For those that don't like to be proven wrong, yes, factual inform can be an affront to their sense of self-worth. |
That makes sense. I never thought of it that way. |
The difference is that public school gets rid of them, and Catholic schools shift the abusers around and protect them. Right this moment in Louisiana and Baltimore, the Church is doing its damnedest to keep records shut and protect the abusers. Shame on them. There are approximately 1.6 million kids in Catholic schools and 49.6 million in public. There is no reality that the math of abuse shows better in Catholic schools than in public. Learn math. |
| Opus Dei is a cult. Women are indoctrinated so are kids |
“ Consider the statistics: In accordance with a requirement of President Bush's No Child Left Behind Act, in 2002 the Department of Education carried out a study of sexual abuse in the school system. “Hofstra University researcher Charol Shakeshaft looked into the problem, and the first thing that came to her mind when Education Week reported on the study were the daily headlines about the Catholic Church. "[T]hink the Catholic Church has a problem?" she said. "The physical sexual abuse of students in schools is likely more than 100 times the abuse by priests." https://www.cbsnews.com/news/has-media-ignored-sex-abuse-in-school/ Catholic institutions have state of the art child protection programs, and have for decades. Public institutions, protected by sovereign immunity and with taxpayer funded defense, not so much. The Archdiocese of Baltimore’s records are literally an open book, as evidenced by one-sided “investigation” reports. I suspect that the situation in the various dioceses in Louisiana is the same. Contrary to the popular Alinskyite blood-libel (which insists on lumping every alleged abuse allegation ever into a single moment and then judging them according to a unique standard manufactured to condemn Catholic institutions because of Catholic moral teachings), the now-published records show that for the most part, bishops and superiors did the best they could in individual cases, according to the social standards of the times and the advice they received from experts in those cases. That expert advice included at various times the recommendation that accused abusers could be treated and retired to work and/or reassigned away from temptation. |
PP is a Catholic Apologist. |
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You are not using the term apologist correctly -- that is about the defense of faith as an intellectual exercise.
But since you likely meant to suggest PP was trying to underplay the abuses in the church, I don't see that comment this way at all. The past abuses in the church are an open public record (most of the abusers are dead or in prison). The current education and reporting program is state of the art and a model for other institutions and has been since the 1980s. These are facts that are not apologietic nor suggesting in any way that the abuses were anything other than criminal, horrific, and traumatic. At the same time, it is also true that other organizations are not and have not been forced to be as transparent and are proteced by our laws from doing so; have not undertaken the years of of work to construct a system of protection for children; and have ongoing abuses. To point out other areas of problems is not condoning the ones that are well publicized. |
Neither of you know what you are talking about, and it undermines whatever it is you are attenpting to do. |
Waht? All of my teachers were married. |
Not really. You did nothing to prove them wrong. |
😠 Why post in a thread if you aren't even going to take the time to follow the discussion? |
| Robert Hansen was Opus Dei. |