Catholics vs. Stupak: Bishops?

Brian Burch for CatholicVoteAction.org about Stupak’s giving in on abortion: “We were betrayed.”

Moreover, in a call to arms:

Over the next 7 months, we will be preparing for the November elections.

Any politician who supported this bill must pay a price. And that price is ultimately paid at the ballot box.

The backers of this health care bill never gave up. They fought for nearly a year against public opinion, and wore down their opponents until they got what they wanted.

We must resolve to do the same.

Remember what happened last night.

Remember how you feel right now.

November will be here before you know it.

This means opposing Democrats.  Will the bishops be aboard?

===============

Later: Not unless they debark the ObamaCare Express, to judge by what Cliff Kincaid says :

While commentators speculate as to whether Stupak was in favor of health care legislation all along and was always intending to vote for it, the real attention should be on the Bishops. They were playing the double-game, acting as if the legislation had to be toughened-up in order to be more pro-life, while insisting it be expanded to cover more immigrants. They were sounding conservative and liberal at the same time. All along they were active players because, in the end, they wanted to see national health care legislation passed.

Ouch.

(Thanks to Nicholas Stix for the heads-up on this.)

Sunday afternoon at the Church of Nice

Caught Rev. Donald Senior yesterday at Catholic Theological Union.  Was one of 200 (I’d guess) devotees at this multi-religious-community seminary-cum-religious-ed-degree-granter to some 415 men and women, 115 of whom are men headed for priesthood.  It’s in Hyde Park, blocks from U. of Chicago.  Senior is a longtime New Testament scholar, president of CTU for 22 years, member of the Passionists.  Hence C.P. after his name, for Congregation of the Passion.

Genial fellow to beat all, clearly an excellent front man for an institution sponsored and supported by 32 religious communities, including his own, the Passionists — which has a paltry five seminarians in attendance, none of them American.  The Passionists have no American candidates for the priesthood, a fact that the priest (whose name I didn’t get carefully enough to give it to you), whose task is to ride herd on their CTU sems, was at a loss to explain.  In Latin America there are bumper crops, he said, standing in a third-floor reception area in CTU’s new building.

I noted that some conservative organizations and dioceses are loaded with candidates while the Chicago archdiocese, for instance, has very few Americans and fewer Chicagoans in its ordination classes.  But the Latin Americans are not conservative, this priest said, agreeing with me about Americans. 

Letting his hair down a bit, he complained somewhat about the new Passionists, who haven’t the same kind of dedication to religious obedience he and other older priests take for granted.  They have their preferences as to where they might be stationed and announce them, whereas the older ones generally have been willing to try something they hadn’t thought of at all, in the process learning they can do things they hadn’t thought of at all.

We visitors, lay people and religious sisters, average age 70 (Fr. Senior’s age) as a rough guess (with Irish faces everywhere: you’d think the boat had just landed, except for the evident prosperity), had heard Senior lecture in an hour of utter charm about the bodily resurrection of Jesus.  He shot down early in his talk the ballyhooed “Lost Tomb of Jesus” documentary contention by James Cameron, of “Titanic” and “Avatar,” fame, citing an Israeli archeologist who said the bones he found (for filming) of Jesus, Mary Magdalen and the kids, while gladdening the heart of Dan Brown of DaVinci Code fame, were anything but, then addressing the question, what if we had the bones of Jesus?  What if he didn’t rise?  (A hotter question than Senior admitted: some years back, a chair-holding Jesuit theology teacher at Loyola U., whom I knew quite well, hedged on the question in a telephone conversation — the last he and I had, unfortunately.)

So doing, he raised from the dead (and criticized the life out of) a controversy from newspapers of a few years back, along the way staking out more or less scholarly claims to what theologians once called “incarnational” theology.  By now, however, you’d think we Catholics, even septuagenarians with time for and interest in Sunday-afternoon mass and lecture, would be fully aware of ours being a religious faith that takes matter, i.e., this life, seriously.

But his was less a scholarly dissertation than a meditation on data and belief, a riff on various Scripture passages and commentary, ancient and recent, in no way bringing coals to Newcastle for his eager audience.  It didn’t hurt that he had the nicely timed quip down cold as can be, which with his winning smile (never far from his Irish face beneath perfect white hair) drew many laughs and smiles — “Holy mackerel!” he threw into a description of the risen Jesus cooking fish for the apostles.  On old joke, I’m sure, but the timing was perfect.

For the same scene, he had Jesus proffering “tender” forgiveness to Peter, who had denied him three times, three times asking him at this lakeside barbecue if he loved him.  Tenderness suffused Senior’s account, in the lecture and in  the 20–minute-or-so homily during the mass that followed, so much so that one drew from his depiction a near-feminine Jesus.

Indeed, the mass, at a simple table next to a makeshift pulpit which had earlier been his lectern, featured extended vocal performances by a young woman and flute accompaniment by another.  The service, which moved at a funereal pace, seemed geared toward softening any rampant masculinity that might still be lurking in the hearts of Catholic worshipers, as did the lecture, delivered as it was smoothly, even soothingly.  This was the very much the Church of Nice.

