abandoned Catholic values and Catholicism itself. They have instead, adopted the prevailing values of current American culture. In what sense are they "Catholic" then?

That is a standard reply, as it is a very convenient means of dealing with the majority of Western RCs being liberal, however, the problem is that Rome counts and treats them as members in life and in death, by which actions she interprets her laws on excommunication as meaning that impenitent souls as Teddy K. remain members.

Meanwhile,

"America is, and always has been, a liberal project. That's its fundamental problem. The "pursuit of happiness" is enshrined in the Declaration of Independence and is the major driving force behind the progressivist, liberal agenda.." "The pursuit of happiness" to increasing numbers of modern Americans, Catholic, non-Catholic, agnostic and atheist, means the pursuit of unrestrained sexual gratification and the disposal of its unfortunate products in the form of abortion, for instance.

This is a skewed understanding of what "pursuit of happiness" originally meant, which was not unrestrained sexual gratification etc., and in fact it was contrary to that.

"Without virtue, happiness cannot be." --Thomas Jefferson to Amos J. Cook, 1816. ME 14:405

"To suppose that any form of government will secure liberty or happiness without any virtue in the people, is a chimerical idea." James Madison

"The diminution of public virtue is usually attended with that of public happiness, and the public liberty will not long survive the total extinction of morals." Samuel Adams

...we have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion. Avarice, ambition, revenge, or gallantry, would break the strongest cords of our Constitution as a whale goes through a net. Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other. (From a letter John Adams wrote on 11 October 1798 to the officers of the First Brigade, Third Division, of the Massachusetts Militia).ion of the Militia of Massachusetts,” October 11, 1798)

There is no truth more thoroughly established than that there exists in theeconomy and course of nature an indissoluble union between virtue and happiness. -GEORGE WASHINGTON, First Inaugural Address, Apr. 30, 1789

"The aggregate happiness of the society, which is best promoted by the practice of a virtuous policy, is, or ought to be, the end of all government" -George Washington

Washington's Farewell Address, 1797 — Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports. . . . And let us with caution indulge the supposition that morality can be maintained without religion. Whatever may be conceded to the influence of refined education on minds of peculiar structure, reason and experience both forbid us to expect that national morality can prevail in exclusion of religious principle. (Farewell Address, 1797; http://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/washing.asp)

As another Catholic said,

The Founding Fathers did say the "pursuit of happiness" is an unalienable right. I often like to point out they did not say the "pursuit of pleasure". (http://forums.catholic.com/showthread.php?t=521055)

The "pursuit of happiness" is seem as coming from Locke in a 1690 essay "Concerning Human Understanding" and used by Jefferson, with the Greek word for “happiness” being "eudaimoniam" which invokes "Greek and Roman ethics in which eudaimonia is linked to aretê, the Greek word for “virtue” or “excellence.” In the Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle wrote, “the happy man lives well and does well; for we have practically defined happiness as a sort of good life and good action.” Happiness is not, he argued, equivalent to wealth, honor, or pleasure. It is an end in itself, not the means to an end." (http://hnn.us/articles/46460.html)

In any case, the founders did not interpret the "pursuit of happiness" as hedonism, but in contrast to the oppression of England, it meant freedom to pursue happiness by lawful virtuous means .

"Know ye not that they which run in a race run all, but one receiveth the prize? So run, that ye may obtain." (1 Corinthians 9:24)

This is no to say that the Founders were wholly Biblical in thier ideology, but while the motive for this pursuit must to be to please God according to His Word, yet the founders did not intend the "pursuit of happiness" to be that of immorality, and instead passed laws against such.

However, just as antinomians misconstrue Scripture to justify lawlessness, so modern revisions supposed the founders meant to sanction porn under the 1st Amendment, and were hostile to any sanction of religion.

81 posted on 05/02/2013 9:27:57 AM PDT by daniel1212 (Come to the Lord Jesus as a contrite damned+destitute sinner, trust Him to save you, then live 4 Him)
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To: ansel12
It seems this is your source: http://www.prolades.com/glama/la5co07/current_situation_2000-2008.htm

As for stats, it is not how many voted each way but the percentage. The fact that many Catholics do not vote means apathy, and for a meaningful comparison this must be compared with how many evangelicals also did not vote, and how they could be expected to voted.

But as seen in more than one FR thread, the way some absolve Catholics from blame is to argue that about half of Catholics did not vote [citation needed], and then blame evangelicals for Romney's loss, as too many of them did not vote, for among those who did 79% voted for Romney - a higher % than any other religious group, even Mormons! So about half the Catholics are pouring on a fire while almost 80% of evangelicals are fighting it, but the latter it to be blamed for the loss of the house because too many stayed home like about half the Catholics.

