Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find the rabid anti-Catholic ex-Catholic's adherence to a sort of neo-tribalism most interesting. In tribal societies, each member in a sense takes on the wrongs inflicted upon or inflicted by another member of the tribe and takes on the blame or the right for vengeance.
RACEC believes similarly that each and every Catholic is guilty and responsible for the crimes of the few of their co-religionists. The primal nature of his/her point of view unfiltered by where we are as a civilization in the US and many other countries where notions like collective punishment are rejected speaks of deep personal pain or dysfunction that has caused her/him to revert to a more primitive way of thinking.
So now, to deflect, you're bringing up a sociological component.
Have you ever witnessed an assault? I've seen plenty in schools where kids and adults stand around and allow the assailant to brutally attack the victim. Yet, according to you, the onlookers are innocent.
How many of these acts of pedophilia had onlookers?
Try to stop being stupid for a moment.
But let be proactive and simplify in case your brain is too small to process too much information.
Let's say you belonged to St. John the Evangelist in Berbertown, MA. Your son, Michael, is friends with another little boy, Jimmy. They attend Sunday school together. You know the family but you're not that close. It's January, and you find out that your parish priest, Father Phil, has suddenly been transferred to another parish. Eventually, you see that he's made the news b/c he molested several children at your church. Jimmy, you discover, is one victim.
So while you weren't necessarily an "onlooker," you now know of the situation. You try to comfort the parents even though you're in shock. But yet you STILL return to church, week after week. well, b/c it didn't happen to YOUR kid
same as being an onlooker, I'd say
And I think many others would agree.
I have a better example. Let's say you were born and raised in Montgomery County, MD. Let's say you went to Catholic church and private Catholic school your entire life, as did your siblings and most of your friends (obviously, because they were your friends from school, CYO basketball, etc.). Let's say that, to your knowledge, none of them had ever been sexually assaulted by a priest or even personally knew someone that had been sexually assaulted by a priest. Then say that something bad happened in other places among people you have never met or known and then some psycho on the internet claims you and everyone you know are therefore evil. But that person only targets your group, and never applies the same reasoning to any of the countless other groups have that experienced the same problems (e.g., camps, public schools, boy scouts, non-Catholic religious organizations, basically any type of social, human community). What would you think about that person?
Let's say that person isn't a psycho and is not making said claims, but instead repeats already known facts. Let's say the facts are repulsive and widespread and many people leave the church because they are disgusted by it and the church continues to protect some of the worse perpetrators while other groups that have done some horrible things do not protect the criminals in their midst or say "everyone does it, why pick on us?" while they continue to monetarily support the institution that perpetrated and covered up the criminal behavior and continues to protect those invovled.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find the rabid anti-Catholic ex-Catholic's adherence to a sort of neo-tribalism most interesting. In tribal societies, each member in a sense takes on the wrongs inflicted upon or inflicted by another member of the tribe and takes on the blame or the right for vengeance.
RACEC believes similarly that each and every Catholic is guilty and responsible for the crimes of the few of their co-religionists. The primal nature of his/her point of view unfiltered by where we are as a civilization in the US and many other countries where notions like collective punishment are rejected speaks of deep personal pain or dysfunction that has caused her/him to revert to a more primitive way of thinking.
So now, to deflect, you're bringing up a sociological component.
Have you ever witnessed an assault? I've seen plenty in schools where kids and adults stand around and allow the assailant to brutally attack the victim. Yet, according to you, the onlookers are innocent.
How many of these acts of pedophilia had onlookers?
Try to stop being stupid for a moment.
But let be proactive and simplify in case your brain is too small to process too much information.
Let's say you belonged to St. John the Evangelist in Berbertown, MA. Your son, Michael, is friends with another little boy, Jimmy. They attend Sunday school together. You know the family but you're not that close. It's January, and you find out that your parish priest, Father Phil, has suddenly been transferred to another parish. Eventually, you see that he's made the news b/c he molested several children at your church. Jimmy, you discover, is one victim.
So while you weren't necessarily an "onlooker," you now know of the situation. You try to comfort the parents even though you're in shock. But yet you STILL return to church, week after week. well, b/c it didn't happen to YOUR kid
same as being an onlooker, I'd say
And I think many others would agree.
I have a better example. Let's say you were born and raised in Montgomery County, MD. Let's say you went to Catholic church and private Catholic school your entire life, as did your siblings and most of your friends (obviously, because they were your friends from school, CYO basketball, etc.). Let's say that, to your knowledge, none of them had ever been sexually assaulted by a priest or even personally knew someone that had been sexually assaulted by a priest. Then say that something bad happened in other places among people you have never met or known and then some psycho on the internet claims you and everyone you know are therefore evil. But that person only targets your group, and never applies the same reasoning to any of the countless other groups have that experienced the same problems (e.g., camps, public schools, boy scouts, non-Catholic religious organizations, basically any type of social, human community). What would you think about that person?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find the rabid anti-Catholic ex-Catholic's adherence to a sort of neo-tribalism most interesting. In tribal societies, each member in a sense takes on the wrongs inflicted upon or inflicted by another member of the tribe and takes on the blame or the right for vengeance.
