Trib, S-T: Try Sailer!

Gauntlet considered thrown before Chi Trib and Sun-Times opinion, controversy, perspective, whatever editors to give Steve Sailer space in your esteemed publications.  His lede for today is alone cause for considering him:

The ritual humiliation of America’s most prominent man of science,  James Watson, for publicly acknowledging that there are differences in average intelligence among the races, highlights the extent to which today’s conventional wisdom is hysterically hostile to basic findings of the human sciences.

The bishop inquired

The Savannah GA bishop wins praise from the home-town paper for Bishop J. Kevin Boland, who

went to bat for a family alleging abuse by a visiting Jesuit priest.

IF THE Catholic Church in this country had more religious leaders like the [Bishop] Boland, then the abuse scandals that have wracked the church in recent years might have been less painful.

Good for him.  However, his letter was not public, nor did he alert law enforcement.  Bishop Boland wrote the Jesuits in 2003

on behalf of a Georgia family whose teen-age son had a “relationship” with McGuire. [He] said the young man had “transferred his loyalty from family to Father McGuire” and asked the religious order for help.

It’s unclear what, if anything, the Jesuits did. But give Bishop Boland credit for going to bat for the family and not sweeping anything under the rug.

He passed on the parental complaint, but privately.  This entre nous approach has its place.  But in 2003 in the matter of clerical abuse?

Such scandals have tested the faith of Catholics in this country. But responsible actions by leaders like Bishop Boland show that some good shepherds are protecting their flocks.

Within limits, yes.  At least his letter has been made public now, apparently as part of legally mandated disclosure.

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Comment by Reader D:

Bishop Boland, 68 in 2003, was born and raised in Ireland and Irish seminaries. That’s probably the best he could muster with a good heart living amongst us in the USA. Probably not trained to make waves, but at least has a strong moral compass himself. Better than nothing, I guess.

Big Brother lives

“Beyond the point of acceptable debate” were the remarks by James Watson that got him fired, de-listed, blackballed — not too strong a word — by the civilized world.

Oh? reacts John Derbyshire:

I have been following science since my childhood. I did not know that anything was “beyond the point of acceptable debate” in science.

Acceptable to whom?  To the currently reigning panjandrums and their craven minions.

Closing in on McGuire

The boom is falling.  Daily Southtown:

Jesuit priest McGuire now faces federal charges
A notorious Jesuit priest and convicted sex offender living in Oak Lawn now faces federal charges alleging he molested boys he took with him on religious retreats in Europe.

Janesville Gazette:

Under current federal law, the statute of limitations for sexual abuse of a minor extends to the life of the victim.

Chi Trib:

 McGuire, who faces up to 15 years in prison, is expected to appear at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse this afternoon.

. . . .

He was transferred from the custody of Wisconsin authorities to federal immigration officials because the allegation involved taking a minor outside the country to engage in sexual conduct, authorities said.

. . . .

Lawyers for five men who have sued McGuire for molesting them as minors say at least 10 families have come forward with similar allegations over the last five decades, including five who are not named in any criminal or civil complaints.

CBS Channel 2:

[McGuire] was affiliated until as recently as last year with the group Mission Fides, which supported his religious retreats in the United States and across the globe. Among the places he visited were Mother Teresa’s communities in India, the U.S. Attorney’s office said.

Documents provided by the Jesuits said for at least the past 16 years, McGuire has had several restrictions on contact with minors, but kept traveling with boys and young men in their teens and early 20s throughout the 1990s and through 2003, the U.S. Attorney’s office alleged.

The federal charges stemmed from a boy who came with McGuire to Austria and Switzerland. He was 13 when the alleged abuse began in 1999, and it continued until the fall of 2003, the U.S. Attorney’s office alleged.

Janesville Gazette:

Jesuit order severing ties to McGuire

.

In a letter to Judge James Carlson, the Rev. Edward W. Schmidt asks that McGuire be jailed because he cannot be watched closely by the Jesuits.

“Clearly, the only failsafe mechanism to ensure the public’s safety would be to order that McGuire begin to serve his sentence and thus be incarcerated,” according to the letter.

. . . .

Starting in at least 1991, the Jesuits placed special restrictions on McGuire regarding his contact with minors, according to documents the Jesuits provided investigators.

He was ordered repeatedly not to travel with or be alone with any minors, according to the complaint.

A 2002 memo from the Jesuits says six complaints were made about McGuire since 1991 that include having a young man sleep in the same room with him, having a young man wash McGuire’s feet while he showered, buying underwear for a boy, talking incessantly about sex and showing a boy pornography, according to the complaint.