Tea party on SW Side

Here’s my thought for the day: We Illinoisans, we Cook County-ans, we Oak Parkers are complicit in yesterday’s Historic Fiasco.  Our people are in the thick of it: Obama, Axelrod, Emanuel, Durbin, et al.  We make not a pretty sight, from coffees for Obama to Loop hotel fund-raisers, supporting the Left with nickels and dollars because that’s where the action is.  Tsk, tsk.

Not all of us, not all the time, however, and a different game is afoot, as Astute Reader reports from a Southwest Side Tea Party gathering yesterday:

The tea party fundraiser was spirited and friendly. Just down-home neighborhood folks, from different parishes, even a North Sider. Some NRA guys fighting Chicago’s gun law, some firefighters, pro-lifers, vets, one young conservative pro-life candidate named Carl Segvich, who will be running against Mayor Daley’s brother for some office in the 11th District in November. Very nice articulate guy who looks like a young Joe Mantegna.

There was an elderly gentleman there, John Walsh, who is funding two buses from this area to the April 15 Tax Day rally in Daley Plaza. His organization is Americans for Life.
 
The young woman who organized the tea party (with a great team of helpers with food and door prizes) is from my neighborhood — about 10 blocks away! She is great and is getting a bus together for both of Glenn Beck’s events coming up in the summer and has a block of rooms at DC hotels.
 
Have you heard of the book The Shadow Party: How George Soros, Hillary Clinton, and Sixties Radicals Seized Control of the Democratic Party? David Horowitz is one of the authors. A woman had it and let us read the last paragraph — part of the master plan. I’m going to look for it.
 
The spooky stuff is reality with Soros. It says he bought election officials — the position that determines election run-offs — in seven states where the vote would be close in the last election — and that’s how Al Franken won.
 
We all sang God Bless America at the end. (It ran right on time.) I was pumped. It was a 40s-50s spirit.
So there’s hope.

Dems make history one way or another

Dem Dems come up with ‘em, don’t they?

Key House Democrat: “There Are No Rules Here … We Make Them Up As We Go Along”

Charitably, can we chalk that up to being unable to express oneself clearly?  On the other hand . . .

Carter made him a federal judge in 1979.  Two years later he

was charged with accepting a $150,000 bribe in exchange for a lenient sentence and a return of seized assets for 21 counts of racketeering by Frank and Thomas Romano, and of perjury in his testimony about the case. He was acquitted by a jury after his alleged co-conspirator, William Borders, refused to testify in court (resulting in a jail sentence for Borders).

He wasn’t off the hook yet:

In 1988, the Democratic-controlled U.S. House of Representatives took up the case, and Hastings was impeached for bribery and perjury by a vote of 413-3. He was then convicted in 1989 by the United States Senate, becoming the sixth federal judge in the history of the United States to be removed from office by the Senate. The vote on the first article was 69 for and 26 opposed, providing five votes more than the two-thirds of those present that were needed to convict. The first article accused the judge of conspiracy. Conviction on any single article was enough to remove the judge from office. The Senate vote cut across party lines, with U.S. Senator Patrick J. Leahy, Democrat of Vermont voting to convict his fellow party member, and U.S. Senator Arlen Specter voting to acquit.

It could have been worse for him:

The Senate had the option to forbid Hastings from ever seeking federal office again, but did not do so. Alleged co-conspirator, attorney William Borders went to jail again for refusing to testify in the impeachment proceedings, but was later given a full pardon by President Bill Clinton on his last day in office.

But not for his buddy Borders.

Dems make history one way or another

Dem Dems come up with ‘em, don’t they?

Key House Democrat: “There Are No Rules Here … We Make Them Up As We Go Along”

Charitably, can we chalk that up to being unable to express oneself clearly?  On the other hand . . .

Carter made him a federal judge in 1979.  Two years later he

was charged with accepting a $150,000 bribe in exchange for a lenient sentence and a return of seized assets for 21 counts of racketeering by Frank and Thomas Romano, and of perjury in his testimony about the case. He was acquitted by a jury after his alleged co-conspirator, William Borders, refused to testify in court (resulting in a jail sentence for Borders).

He wasn’t off the hook yet:

In 1988, the Democratic-controlled U.S. House of Representatives took up the case, and Hastings was impeached for bribery and perjury by a vote of 413-3. He was then convicted in 1989 by the United States Senate, becoming the sixth federal judge in the history of the United States to be removed from office by the Senate. The vote on the first article was 69 for and 26 opposed, providing five votes more than the two-thirds of those present that were needed to convict. The first article accused the judge of conspiracy. Conviction on any single article was enough to remove the judge from office. The Senate vote cut across party lines, with U.S. Senator Patrick J. Leahy, Democrat of Vermont voting to convict his fellow party member, and U.S. Senator Arlen Specter voting to acquit.