RACEC believes similarly that each and every Catholic is guilty and responsible for the crimes of the few of their co-religionists. The primal nature of his/her point of view unfiltered by where we are as a civilization in the US and many other countries where notions like collective punishment are rejected speaks of deep personal pain or dysfunction that has caused her/him to revert to a more primitive way of thinking.
So now, to deflect, you're bringing up a sociological component.
Have you ever witnessed an assault? I've seen plenty in schools where kids and adults stand around and allow the assailant to brutally attack the victim. Yet, according to you, the onlookers are innocent.
How many of these acts of pedophilia had onlookers?
Try to stop being stupid for a moment.
But let be proactive and simplify in case your brain is too small to process too much information.
Let's say you belonged to St. John the Evangelist in Berbertown, MA. Your son, Michael, is friends with another little boy, Jimmy. They attend Sunday school together. You know the family but you're not that close. It's January, and you find out that your parish priest, Father Phil, has suddenly been transferred to another parish. Eventually, you see that he's made the news b/c he molested several children at your church. Jimmy, you discover, is one victim.
So while you weren't necessarily an "onlooker," you now know of the situation. You try to comfort the parents even though you're in shock. But yet you STILL return to church, week after week. well, b/c it didn't happen to YOUR kid
same as being an onlooker, I'd say
And I think many others would agree.
I have a better example. Let's say you were born and raised in Montgomery County, MD. Let's say you went to Catholic church and private Catholic school your entire life, as did your siblings and most of your friends (obviously, because they were your friends from school, CYO basketball, etc.). Let's say that, to your knowledge, none of them had ever been sexually assaulted by a priest or even personally knew someone that had been sexually assaulted by a priest. Then say that something bad happened in other places among people you have never met or known and then some psycho on the internet claims you and everyone you know are therefore evil. But that person only targets your group, and never applies the same reasoning to any of the countless other groups have that experienced the same problems (e.g., camps, public schools, boy scouts, non-Catholic religious organizations, basically any type of social, human community). What would you think about that person?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find the rabid anti-Catholic ex-Catholic's adherence to a sort of neo-tribalism most interesting. In tribal societies, each member in a sense takes on the wrongs inflicted upon or inflicted by another member of the tribe and takes on the blame or the right for vengeance.
RACEC believes similarly that each and every Catholic is guilty and responsible for the crimes of the few of their co-religionists. The primal nature of his/her point of view unfiltered by where we are as a civilization in the US and many other countries where notions like collective punishment are rejected speaks of deep personal pain or dysfunction that has caused her/him to revert to a more primitive way of thinking.
So now, to deflect, you're bringing up a sociological component.
Have you ever witnessed an assault? I've seen plenty in schools where kids and adults stand around and allow the assailant to brutally attack the victim. Yet, according to you, the onlookers are innocent.
How many of these acts of pedophilia had onlookers?
Try to stop being stupid for a moment.
But let be proactive and simplify in case your brain is too small to process too much information.
Let's say you belonged to St. John the Evangelist in Berbertown, MA. Your son, Michael, is friends with another little boy, Jimmy. They attend Sunday school together. You know the family but you're not that close. It's January, and you find out that your parish priest, Father Phil, has suddenly been transferred to another parish. Eventually, you see that he's made the news b/c he molested several children at your church. Jimmy, you discover, is one victim.
So while you weren't necessarily an "onlooker," you now know of the situation. You try to comfort the parents even though you're in shock. But yet you STILL return to church, week after week. well, b/c it didn't happen to YOUR kid
same as being an onlooker, I'd say
And I think many others would agree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find the rabid anti-Catholic ex-Catholic's adherence to a sort of neo-tribalism most interesting. In tribal societies, each member in a sense takes on the wrongs inflicted upon or inflicted by another member of the tribe and takes on the blame or the right for vengeance.
RACEC believes similarly that each and every Catholic is guilty and responsible for the crimes of the few of their co-religionists. The primal nature of his/her point of view unfiltered by where we are as a civilization in the US and many other countries where notions like collective punishment are rejected speaks of deep personal pain or dysfunction that has caused her/him to revert to a more primitive way of thinking.
So now, to deflect, you're bringing up a sociological component.
Have you ever witnessed an assault? I've seen plenty in schools where kids and adults stand around and allow the assailant to brutally attack the victim. Yet, according to you, the onlookers are innocent.
How many of these acts of pedophilia had onlookers?
Try to stop being stupid for a moment.
But let be proactive and simplify in case your brain is too small to process too much information.
Let's say you belonged to St. John the Evangelist in Berbertown, MA. Your son, Michael, is friends with another little boy, Jimmy. They attend Sunday school together. You know the family but you're not that close. It's January, and you find out that your parish priest, Father Phil, has suddenly been transferred to another parish. Eventually, you see that he's made the news b/c he molested several children at your church. Jimmy, you discover, is one victim.
So while you weren't necessarily an "onlooker," you now know of the situation. You try to comfort the parents even though you're in shock. But yet you STILL return to church, week after week. well, b/c it didn't happen to YOUR kid
same as being an onlooker, I'd say
And I think many others would agree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find the rabid anti-Catholic ex-Catholic's adherence to a sort of neo-tribalism most interesting. In tribal societies, each member in a sense takes on the wrongs inflicted upon or inflicted by another member of the tribe and takes on the blame or the right for vengeance.