Now here are many referenced stats:


82 posted on 05/02/2013 10:13:25 AM PDT by daniel1212 (Come to the Lord Jesus as a contrite damned+destitute sinner, trust Him to save you, then live 4 Him)
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To: daniel1212; ansel12
As for stats, it is not how many voted each way but the percentage. The fact that many Catholics do not vote means apathy, and for a meaningful comparison this must be compared with how many evangelicals also did not vote, and how they could be expected to voted.

But as seen in more than one FR thread, the way some absolve Catholics from blame is to argue that about half of Catholics did not vote [citation needed], and then blame evangelicals for Romney's loss, as too many of them did not vote, for among those who did 79% voted for Romney - a higher % than any other religious group, even Mormons! So about half the Catholics are pouring on a fire while almost 80% of evangelicals are fighting it, but the latter it to be blamed for the loss of the house because too many stayed home like about half the Catholics.

Case in point, this day-after-the-election diatribe from Catholic blogger Kevin Collins:

The experts are wringing their hands trying to figure out why Romney didn’t win, but now we know: the 14 million missing voters from Romney’s column are Evangelicals. Evangelical Christians may not be evil people, but they helped an evil president become an evil dictator on Tuesday. The exact numbers aren’t in but clearly the vast majority of Evangelicals stayed home on Election Day. They weren’t dealing with a storm or a personal family emergency. They stayed home because they made a conscious decision to allow our Marxist enemy to continue ruining our lives rather than have Mormon Mitt Romney as our president....The Evangelicals’ hatred of Romney burns so brightly it blinded them. Self- flagellation and a willingness to aid and abet a clear enemy became preferable to them – consequences be damned.
-- from the thread Evangelicals plunge America into darkness – mislead polls and stay home on Election Day

83 posted on 05/02/2013 10:27:44 AM PDT by Alex Murphy ("If you are not firm in faith, you will not be firm at all" - Isaiah 7:9)
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To: metmom

Some long for the good ol days, before her unholy use of the sword of men was lost.

Canons of the Ecumenical Fourth Lateran Council, 1215:

We excommunicate and anathematize every heresy that raises against the holy, orthodox and Catholic faith which we have above explained; condemning all heretics under whatever names they may be known, for while they have different faces they are nevertheless bound to each other by their tails, since in all of them vanity is a common element.

Those condemned, being handed over to the secular rulers of their bailiffs, let them be abandoned, to be punished with due justice, clerics being first degraded from their orders. As to the property of the condemned, if they are laymen, let it be confiscated; if clerics, let it be applied to the churches from which they received revenues. But those who are only suspected, due consideration being given to the nature of the suspicion and the character of the person, unless they prove their innocence by a proper defense, let them be anathematized and avoided by all 1-intil they have made suitable satisfaction; but if they have been under excommunication for one year, then let them be condemned as heretics.

Secular authorities, whatever office they may hold, shall be admonished and induced and if necessary compelled by ecclesiastical censure, that as they wish to be esteemed and numbered among the faithful, so for the defense of the faith they ought publicly to take an oath that they will strive in good faith and to the best of their ability to exterminate in the territories subject to their jurisdiction all heretics pointed out by the Church; so that whenever anyone shall have assumed authority, whether spiritual or temporal, let him be bound to confirm this decree by oath.

But if a temporal ruler, after having been requested and admonished by the Church, should neglect to cleanse his territory of this heretical foulness, let him be excommunicated by the metropolitan and the other bishops of the province. If he refuses to make satisfaction within a year, let the matter be made known to the supreme pontiff, that he may declare the ruler’s vassals absolved from their allegiance and may offer the territory to be ruled lay Catholics, who on the extermination of the heretics may possess it without hindrance and preserve it in the purity of faith; the right, however, of the chief ruler is to be respected as long as he offers no obstacle in this matter and permits freedom of action.

The same law is to be observed in regard to those who have no chief rulers (that is, are independent). Catholics who have girded themselves with the cross for the extermination of the heretics, shall enjoy the indulgences and privileges granted to those who go in defense of the Holy Land. (http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/basis/lateran4.asp)

Pope Innocent IV, Ad extirpanda: The head of state or ruler must force all the heretics whom he has in custody,{8} provided he does so without killing them or breaking their arms or legs,as actual robbers and murderers of souls and thieves of the sacraments of God and Christian faith, to confess their errors and accuse other heretics whom they know, and specify their motives, {9} and those whom they have seduced, and those who have lodged them and defended them,as thieves and robbers of material goods are made to accuse their accomplices and confess the crimes they have committed.

