Sunday, September 26, 2010 \AM\.\Sun\.
It would appear that those in the mainstream media who want to do hit pieces on Pope Benedict XVI need to take a number. The latest to engage in Yellow Journalism is CNN. The “network of record” dispatched Gary Tuchman to do the dirty work. One might recall that it was none other than Tuchman who remarked how distressing it was travelling in the heartland during the 2008 Election campaign. He complained that some who recognized him told him that their Middle American views and ideas were repeatedly mocked by the mainstream media, all the while those of the liberal establishment were hailed. Tuchman’s words were quite revealing when it comes to this story.
CNN has been advertising their hit piece on Pope Benedict XVI as if he was already guilty of some sort of cover up, even though during the Abuse Scandal it was none other than the New York Times who praised then Cardinal Ratzinger for tackling the tough problems. What tough problems did he tackle? The most notable example being Father founder of the Legionaries of Christ. Father Marcial Maciel was one of the few prominent conservatives caught up in the Abuse Scandal, most of the abusers were Church liberals who wanted to change the Church. Cardinal Ratzinger took on Father Maciel at the height of his power and popularity. One might recall that Father Maciel was quite close to Pope John Paul II. So from this example we can see that Cardinal Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict XVI) showed no favorites and pulled no punches. The Legionaries of Christ were shaken to the core and as pontiff, Pope Benedict XVI removed their leadership and installed his own, hardly the work of someone who was timid.
The CNN piece was perhaps even more despicable than the New York Times hit piece, because in the interim much of the modus operandi of the Old Gray Lady was exposed. Still CNN used the same material and claimed that they had something new. There is nothing new here. The crux of their argument comes from material provided by Jeffrey Anderson the attorney who has made millions off the scandal. Anderson says he is one a mision to “reform the Church.” What kind of reform would that be? Some Catholic dioceses have been forced into bankruptcy, which means the poor whom they dioceses assisted through their social programs are left in the cold. For all his concern of “reform” Anderson hasn’t provided a penny to these particular poor.
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17 Comments | Uncategorized | Tagged: 1960s Violent Revolution, Abuse Scandal, Anglican Church, Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams, Catholic Church, CNN, Dictatorship of Relativism, Evangelical Churches, Father Marcial Maciel, Fox News, French Revolution, Gary Tuchman, Hit Pieces on Pope Benedict XVI and The Catholic Church, Jeffrey Anderson, Kenneth Woodward, Legionaries of Christ, Liberal Christianity, Michael Sean Winters, National Catholic Reporter, New York Times, Orthodox Judaism, Pope Benedict XVI, Pope John Paul II, Russian Revolution, Saul Alinsky, Tea Party Movement, Voltaire, Willam Ayres | Permalink
Posted by Dave Hartline
Tuesday, August 31, 2010 \AM\.\Tue\.
I’m on record as not being a member of the Glenn Beck fan club. I don’t like his overly emotive mannerisms, his politics, or his theology. I’d rather the president of my alma mater was more circumspect in praising him, and I’ve written to the university to that effect. At the same time, I’m somewhat fascinated by the accounts of his rally in DC this past weekend. For instance, here is David Weigel (erstwhile Washington Post reporter and Journolist member) reporting on the event:
“It’s about as angry as a Teletubbies episode….The Democrats who pre-butted Beck’s rally by predicting an overtly political hateananny were played for suckers. They didn’t pay attention to Beck’s “Founder Fridays” episodes on Fox, his high-selling speaking tour, or his schmaltzy children’s book The Christmas Sweater. It’s not his blackboard that makes him popular. It’s the total package he sells: membership in a corny, righteous, Mormonism-approved-by-John Hagee cultural family. The anger is what the media focus on, he says, joking several times about what “the press” will do to twist his words.
…
Beck’s rally ends just as he said it would—without incident, political or otherwise. He’s just taken the world’s most derided TV audience, put them in the National Mall, and presided over the world’s largest megachurch. “Bring out the bagpipes,” he says. Bagpipe players then walk onto his stage, and the sound of “Amazing Grace” fills the mall.
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85 Comments | Uncategorized | Tagged: David Weigel, Glenn Beck, JournoList, Michael Sean Winters, Mormons, Religion, Ross Douthat, Washington Post | Permalink
Posted by John Henry
Saturday, August 14, 2010 \PM\.\Sat\.
One of the interesting (by which I mean dull, predictable and repetitive) aspects of the 24 hour news cycle is that all forms of media have incentives to magnify and actively seek out controversy. Not only does this increase ratings/page views/newspaper sales, it provides media outlets with something – anything in a slow news month – to talk about. I can’t help but feel that the recent outburst of commentary about the construction of a mosque near the site of the 9/11 attacks is the type of story designed to increase media consumption and accomplish little else. The First Amendment is not in dispute here; freedom of religion is well established and protected by settled case law. Furthermore, the proposed mosque is to be constructed on private property, and there is no legal reason to challenge its construction. And so most of the discussion revolves (and frequently devolves) around taste and symbolism.
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44 Comments | Uncategorized | Tagged: 9/11, Barack Obama, First Amendment, Freedom of Religion, Ground Zero Mosque, Islam, Mainstream Media, Media, Michael Sean Winters, Mosque at Ground Zero, National Catholic Reporter, New York City, Weekly Standard | Permalink
Posted by John Henry
Tuesday, October 20, 2009 \PM\.\Tue\.
I will be updating this post as often as I can throughout the day [Last update at 10:01pm CDT]. I’ll be reporting on reactions and news concerning this groundbreaking development that came from the Vatican this morning. The Vatican issued a note explaining a new provision in an upcoming Apostolic Constitution that will allow for a structure to be in place to receive Anglicans and Episcopalians into the Catholic Church. Basically a corporate reunion!