RACEC believes similarly that each and every Catholic is guilty and responsible for the crimes of the few of their co-religionists. The primal nature of his/her point of view unfiltered by where we are as a civilization in the US and many other countries where notions like collective punishment are rejected speaks of deep personal pain or dysfunction that has caused her/him to revert to a more primitive way of thinking.
So now, to deflect, you're bringing up a sociological component.
Have you ever witnessed an assault? I've seen plenty in schools where kids and adults stand around and allow the assailant to brutally attack the victim. Yet, according to you, the onlookers are innocent.
How many of these acts of pedophilia had onlookers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It just doesn't make any sense what you are explaining.
If that's true across the board in every situation then when a teacher molests a child all schools have to shut down.
Every principal and every other teacher is guilty.
Parents who continue to send their child to school are saying they think its ok.
Lawmakers who pass bills to fund these schools are guilty.
And on and on.
[b]
You can hate Catholics (and all Christians for that matter) but to keep railing on this (and look up about rape and the NYC synagogues while you're at it) just isn't making the point you think it is.
But schools don't protect such teachers and send them on to other schools to rape again, meaning that the principal and superintendent, with full knowledge of the teacher's crime, do nothing to protect that boy or other students.
See the difference?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It just doesn't make any sense what you are explaining.
If that's true across the board in every situation then when a teacher molests a child all schools have to shut down.
Every principal and every other teacher is guilty.
Parents who continue to send their child to school are saying they think its ok.
Lawmakers who pass bills to fund these schools are guilty.
And on and on.
You can hate Catholics (and all Christians for that matter) but to keep railing on this (and look up about rape and the NYC synagogues while you're at it) just isn't making the point you think it is.
Your railing is making a point, however -- that you can convince yourself of false and weak arguments to justify your continued allegiance to a corrupt institution.
I don't believe them to be false and weak and you haven't compelled anyone to think otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:But again, please tell me how any of this means that my little 90 year old Italian grandmother in New Jersey who takes over an hour every day to get to morning mass with her walker, down the same street she has walked since she was a little girl, needs to leave the church inmediately. Or is complicit with this. Or any of the billion plus Catholics around the world that have nothing to do with it.
And again explain to me, since it was admitted above that schools have covered up abuse (and no one wanted to answer why there is no fury against Jewish community in NYC with the same type of crime), why you all haven't pulled your children out of public schools in protest?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find the rabid anti-Catholic ex-Catholic's adherence to a sort of neo-tribalism most interesting. In tribal societies, each member in a sense takes on the wrongs inflicted upon or inflicted by another member of the tribe and takes on the blame or the right for vengeance.
RACEC believes similarly that each and every Catholic is guilty and responsible for the crimes of the few of their co-religionists. The primal nature of his/her point of view unfiltered by where we are as a civilization in the US and many other countries where notions like collective punishment are rejected speaks of deep personal pain or dysfunction that has caused her/him to revert to a more primitive way of thinking.
So now, to deflect, you're bringing up a sociological component.
Have you ever witnessed an assault? I've seen plenty in schools where kids and adults stand around and allow the assailant to brutally attack the victim. Yet, according to you, the onlookers are innocent.
Anonymous wrote:I find the rabid anti-Catholic ex-Catholic's adherence to a sort of neo-tribalism most interesting. In tribal societies, each member in a sense takes on the wrongs inflicted upon or inflicted by another member of the tribe and takes on the blame or the right for vengeance.
RACEC believes similarly that each and every Catholic is guilty and responsible for the crimes of the few of their co-religionists. The primal nature of his/her point of view unfiltered by where we are as a civilization in the US and many other countries where notions like collective punishment are rejected speaks of deep personal pain or dysfunction that has caused her/him to revert to a more primitive way of thinking.
Anonymous wrote:But again, please tell me how any of this means that my little 90 year old Italian grandmother in New Jersey who takes over an hour every day to get to morning mass with her walker, down the same street she has walked since she was a little girl, needs to leave the church inmediately. Or is complicit with this. Or any of the billion plus Catholics around the world that have nothing to do with it.
And again explain to me, since it was admitted above that schools have covered up abuse (and no one wanted to answer why there is no fury against Jewish community in NYC with the same type of crime), why you all haven't pulled your children out of public schools in protest?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It just doesn't make any sense what you are explaining.
If that's true across the board in every situation then when a teacher molests a child all schools have to shut down.
Every principal and every other teacher is guilty.
Parents who continue to send their child to school are saying they think its ok.
Lawmakers who pass bills to fund these schools are guilty.
And on and on.
You can hate Catholics (and all Christians for that matter) but to keep railing on this (and look up about rape and the NYC synagogues while you're at it) just isn't making the point you think it is.
Your railing is making a point, however -- that you can convince yourself of false and weak arguments to justify your continued allegiance to a corrupt institution.
Well, 1.2 billion Catholics agree with me world wide so I'm okay that you see things differently. Merry Christmas