Fr. Schmidt letter to donors:

The Jesuits of the Chicago Province are cooperating proactively and fully with law enforcement authorities in every way we can.

That’s in a release.  In an accompanying letter, he gives telephone number, 773 975 6909, and email address, tim@jesuits-chi.org, where he says he will “welcome your questions, thoughts, ideas and feedback regarding Jesuit misconduct issues.  Please call, write,” 2050 N. Clark St., Chicago 60614, “or email.”

Finally, again in Chi Trib:

“There’s certainly vindication in the filing of criminal charges given McGuire’s influence and support extends across the country,” said Kevin McGuire, the priest’s nephew and the attorney representing two of the three accusers in civil suits. The third accuser has not filed a civil suit.

“We would hope the filing of these charges by an independent law-enforcement body would bring a certain amount of closure to those who were still wondering.”

“Feel the Love,” he wrote

Longtime reader, third– or fourth-time writer (WRITE ME, I’M LONELY!) Phil put me on to today’s David Brooks column and its brilliant reportage on the recent debate between Democrat runners-for-office, which includes this from the Man from Poverty:

EDWARDS: I worry about the two Irans. For while the corporate Jihadis are building nuclear weapons, the working-class extremists are shivering in doorways and making do with sharp sticks.

Lots more here, including a closing paean from Tonto:

GOV. BILL RICHARDSON: That was beautiful, Hillary. I love you

Who says the NY Times sucks?

Where have all the (right) causes gone, where have they gone?

Dave Newbart is at it again in S-T, with story about Loyola kids protesting LU investments in things that The Left does not like: “controversial companies like Halliburton, Clear Channel, Wal-Mart, Chevron and Dow Chemical,” says Newbart — his exact words NOT in quotes in his tendentious lede.  (Suggested redo: “companies controversial to libs and mainstream media.”)

N. has finished with his Finkelstein-DePaul coverage that was heavy on complaints by protestors and perfunctory on rebuttals. It’s a meme he has pursued since he led the ouster of Fr. Donald Rowe some years back as president of St. Ignatius College Prep in which N. gave ample space to — guess what? — protesters, this time among dissident teachers.

Rowe may have overstayed his time at Ignatius, where he raised lotsa bucks in a good cause.  But what about selecting this investment-in-Wal-Mart cause at Loyola, one dear to leftists’ hearts, while never the cause of campus conservatives? I would love to hear of a campus-protest story by Newbart that picks up on a conservative protest. It could be I have missed it or them, but I very much doubt it.

This we know

This being All Souls’ Day, or day of Commemoration of the Faithful Departed,

Something for the day:

Should poor souls fear a shade or night,

Who came sure from a sea of light?

Or since those drops are all sent back

So sure to thee, that none doth lack,

Why should frail flesh doubt any more

That what God takes, He’ll not restore?

ATTRIBUTION by Bartleby.com: Henry Vaughan (1622–1695), Welsh poet. “The Waterfall” (l. 17–22). . .

Meaning, tentatively proffered:

Having come from “a sea of light,” should we fear endless night when we die?  God takes his gift when we die and will give it back.  Don’t worry.

McGuire to jail

Rev. Donald McGuire SJ will have to go to jail, having lost his appeal in Walworth County (Wis.) court, the Janesville Gazette reports.

The Rev. Donald J. McGuire is in custody and will have to go to the Wisconsin Court of Appeals if he wishes to overturn a conviction on nearly 40-year-old child molestation charges.

Minutes after Walworth County Judge James Carlson denied every defense motion requesting a new trial, McGuire, 77, was arrested on a warrant for a probation violation.

A Wisconsin Department of Corrections spokesperson said McGuire was arrested for failing to comply with requirements of his sex offender registration.

More:

McGuire had not returned information needed to update his registered status, department of corrections spokesman John Dipko said.

McGuire will likely spend at least three days in jail while the violation is investigated. Probation agents could force him to say longer as a punishment for failing to comply with requirements.

 

Impact man

Convicted sexual abuser Rev. Donald McGuire, S.J., made his mark in the Deep South, leading Bishop J. Kevin Boland of Savannah GA to write to Chicago Province Jesuits on Sept. 24, 2003, telling what he’d been told by a boy’s parents:

“They are an excellent family and are obviously very concerned because of the relationship their (name redacted) had over a long period of time with Father McGuire. (Name redacted) has transferred his loyalty from family to Father McGuire,” Boland said in the message on official diocesan letterhead. “On a different level, the Diocese of Savannah is also concerned because Father McGuire gave at least three retreats for our potential seminarians at the request of our Vocation Director. By all accounts they were very dynamic and had great impact on those who participated.”

Great impact, yes.