by John Nolte 17 Aug 2018
"The Vatican released a statement expressing “shame and sorrow” Thursday about the hundreds of predator priests uncovered in Pennsylvania. This statement comes after two days of silence and offers no quote from Pope Francis.
“There are two words that can express the feelings faced with these horrible crimes: shame and sorrow,” the statement reads. “The Holy See treats with great seriousness the work of the Investigating Grand Jury of Pennsylvania… The Holy See condemns unequivocally the sexual abuse of minors.”
“Victims should know that the Pope is on their side. Those who have suffered are his priority, and the Church wants to listen to them to root out this tragic horror that destroys the lives of the innocent.”
In the middle of these platitudes, comes this: “By finding almost no cases after 2002, the Grand Jury’s conclusions are consistent with previous studies showing that Catholic Church reforms in the United States drastically reduced the incidence of clergy child abuse.”
This is what stood out to me… “Almost no cases after 2002.”
We are talking about the kind of sexual abuse against children that would make Harvey Weinstein blush and the Church is using the words “almost no” in its defense.
Let’s read that another way…
Ford Motor: “Almost no Ford Pintos exploded and killed their occupants after 2002.”
The FBI: “Almost no FBI agents were involved in manipulating presidential elections after 2002.”
The local mosque: “Almost none of our Imams sought to radicalize terrorists after 2002.”
CNN: “Almost none of our reporters spread fake news after 2002.”
the Catholic Church: “Almost no children were raped by our priests after 2002.”
And then there is the whole “fool me once” aspect of all this.
These are the kinds of statements we heard 15 years ago when the first child abuse scandal exploded on the Church, and I am afraid empty words are just not good enough anymore.
...
Just as unacceptably is this sentence in the Vatican’s statement, “The Holy See also wants to underscore the need to comply with the civil law, including mandatory child abuse reporting requirements.”
You have child rapists in your own home and a gangster mentality protecting those child rapists… How can you not be proactive? How can you not be calling on every attorney general in all 50 states to launch investigations — with the FULL cooperation of the church — in all 50 states? How can you not be demanding these “secret archives” (incredibly, that was the Pennsylvania Church’s term for the secret files detailing the abuse and cover-ups) be released to the public in very diocese, not only here in America but throughout the world?"
view the rest of the comments →
HennyPenny ago
Those diocesian records that were under lock and key held only by the Bishop had to be subpoenaed by the grand jury before they saw the light of day. Let's cut the crap: The Catholic Church has no interest in exterminating child abuse . When they wrote a consoling letter after abuse became known, the letter was sent to the offending priest, not the victim (who they often hired lawyers to dig up discrediting dirt on). They even wrote a positive job recommendation for a predator priest so he could go to Disneyland and continue the same crap driving their train in the park for 15 years.
The Church has been infiltrated since before the 1950s. These farmed out, pensioned off predator priests/bishops are in their 80s and 90s and they had a lot of time to train, place and promote the same type of predator in the Church. The problem is not going away as long as you have those sexually active homosexuals running the ship .
Factfinder2 ago
Agree completely. Have you seen this? https://voat.co/v/pizzagate/2678633