It could have been worse for him:

The Senate had the option to forbid Hastings from ever seeking federal office again, but did not do so. Alleged co-conspirator, attorney William Borders went to jail again for refusing to testify in the impeachment proceedings, but was later given a full pardon by President Bill Clinton on his last day in office.

But not for his buddy Borders.

The public sector, yes!

News alert has it: Illinois is broken

It’s all about our timeservers in Springfield and Chicago:

Two in Sfld

What’s going on?

When your strategy is delay-and-deny, you have chosen to be obsolete. Reasonable people want to elbow you aside and make way for problem-solvers. That’s why, in America’s private sector, a generation of managers who confused mastery of the status quo with aggressive response to crises has been shoved into early retirement. Those execs lacked the skills to quickly re-engineer failing businesses. To make unfamiliar, uncomfortable, unpopular decisions. To halt death spirals. Many of those ex-bosses now call themselves “consultants.”

Day by do-little day, the leadership rank in Illinois government looks more like a breeding ground for consultants. An epic challenge has brought not an epic response, but rather a pattern of petrified inaction and bizarre belief that revenue is sure to rebound. Faced with problems largely of their own making, these people merely shift the blame to national economic trends. They behave as though they are helpless. And perhaps they are. We, the voters and taxpayers, are not.

Etc.  See Chi Trib for more more more . . .

The public sector, yes!

News alert has it: Illinois is broken

It’s all about our timeservers in Springfield and Chicago:

Two in Sfld

What’s going on?

When your strategy is delay-and-deny, you have chosen to be obsolete. Reasonable people want to elbow you aside and make way for problem-solvers. That’s why, in America’s private sector, a generation of managers who confused mastery of the status quo with aggressive response to crises has been shoved into early retirement. Those execs lacked the skills to quickly re-engineer failing businesses. To make unfamiliar, uncomfortable, unpopular decisions. To halt death spirals. Many of those ex-bosses now call themselves “consultants.”

Day by do-little day, the leadership rank in Illinois government looks more like a breeding ground for consultants. An epic challenge has brought not an epic response, but rather a pattern of petrified inaction and bizarre belief that revenue is sure to rebound. Faced with problems largely of their own making, these people merely shift the blame to national economic trends. They behave as though they are helpless. And perhaps they are. We, the voters and taxpayers, are not.

Etc.  See Chi Trib for more more more . . .

OPRF’s Weninger in SC

OPRF’s Supt. Weninger in South Carolina:

Today, the seven-member [Asheville-area] board must [begin to] decide who among the three [candidates] – a cerebral Midwesterner, a thoughtful South Carolinian and an engaging Georgian – will be their top choice. [italics added]

Next week the decision.  Weninger:

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At Wednesday’s public forum, Weninger addressed a long-standing concern among Richland 2 personnel that an outsider would alter community and culture that already exist in the district.

. . . this is the first time in decades that a board is looking to outside leadership.

He explained the name:

For sure, Weninger is not a Southerner, noting his name, Attila, was given him by his Hungarian immigrant father.

But he said his parents’ story of coming to America fueled in him the sense that he could live anyplace in the country and be comfortable.

“I think I can be comfortable in Columbia. I really feel as if I belong to this country,” said Weninger, who described his leadership style as “situational.”

His style “has got to accommodate the culture,” he said, adding that he’d been brought to Oak Park to “make change.”

That ended in controversy with the board refusing to extend another three-year contract.

“My work is not done,” Weninger said. “I want to leave my kids a legacy because as an immigrant’s son, that is very important to me.”

OPRF's Weninger in SC

OPRF’s Supt. Weninger in South Carolina:

Today, the seven-member [Asheville-area] board must [begin to] decide who among the three [candidates] – a cerebral Midwesterner, a thoughtful South Carolinian and an engaging Georgian – will be their top choice. [italics added]

Next week the decision.  Weninger:

if ($(‘#story_assets’).length == 0 && $(‘#assets_ad #yahoo_300x250_ipbtf div’).length == 0) {
$(‘#assets_ad’).hide ();
}

At Wednesday’s public forum, Weninger addressed a long-standing concern among Richland 2 personnel that an outsider would alter community and culture that already exist in the district.

. . . this is the first time in decades that a board is looking to outside leadership.

He explained the name:

For sure, Weninger is not a Southerner, noting his name, Attila, was given him by his Hungarian immigrant father.

But he said his parents’ story of coming to America fueled in him the sense that he could live anyplace in the country and be comfortable.

“I think I can be comfortable in Columbia. I really feel as if I belong to this country,” said Weninger, who described his leadership style as “situational.”

His style “has got to accommodate the culture,” he said, adding that he’d been brought to Oak Park to “make change.”

That ended in controversy with the board refusing to extend another three-year contract.

“My work is not done,” Weninger said. “I want to leave my kids a legacy because as an immigrant’s son, that is very important to me.”