Those convicted of heresy by the aforesaid Diocesan Bishop,surrogate or inquisitors, shall be taken in shackles to the head of state or ruler or his special representative, instantly,or at least within five days, and the latter shall apply the regulations promulgated against such persons...- http://userwww.sfsu.edu/%7Edraker/history/Ad_Extirpanda.html

[Error condemned] That heretics be burned is against the will of the Spirit. Exsurge Domine, Bull of Pope Leo X issued June 15, 1520 http://www.papalencyclicals.net/Leo10/l10exdom.htm


84 posted on 05/02/2013 10:29:13 AM PDT by daniel1212 (Come to the Lord Jesus as a contrite damned+destitute sinner, trust Him to save you, then live 4 Him)
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To: Alex Murphy

So instead of blaming the majority of Catholics - who make up a greater percentage of the electorate - for not voting like Evangelicals, they blame the most conservative group because too many of them did what Catholic’s did. The fact is that in many elections, it would have been better for conservatives if all Catholics stayed home, which cannot be said of Evangelicals. But they must protect Rome from any blame at any cost to objectivity.

I would like to know where he got his “the vast majority of Evangelicals”stayed home figure, and how man Catholics did. The National Election Pool, which conducts exit polls for major media outlets, decided to exclude 19 states from its polling this last election, rather than the usual 50, and i am not sure if that makes much of a difference.


85 posted on 05/02/2013 10:59:34 AM PDT by daniel1212 (Come to the Lord Jesus as a contrite damned+destitute sinner, trust Him to save you, then live 4 Him)
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To: daniel1212; marshmallow; ansel12; metmom; boatbums; caww; presently no screen name; smvoice; ...
Marsh: "Catholics" who vote for Obama, for instance, have abandoned Catholic values and Catholicism itself. They have instead, adopted the prevailing values of current American culture. In what sense are they "Catholic" then?

FWIW, I do not believe there is a "Catholic Vote". We've seen in the last couple elections that no matter what the leaders of this church do, or say, a majority in the 52-55% range will vote for the liberals. I think in the last election the RCC leadership was pretty clear that they did not support obama and it really didn't alter his vote totals. A better way to look at the "Catholic vote" is by breaking it down into different ethnic or economic groups. Their church leadership has had little or no influence over how their members vote.

Evangelical Christians are a clear example of a religious group that is solidly conservative even though most Black Americans are identified with Evangelical churches and they vote in the 90%+ area for the liberals. I suspect that part of the more conservative view is because of the belief in Sola Scriptura rather than tradition and organizational authority.

86 posted on 05/02/2013 11:17:42 AM PDT by wmfights
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To: wmfights; daniel1212; ansel12; metmom; boatbums; caww; presently no screen name; smvoice; ...
FWIW, I do not believe there is a "Catholic Vote". We've seen in the last couple elections that no matter what the leaders of this church do, or say, a majority in the 52-55% range will vote for the liberals. I think in the last election the RCC leadership was pretty clear that they did not support obama and it really didn't alter his vote totals. A better way to look at the "Catholic vote" is by breaking it down into different ethnic or economic groups. Their church leadership has had little or no influence over how their members vote.

And to drive that point home, here are two articles by Catholics which say the same thing - there is no "Catholic" vote:

They may call themselves Catholics, and they may even go to Mass, but when it comes to life choices they are virtually indistinguishable from everyone else in America. They don’t live radical Christianity out in any real sort of way. Their lives look just like the lives of their worldly neighbors. They don’t give any more than the average joe. They seem just as likely to divorce their spouses, have only 2.5 children as their non Catholic neighbors and they seem just as materialistic as everyone else. They attend church if they feel like it, but if there’s a weekend football game or the call of the beach house they’re just as likely to respond to that demand. When it comes to voting, they’ll vote as they wish according to wherever they get their opinions from–TV, the newspaper, the mass media–just like their neighbors. The one source they won’t consider when informing their vote is their priests and bishops.
-- from the thread Catholic Vote?

Are Catholics now so “successfully” assimilated into American political life that they are without political impact—that there really is no such thing as a “Catholic vote”? Unfortunately enough, Catholics are largely indistinguishable from non-Catholics and, despite a few pundits, no, there really is no “Catholic vote.” This obvious conclusion—clear enough from the fact that the vote for the winning candidates in the last national election was approximately the same for Catholics and non-Catholics—has serious current implications....

