Brother Joseph Califano tells all

Joseph A. Califano Jr., Washington establishmentarian, sets it all straight for us. He’s been there, and he’s done it right. He knows how to reconcile his Catholic beliefs with occupying a public office. He tells us this from the pages of the Washington Post, in an article reprinted from America magazine, that bastion of rock-ribbed Catholic orthodoxy.

When God and Caesar claim controlling jurisdiction over public policy in America, public servants who are Catholic can get caught between a religious rock and a public policy hard place. Sen. John F. Kerry, who is at the center of a controversy over whether Catholic politicians should be denied Communion if their political views contradict church teaching, finds himself there. But he’s not the first. I know. I’ve been there, too.

This dedicated servant of God was indeed there — to undermine Catholic teaching on artificial contraception:

We crafted an uneasy truce: If [President Johnson] used the term “population problem” (which also allowed for solutions such as increasing available food) rather than “birth control” or “population control,” the bishops would stay silent. Johnson kept his part of the bargain. So did the bishops.

I’d love to hear the bishops’ explanation. Did they really agree to “stay silent” while the Johnson administration pushed condoms and vasectomies on poor people? If so, that’s a shame, but that doesn’t diminish Califano’s actions.

As a citizen I consider it preposterous and wrong for the political parties to impose an abortion litmus test on eligibility for their party’s presidential nomination: in support of abortion rights for Democrats, and opposed to them for Republicans. But that is no reason for the bishops to make the same mistake by imposing a similar litmus test for the right to receive Communion.

The Church founded by Christ, nurtured by his Body and Blood, for which countless martyrs have died, and through which salvation comes to all men,
is equivalent to a political party.

I believe that public figures who are Catholic are entitled to consult their own conscience to determine whether they are entitled to receive Communion. The Catholic tradition of leaving that decision to the individual Catholic and God applies to Catholics who have divorced, sinned or eaten food five minutes before Mass.

Working to keep abortion lethal, legal, and frequent is the same as accidently taking a swig of orange juice on the way to Mass.
Read the whole thing here. Couldn’t the Post find somebody with an original thought to contribute? Or someone who could come up with a line better than “a religious rock and a public policy hard place”?
It does provide a minor public service: we now know how culpable Joseph Califano was in midwifing the Culture of Death a quarter-century ago. I’m sure it will be read back to him at the Last Judgment.

A Miracle

I was able to register a new vehicle, get a title and new tags in 14 minutes at the Springfield, VA DMV. If this is a dream, I don’t want to wake up.

Michael Moore: Bigger than Jesus

Michael Moore is bigger than Jesus. I mean that literally: given that people were smaller 2,000 years ago, he is bigger than the Holy Family and all twelve apostles put together.
But that’s not important right now. Some people think “Fahrenheit 9/11” is going to be more popular than “The Passion of the Christ.” That seems doubtful, even though the per theater average is about the same as “The Passion” on its opening weekend. Says the respected movie stat site Box Office Mojo:

Though Fahrenheit’s $25,115 per theater average is extraordinary, it’s not unprecedented. It ranks as the seventh highest all time for a wide release (adjusting for ticket price inflation knocks it down to no. 28) and the third best this year behind The Passion of the Christ’s $27,554 and Shrek 2’s $25,951. However, they were super-saturation releases playing at 3,043 and 4,163 theaters respectively — the lower the theater count, the easier it is to have a high average as the release isn’t diluted by less populous locations with lower ticket prices.

The author isn’t an apologist for “The Passion”; he dumped on it when it opened, dragging out the tired “faith as the enemy of reason” canard. (By the way, did you know “The Passion” is still playing in 158 theatres four months after its release?)
It seems doubtful that “Fahrenheit 9/11” will top $600 million worldwide, which it would need to do to beat “The Passion.” I’m sure it will be a hit, though, as the market for Bush-haters is looking bullish these days. (Whether that market is expanding is an open question.) Yet one of our readers, “jeff”, is concerned that we are being insufficiently open-minded. To avoid misquoting him, his full comment is below (onomatopoeia in the original).

It’s sad to me that people censor themselves – e.g., Michael Moore’s film.
The America I know is one where people actually consider other points of view. Unlike some comments on this thread, I saw Fahrenheit 9/11… Do I agree with everything in it? Will it change my vote? Of course not. But, at least I can have a cogent discussion on the movie because I saw it.
Why are people so afraid of ideas that contradict their own? If your position is strong, films like Fahrenheit 9/11 will only add to it, not detract. Furthermore, when someone [who is ignorant] talks to you about the film, you can actually explain your [stronger] point of view.
The America of today seems to be: make your decision about whether to view/read/hear something based on second-hand information you read on some blog or heard on Fox News. Talk about being duped.
Sigh.