To read the full text of this announcement from the Vatican click here.
To read the full text of the joint press release of the Archbishop of Westminster, Vincent Gerard Nichols, and the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, click here.
Reaction and news from around the world [all emphasis mine]:
Last Update of the day at 10:01pm CDT (Earlier updates further down this post)
Ruth Gledhill of the Times of London. Offers a brief history of what transpired the last couple of years between Anglo-Catholics, and those inside the Vatican, both faithful and dissident Catholics.
“Rome has parked its tanks on the Archbishop of Canterbury’s lawn [Interesting choice of words, but nonetheless accurate in my opinion] after manoeuvres undertaken by up to fifty bishops and begun two years ago by an Australian archbishop, John Hepworth [The leader of the Traditional Anglican Communion].”
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18 Comments | Uncategorized | Tagged: America Magazine, Anglican Church in North America, Anglican Communion, Anglican Use, Anglicanism, Apostolic Constitution, Archbishop Joseph Di Noia, Archbishop Vincent Nichols, Canon 29, Canon 294, Canon 295, Canon 296, Canon 297, Canon 34, Canon 368, Canon 372, Canon 518, Canon Law, Canterbury, Catholic Church, Christendom, Congregation for Divine Worship, Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Cormac Cardinal Murphy-O'Connor, Ecumenism, Katharine Jefferts Schori, Michael Sean Winters, Military Ordinariate, Modern Liberalism, National Catholic Reporter, Opus Dei, Orthodox Church, Personal Prelature, Pope Benedict XVI, Rowan Williams, Spirituali Militum Curae, SSPX, The Episcopal Church, Traditional Anglican Communion, Ut Unum Sint, Vatican II, Walter Cardinal Kasper, Westminster | Permalink
Posted by Tito Edwards
Wednesday, September 2, 2009 \AM\.\Wed\.
Well, I’ve read and talked more than I ever cared to about Ted Kennedy recently, may he rest in peace. And Darwin has already ably responded to this defense of the late Senator Kennedy from Michael Sean Winters. But something about Mr. Winters response has been ringing in my ears, and I think it’s because it summarizes in a few sentences what I perceive to be the tragedy of Catholic Democrats in the U.S.: they could have taken a stand for unborn life but were unwilling. As a result, faithful Catholics have either been driven into the Republican Party, become independents, or become disconcertingly comfortable with the status quo on abortion. Currently I think both the first and last options are incompatible with Catholic thought – at least without substantial departure from party orthodoxies. Where familiarity (with both parties) should have breed contempt, it has instead yielded unconscionable familiarity and acceptance. And Mr. Winters’ post provides a clear illustration of this reality:
To dismiss his [Senator Kennedy’s] career because of his stance on abortion is to be ignorant of the complicated way the issue of abortion manifested itself in the early 1970s: I think Kennedy got it wrong but I do not find it difficult to understand why and how he got it wrong.
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5 Comments | Uncategorized | Tagged: Consistent Life Ethic, Michael Sean Winters, Party Politics, Sophism, Ted Kennedy, Tribalism | Permalink
Posted by John Henry
Friday, August 28, 2009 \PM\.\Fri\.
I was struck by a section out of Michael Sean Winters’ ringing (indeed, rather shrill) defense of Senator Ted Kennedy on the America Magazine blog.
To say that Sen. Kennedy was flawed is to say that he was a human being. To dismiss his career because of his stance on abortion is to be ignorant of the complicated way the issue of abortion manifested itself in the early 1970s: I think Kennedy got it wrong but I do not find it difficult to understand why and how he got it wrong. If the pro-life leaders would stop ranting for a second and study that history they might become more effective at advancing their cause. Besides, Ted Kennedy got many more things right than he got wrong.
Honestly, what does it mean to say that Kennedy “got many more things right than he got wrong”? I cannot tell that it means anything other than, “Kennedy is one of my political tribe, and so I find it easy to forgive his faults.” What, surely Winters does not propose something so trivializing as a weighted check list: “Kennedy was in favor of expanding welfare, and we’ll weight that at an 8. He was in favor of increased immigration, and we’ll give that a 10. Unfortunately, he was in favor of abortion, we’ll weight that at a 4. So far a +14 total, what next?”
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16 Comments | Uncategorized | Tagged: America Magazine, Catholic Social Teaching, Michael Sean Winters, Partisanship, Politics, Ted Kennedy, Tribalism | Permalink
Posted by DarwinCatholic
Thursday, August 27, 2009 \PM\.\Thu\.
Day II of what Catholics are saying on the passing away of Edward Moore Kennedy around the web (will be continuously updated until tonight at 7:00 pm CST):
A Catholic Funeral for Ted Kennedy by Dr. Edward Peters of Canon Law
A Catholic Funeral for Ted? It’s a Lie, a Sham, a Scandal, a Pretense, an Insult to faithful Catholics by Robert Kumpel of St. John’s Valdosta Blog
Dissident Catholic America magazine doesn’t want to talk about Ted Kennedy’s stance on abortion and trashes Patrick Madrid by Father John Zuhlsdorf of What Does The Prayer Really Say?
Who can have a Catholic Funeral & more by Elizabeth Scalia of The Anchoress via First Thoughts
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1 Comment | Uncategorized | Tagged: America Magazine, Canon Law, Catholic Culture, Catholic World, Catholics in Political Life, Father John Zuhlsdorf, Father Patrick Tarrant, Michael Sean Winters, Patrick Madrid, Roger Cardinal Mahony, Ted Kennedy, Ted Kennedy's Funeral Mass Scandal | Permalink
Posted by Tito Edwards