Dead Catholics, nearly dead Catholics and the great Catholic unborn
You can’t even throw a rock these days without hitting a dead Catholic, at least if you are throwing a stone at a nearby television set, and how many places can you go these days and not be within a stones throw of one of them?
I’m not trying to pick on the recently departed Pope, after all, he’s not my pope. He might not have been your pope either if you are a part of the nearly 76% of the United States that does not identify itself as Catholic. Nope, for most of us United States citizens, the pope is not our spiritual leader.
That might surprise you if you were trying to figure out “just how Catholic is this country anyway?” while watching the boob tube. It would seem that we’re all Catholic these days.
But you’d be wrong. We’re not. I’m certainly not and I can’t wait for the news to get back into the business for which it receives constitutional protection; the business of educating the electorate on issues of political importance.
It is of political importance that the United States Congress recently stood on its collective head in an unsuccessful attempt to interfere in a private medical decision for a near corpse in Florida at the behest of her Catholic parents, while at the same time cutting funding for medical programs that would save a statistically vast number of lives...but you really can’t video tape a statistic. Statistics rarely give you the satisfaction of seeming to follow an arbitrary balloon.
Meanwhile, in Texas, our president’s “hometown,” Sun Hudson had his ventilator removed over his mother’s objections because the money ran out. The medicaid money.
In my opinion is it better to let some of these people die? Maybe. But neither you nor I want to put me in charge of your family’s most devastating life decisions. It’s none of my business, I’m not a doctor and I’m not your spiritual leader.
I’m not your governor either, but if I was I still wouldn’t consider myself an expert on your faith. That’s not stopping our Governor Owens. No, if you are raped and you get yourself to a hospital in Colorado, you may or may not find out that there’s a way to prevent pregnancy from occurring as a result of this heinous felonious assault.
That’s because Governor Owens believes that institutions have First Amendment rights. Not individuals, they are already protected, Institutions.
The Governor is concerned about the rights of Institutions under our Constitution. The Governor is concerned about what an institution thinks, feels, believes and has to say. He expresses his concerns when he uses this phrase: “by forcing an institution to say things to patients that it explicitly does not believe to be morally or ethically valid...”
I’ve got a news flash here. An institution doesn’t have beliefs, nor morals, nor ethics. Institutions do not have rights; particularly not rights endowed by (a divine) Creator. People do. Rape victims do. Citizens do.
And as citizens, we need to take back the public space. We need to take it back from the commercial industry of the entertainment-news. We need to take it back from those with a religious agenda for the rest of us.
There are some decisions that are private, and they need to stay that way. They may be agonizing, devastating and polarizing, but they are deeply private.
There are some decisions that are public, like supporting or opposing a politician or an elected official.
Governor Owens isn’t my conscience, he’s not my spiritual leader and I deeply regret that he is my governor, not only because we have such different views about personal decisions and about the role of government. But more than that, because Governor Owens confuses the difference between people who rightfully have ethics and morals and need to make decisions; and institutions which do not.
Governor Owens lacks the clarity of judgment to represent me.
Somebody hand me a stone.
I’m not trying to pick on the recently departed Pope, after all, he’s not my pope. He might not have been your pope either if you are a part of the nearly 76% of the United States that does not identify itself as Catholic. Nope, for most of us United States citizens, the pope is not our spiritual leader.
That might surprise you if you were trying to figure out “just how Catholic is this country anyway?” while watching the boob tube. It would seem that we’re all Catholic these days.
But you’d be wrong. We’re not. I’m certainly not and I can’t wait for the news to get back into the business for which it receives constitutional protection; the business of educating the electorate on issues of political importance.
It is of political importance that the United States Congress recently stood on its collective head in an unsuccessful attempt to interfere in a private medical decision for a near corpse in Florida at the behest of her Catholic parents, while at the same time cutting funding for medical programs that would save a statistically vast number of lives...but you really can’t video tape a statistic. Statistics rarely give you the satisfaction of seeming to follow an arbitrary balloon.
Meanwhile, in Texas, our president’s “hometown,” Sun Hudson had his ventilator removed over his mother’s objections because the money ran out. The medicaid money.
In my opinion is it better to let some of these people die? Maybe. But neither you nor I want to put me in charge of your family’s most devastating life decisions. It’s none of my business, I’m not a doctor and I’m not your spiritual leader.
I’m not your governor either, but if I was I still wouldn’t consider myself an expert on your faith. That’s not stopping our Governor Owens. No, if you are raped and you get yourself to a hospital in Colorado, you may or may not find out that there’s a way to prevent pregnancy from occurring as a result of this heinous felonious assault.
That’s because Governor Owens believes that institutions have First Amendment rights. Not individuals, they are already protected, Institutions.
The Governor is concerned about the rights of Institutions under our Constitution. The Governor is concerned about what an institution thinks, feels, believes and has to say. He expresses his concerns when he uses this phrase: “by forcing an institution to say things to patients that it explicitly does not believe to be morally or ethically valid...”
I’ve got a news flash here. An institution doesn’t have beliefs, nor morals, nor ethics. Institutions do not have rights; particularly not rights endowed by (a divine) Creator. People do. Rape victims do. Citizens do.
And as citizens, we need to take back the public space. We need to take it back from the commercial industry of the entertainment-news. We need to take it back from those with a religious agenda for the rest of us.
There are some decisions that are private, and they need to stay that way. They may be agonizing, devastating and polarizing, but they are deeply private.
There are some decisions that are public, like supporting or opposing a politician or an elected official.
Governor Owens isn’t my conscience, he’s not my spiritual leader and I deeply regret that he is my governor, not only because we have such different views about personal decisions and about the role of government. But more than that, because Governor Owens confuses the difference between people who rightfully have ethics and morals and need to make decisions; and institutions which do not.
Governor Owens lacks the clarity of judgment to represent me.
Somebody hand me a stone.

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