Jeff — I refuse to use lowercase for his name, like e.e. “buster” cummings — is, I gather, something of a First Amendment fetishist. That’s okay, because some of my best friends are professional First Amendment fetishists (a.k.a. “journalists”).
To clarify my own position, I will not be seeing the movie in question. Not in the theater, not on DVD, not on cable, not on network TV. Not in my house, not with a mouse, not in the dark, not with a lark…you get the idea. Yet I have absolutely no problem saying that in my considered, intellectual opinion, it sucks and I hate it.
To Jeff, this means I am “afraid of ideas that contradict [my] own.” Untrue. If that were true, I would pay no attention to politics and would never listen to others’ religious opinions.
The primary reason I won’t see this movie is because I’m married with three little kids, and it’s a lot of trouble for my wife and me to see a movie. It’s also very expensive. An evening with a nice dinner, movie tickets for two, and a babysitter costs about $100 in this part of the country. For that price, when I see a movie in the theater I had better pass out from laughter or become a better person. I doubt either one will happen with “Fahrenheit.” There are other reasons, enumerated forthwith.
Seeing the movie absolutely will not make me like it. That isn’t true for a fictional movie. When I was away last year, I saw many movies I would not have seen unless I had nothing better to do. I thought I would have despised a teen comedy like “10 Things I Hate About You,” but I found it hilarious and emotionally compelling. There were also movies I might have seen because I am married to a woman, such as “How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days,” which were unwatchable and managed to temporarily lower my I.Q.
No such epiphany is possible for “Fahrenheit.” My objection to the movie is not aesthetic, it is intellectual. It’s not as if my sources are saying it has ugly cinematography and unbelievable characters. This is a documentary, which means it comes from a point of view and presents facts accordingly. I consider the point of view to be that of a lazy, paranoid pseudo-intellectual. There are many purported “facts” which are either misleading or false. For example, I’ve read that Moore thinks the Saudis run Bush’s foreign policy. Seeing that slander on the silver screen isn’t going to make it any less false.
I’ve heard it all before. Nothing he says is going to surprise me. I’m familiar with the “point of view” because I’ve seen it on the Loony Left Web sites, from which all of his “facts” seem to originate.
Self-censorship is a good thing. Nobody has unlimited time on Earth. We must use it as best we can. All points of view are not equally valid or worthy of our attention. That means we have to filter out experiences that are unlikely to be of any benefit.
Paying to see “Fahrenheit 9/11” would give money to someone beneath contempt. Jeff, you might not know this, but Michael Moore thinks more American soldiers and Marines should die in Iraq. You cool with that? If you think that’s an exaggeration or distortion, let’s let him speak for himself:

I’m sorry, but the majority of Americans supported this war once it began and, sadly, that majority must now sacrifice their children until enough blood has been let that maybe — just maybe — God and the Iraqi people will forgive us in the end.

You can read that quotation in context here.
I understand there is a smarmy part of “Fahrenheit” where he emphasizes that the poor and minorities are the only ones desperate (or dumb) enough to enlist in Bush’s military. Thus he thinks it’s unfortunate that anyone should join the armed forces, but if they do, then they deserve to be human sacrifices for our national sins.
When I read that, I thought I would beat his flabby ass if I ever saw him in person — but what would be the point of that? It hardly seems like a Christian response (a whipping seems more appropriate), and it lacks style. Then I envisioned the perfect attack: spray him with Silly String. It isn’t violent, and it would drive that pompous mountebank insane. It has a historical precedent: our Founding Fathers used Silly String to ridicule their British oppressors.
So I already know enough about “Fahrenheit” to devise an appropriate way to converse with Michael Moore about his “ideas.” And I’ve done it without wasting an evening and a hundred bucks. That works on so many levels.
Postscript: Anti-Americans in other countries should just give up, because Moore demonstrates our cultural superiority. We’re so great, we can even do anti-Americanism better than foreigners! Everybody start chanting now:
U! S! A!
U! S! A!
U! S! A!

Midnight thought

As I monitor a server at work, a thought fluttered into my head:
Political conservatives keep saying that “Farenheit 9/11” won’t affect the election because Michael Moore is a paranoid buffoon. However, the movie is apparently doing quite well.
By most people’s reckoning, the presidential election will be decided by a slim margin, and by people who make up their minds at the last minute, despite the wealth of information they have about both candidates, their records, and their positions. These are people who don’t know much about national affairs, and who will make their decision based on television ads or other ephemera.
So the election may very well be decided by the ignorant and the easily duped. From what I’ve read, only the ignorant and the easily duped will be persuaded by Moore’s movie. Therefore, it could very well decide the next election. Think about it….

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Respect life Mass today at Parishes in Arlington

Masses were offered today for the protection of the unborn and an end to abortion in some parishes in Arlington. The readings of are providentially, perhaps even hauntingly, appropriate for the occasion. Excerpts appear below.

Lamentations 2:2, 10-14, 18-19

18 Cry aloud to the Lord! O daughter of Zion! Let tears stream down like a torrent day and night! Give yourself no rest, your eyes no respite!
19 Arise, cry out in the night, at the beginning of the watches! Pour out your heart like water before the presence of the Lord! Lift your hands to him for the lives of your children, who faint for hunger at the head of every street.

Psalm 74:1-7, 20-21

3 Direct thy steps to the perpetual ruins; the enemy has destroyed everything in the sanctuary!
4 Thy foes have roared in the midst of thy holy place; they set up their own signs for signs.
5 At the upper entrance they hacked the wooden trellis with axes.
6 And then all its carved wood they broke down with hatchets and hammers.
7 They set thy sanctuary on fire; to the ground they desecrated the dwelling place of thy name.
20 Have regard for thy covenant; for the dark places of the land are full of the habitations of violence.
21 Let not the downtrodden be put to shame; let the poor and needy praise thy name.

Is the womb not a sanctuary of human life, the result of God sharing His creative power with humanity? If only it were treated as such always.

After the Masses a group of the faithful prayed all four mysteries of the Rosary in front of an abortion clinic in Alexandria. I spoke with a man who had been praying with the group for years. He said the worst thing is to see a father drive his teenage daughter to the clinic to procure an abortion. “What kind of sicko would do that?” he asked. “The man who gave his little girl life is taking her to kill her own baby.” It reminds me of one of the many things Mother Teresa said about abortion:

“Please don’t kill the child. I want the child. Please give me the child. I am willing to accept any child who would be aborted, and to give that child to a married couple who will love the child, and be loved by the child. From our children’s home in Calcutta alone, we have saved over 3,000 children from abortions. These children have brought such love and joy to their adopting parents, and have grown up so full of love and joy!”

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