Church efforts too little too late
The head of the U.S. conference of catholic bishops, bishop Wilton D. Gregory, has said that there has been progress on dealing with the problem of sex abuse by catholic priests and that reports of abuse are down a small percentage this year, which leads me to believe that the criminals are just getting better at covering up and squelching the news of pedophile reports.
Leaving the details to church self policing is tantamount to allowing the wolves to guard the henhouse; the RCC has never been fully forthright about the full extent of this systemic problem of pedophile priests. They say it involves only 4,450 priests between 1950 and 2002, that is about 4 percent of the total number of them serving throughout that time, yet there are many more victims coming forward every day bringing the total number of victims to well over 100,000 with 90 percent of them being young boys between the ages of 11 to 14. How can this have been allowed to continue in light of the fact it has been known to be happening for over 50 years. Many F.B.I. analysts say it is only the tip of the iceberg.
The Vatican itself has been compliant in allowing the horror to go unchecked as recent surfaced documents have shown. In March, 1962 a document was circulated urging heads of dioceses all over the world to keep charges against priests secret if they were caught trying to solicit sex from a parishioner. Although they allege that cannon law was changed in 1963, the documents in question remained in the secret Vatican archives until being exposed recently.
The pattern being followed by diocese all over this country has been to evade responsibility in dealing with their problems either in offering payoffs to victims to keep them quiet, or declaring bankruptcy to avoid paying court ruled settlements, to resignations of church officials that take them out of the center of inquiries of abuse cases. There have been cases of priests upon being accused of sex abuse resorting to suicide, if they are really guilty this can only be a good thing, as children will be safer. Some are killed in prison like John Geoghan who was sentenced in 1991 to life in prison for molestation of young boys. His killer should be commended for saving the state of Mass. the money it would have to pay for keeping Geoghan alive for the rest of his life.
I issue this plea to the rest of you priests who are guilty of these crimes. Don’t wait until you are accused, or charged, or jailed to end your life, do it now! Save the children, save money, get out of here now! Paul Shanley you are next to go, do it now!
When the Milwaukee priest Siegfried Widera learned last May that he would be charged with 42 counts of child molestation in the states of California and Wisconsin he fled and is still a fugitive. Widera if you are reading this, please end your life, it’s not worth a plug nickel anyway, save us time and money. Evidence has shown that therapy doesn’t work on these criminals yet the church still wastes time and money on it thinking it will ameliorate the problem, just more evidence the RCC is not seriously trying to end its abuses.
The German catholic church has recently issued an apology to its victims of abuse by priests by saying, “We failed to deal with the problem adequately” and “when a clergyman abuses a child or youth, he darkens the christian message and the credibility of the church.” I say the church has no credibility, and never will. It is good though that all these other countries like Germany, Australia, Japan, Ireland, England and many others are starting to deal with this systemic problem but really the wrongs can never be fully righted as long as the RCC is allowed to operate in an ongoing fashion. The mandate is written into their main document, the new testament. Even in the Nag Hamadi texts use by old christian Gnostics, which but for a twist of fate remained out of the body of various texts that became part of the bible used by the catholic church. The abuse of women and children is deemed acceptable in many parts of that document, which raises the question ‘why is there so much fervor and validity attached to it in modern times?’, being that it is only after all merely a fevered account of barbaric times laid down by a variety of clearly disturbed individuals from the bronze age agrarian society of Northeast Africa. It has no relevance today other than being an interesting ancient text.
No, the RCC has long ago forfeited its right to operate in this country after having practically institutionalized the criminal behavior it displays. Abuse is too ingrained into the catholic system to continue to allow them to remain. The time has come to take the kid gloves off and not allow them to hide under the cover of religious freedom here. I say ban the RCC in this country, liquidate their assets sell the land they own. Set up a fund for victims to give free counseling, financial aid and set the wrongs right.
Let the other countries deal with the church in their own way, but set the example here that if you break the law as an institution, the rights of the institution no longer exist. Institute the corporate death penalty for the RCC for past and ongoing crimes against women and children it continues to perpetrate. Ban the RCC.
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
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