....Compare two lists:
According to the USCCB, the five most Catholic states, in population, are: Rhode Island, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York and Connecticut. According to the American Life League, the states with the most pro-life legislation (i.e., inhibiting abortion in various ways) are: Oklahoma, Louisiana, Pennsylvania, Arkansas and Texas.

This is a shocker. In short, there is no Catholic political impact in support of life in those states reportedly having the most Catholics. As Archbishop Charles Chaput of Philadelphia put it, after the 2008 election, “[w]e need to stop overcounting our numbers, our influence, our institutions, and our resources, because they are not real.”
-- from the thread The Mythical Catholic Vote: The Harmful Consequences of Political Assimilation


87 posted on 05/02/2013 11:46:29 AM PDT by Alex Murphy ("If you are not firm in faith, you will not be firm at all" - Isaiah 7:9)
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To: daniel1212; metmom

I read the threads, you guys don’t need to put me into your group pings for everything that you post.


88 posted on 05/02/2013 12:30:52 PM PDT by ansel12 (Civilization, Crusade against the Mohammedan Death Cult)
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To: daniel1212

Look at that ridiculous post.

Do you really think that someone is going to read all that?

You posted it to me and I have no idea what you wanted to say, and I’m not going to spend hours of reading and visiting links at your direction to unravel what you should have been able to say within a few sentences or a paragraph.


89 posted on 05/02/2013 12:36:10 PM PDT by ansel12 (Civilization, Crusade against the Mohammedan Death Cult)
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To: Alex Murphy
.....”Archbishop Charles Chaput of Philadelphia put it, after the 2008 election, “We (Catholics) need to stop overcounting our numbers, our influence, our institutions, and our resources, because they are not real.”......

I sometimes wonder if that isn't something we conservatives in general need to look at as well....I don't think we have the numbers nor influence nor resources we appear to need to change the trajectory of this nation....there are more of ‘everything else’ than WE.

Evil appears to be on the upside...and running ravage in all out institutes, churches and governance.....But the He did say these days would come. I just didn't think it would come so fast and hammer so hard!

90 posted on 05/02/2013 12:40:54 PM PDT by caww
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To: daniel1212

Their mind is made up. Don’t confuse them with the facts!

Sheesh!!!


91 posted on 05/02/2013 12:43:34 PM PDT by metmom (For freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore & do not submit again to a yoke of slavery)
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To: wmfights

.....”Evangelical Christians are a clear example of a religious group that is solidly conservative”.....

I don’t think so.... for many of them are also being caught up in the worldly ways of this nation. Perhaps not to the degree catholics have gone..but realistically the Evangelical community is shifting...and it’s a deceptive shift.....


92 posted on 05/02/2013 12:44:49 PM PDT by caww
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To: ansel12

Um, I didn’t include you in the group pings to the person to whom you were responding, I pinged the group in addition to you.

I would have courtesy pinged you to the response to the Catholic poster you were debating with anyway, whether or not I pinged anyone else.

Relax. You’re not on my ping list.


93 posted on 05/02/2013 12:49:00 PM PDT by metmom (For freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore & do not submit again to a yoke of slavery)
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To: wmfights
FWIW, I do not believe there is a "Catholic Vote". We've seen in the last couple elections that no matter what the leaders of this church do, or say, a majority in the 52-55% range will vote for the liberals.

After 150 years of knowing the Catholic vote, and it's devotion to the democrat party, we know that there is a "Catholic vote", it isn't wild and unpredictable, it is predictable and routine, just as the Protestant vote is, in the other direction.

The Catholic voters all belong to a single denomination, and their vote is predictable, because it is "the catholic vote".

94 posted on 05/02/2013 12:50:33 PM PDT by ansel12 (Civilization, Crusade against the Mohammedan Death Cult)
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To: ansel12; daniel1212

It’s not really ridiculous.

Catholics are forever demanding that dan cite his comments and assertions.

He is.

They want data instead of unsupported assertions, they get it.

And they STILL will not acknowledge that there’s anything to them.


95 posted on 05/02/2013 12:50:47 PM PDT by metmom (For freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore & do not submit again to a yoke of slavery)
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To: caww
I don’t think so.... for many of them are also being caught up in the worldly ways of this nation. Perhaps not to the degree catholics have gone..but realistically the Evangelical community is shifting...and it’s a deceptive shift.....

Since they are the least worldly, and most conservative voters in America and deliver 80% of their vote for pro-life and conservatism. I think that we can count them as ""a clear example of a religious group that is solidly conservative"".

Actually, I guess America' second largest church denomination (Southern Baptist) could be slightly to the right of the catch all (mass) category of "Evangelical".

96 posted on 05/02/2013 12:57:05 PM PDT by ansel12 (Civilization, Crusade against the Mohammedan Death Cult)
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To: metmom; daniel1212

daniel1212’s post 82 was only to me.

I’m not going to wade through all that nonsense to find out what he wanted.


97 posted on 05/02/2013 1:00:06 PM PDT by ansel12 (Civilization, Crusade against the Mohammedan Death Cult)
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To: Natural Law; ansel12; All
We have been around this canard many times. Less than half of the self described Catholics vote and of those that do approximately half vote for each party. To try to characterize the 25% of Catholics voting for liberal policies and politicians as being representative of all or even most Catholics is completely disingenuous and mathematically flawed. Remember, there are lies, damned lies and statistics.

Well, either you actually portray a worse portrait of Catholics here...OR, you yourself are negatively contributing to your statement of "lies, damned lies and statistics."

Per this source, Voter Turnout, 54-62% of the Voting Eligible Population (which is distinct from VAP -- The Voting Age Population as not all adults are eligible to vote) turned out to vote over these past three Presidential elections. This % reflects BOTH registered AND unregistered voters.

You say that "less than half of the self described Catholics vote"...whereas in the presidential elections, 54% (2000), 60% (2004), 62% (2008), 58% (2012) of ALL eligible voters actually voted.

Since Catholics are approximately 1/4th of all registered voters (I saw one 2008 figure of 47 million...so it's probably higher than that now)...
...and if they turn out anywhere from 5-13% LESS than the national average [say your 49% or less you cite...vs. 54-62% of all]
...and this 5-13% INCLUDES those %-'bringer-down' Catholic votes ... meaning that % of DIFFERENCE/contrast with other voting groups actually grows to a 7-->16% difference between Catholic and non-Catholic voters (in terms of turn-out...if what you said is "so"...IOW, say 49% of Catholic VEP vs. 56-65% of non-Catholic VEP.

So, if you are right, Catholics are the sloppiest voters there are even counting upon them to turn out!

But I don't think you are right here. I think Catholics, by and large, turn out at almost the same rate other voters do...and I think you were simply trying to reduce as far as possible what the representational impact Catholic voters constitute...in order to dilute Catholic voter accountability (as much as you could possibly do)

Overall...the numbers speak for themselves:
In a population around 312 million...about 78 million of them (25%) are Catholic...which includes kids/minors, btw...
...and 47-48 million of them are old enough (& registered) to vote...
...and, at first glance, at least almost 30 million of them DID vote in the 2012 presidential election...among almost 125 million voters...
...and, taking a November 2012 CNN citation that 52% of Catholics voted for Obama...

...that means that since over HALF of Catholic voters voted for Obama, over 1 in 5 Obama votes (by my calculation, 22% of ALL Obama votes...about 14.5 million of Obama's 65.5 million votes) came from Catholics...

That's quite handy "pocket change" eh?

98 posted on 05/02/2013 1:05:45 PM PDT by Colofornian (Jude 3: "...I felt compelled to write and urge you to CONTEND for the faith that was once for all")
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To: Alex Murphy
Are Catholics now so “successfully” assimilated into American political life that they are without political impact—that there really is no such thing as a “Catholic vote”? Unfortunately enough, Catholics are largely indistinguishable from non-Catholics and, despite a few pundits, no, there really is no “Catholic vote.”

So immigrant Catholics from Catholic nations vote more conservatively and pro-life than Catholics who have been here for generations?

We know that it is the opposite, the more American that Catholics become, the less liberal they are.

The left isn't pushing for Catholic immigration because they fear that it will take generations to turn them from pro-life conservatives into pro-abortion voting liberals.

99 posted on 05/02/2013 1:05:49 PM PDT by ansel12 (Civilization, Crusade against the Mohammedan Death Cult)
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To: Colofornian

It’s only lies, damned lies, and statistics when it impugns the Catholic church.

If it either makes Catholicism look good or impugns anyone else non-Catholic, then it’s about written in stone.


100 posted on 05/02/2013 1:15:01 PM PDT by metmom (For freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore & do not submit again to a yoke of slavery)
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