dclane wrote: » If winning means all that much to you, well then congrats, you won! And what is it you won?
Defending the RCC for clerical child sexual abuse and it's cover up. Really well done, something to be very proud of.
dclane wrote: » Are you running this thread?
marienbad wrote: » I don't doubt that the situation was worse at home for some, but two wrongs dont make a right ! But there is little point in rehashing this whole sorry tale as yourself and ISAW will not accept any responsibilty by the church for any of it.
at times for life,working them seven days a week,
babies taken away from them and sent to the USA for adoption with and without the parents permission,
according to the Government's own report to the UN committee, the overwhelming majority of women in the Magdalene Laundries were there voluntarily.
[false signatures are on some documents] all of those children had a mother and father,it was wrong and has been proven in law,
that is child abuse,its not just sexual abuse this thread is about,the only reason this is not happening as much as in the passed [past] is that the church has been found out,and it knows it can no longer get away with it.
gimmebroadband wrote: » Their own families put the young girls there, some of them got pregnant due to incest. I myself worked in the Magdalen Laurdries.
getz wrote: » yes in most cases their own families did put them there,why ? because of the catholic churches moral doctrine,they [the church] created the situation that brainwashed the catholic people into thinking it is a sin for girls to have sex or children outside of marriage,
well i have news for you,its not a sin or crime to have sex or babies out of marriage,
BUT IT IS A SIN AND A CRIME TO LOCK YOUNG GIRLS UP AND USE THEN AS SLAVES,
ISAW wrote: » You have been shown these Magdalen Institutions were not founded by Catholics but by Protestants! You would be out of line with Christian teaching. Christians ( Catholic and Protestsnts) suggest that sex be used in a loving monogamous relationship and the type of sex to which you are referring is sinfull. From what christian source did you get this "news" because it is out of step with christian theology? No matter how much you shout it won't change the fact that according to the Government's own report to the UN committee, the overwhelming majority of women in the Magdalene Laundries were there voluntarily.
getz wrote: » in june 2011 the UN committee against torture,the panel has urged ireland to investigate allegations that for decades women and girls sent to work in catholic laundries were tortured, in 2001 the irish goverment has admitted the children were abuse victims,over 155 unmarked graves of young girls and women have been found in those institutions.its not going to just go away, the evidence of crerical abuse is just building up
gimmebroadband wrote: » The Goverment also put girls there instead of sending them to jai!
ISAW wrote: » marienbad wrote: » circular arguments indeed ISAW , and none better than your good self, when anyone mentions a legitimate proven case you will blame everybody and anybody rather than except that the Church as an institution has any even a smidgin of responsibility for the whole sorry mess. One swallow does not male a Spring. Individual cases ( and there is no surfeit of them) do not prove a general rule. Yes some priests did terrible things but this does not prove any church wide coverup conspiracy! As to the church having responsibility you seem to have ignored the Churches response. StudentDad wrote: » That reply smacks of a bloody awful attitude either on your part or that of the church. One that says, 'we'll do what we bloody well like and if anything illegal is going on well that's for you (the state) to find out and if we choose to divulge any information we'll only do so if it is in the churches interest. Not very christian. SD Also not anything to do with what I stated! Where did i say the church policy is "'we'll do what we bloody well like"? Where did I say " if anything illegal is going on well that's for you (the state) to find out"? Where did I say " if we choose to divulge any information we'll only do so if it is in the churches interest"? You have completely misrepresented what was stated! What part of "The church will abide by the local State law" do you not understand?
marienbad wrote: » circular arguments indeed ISAW , and none better than your good self, when anyone mentions a legitimate proven case you will blame everybody and anybody rather than except that the Church as an institution has any even a smidgin of responsibility for the whole sorry mess.
StudentDad wrote: » That reply smacks of a bloody awful attitude either on your part or that of the church. One that says, 'we'll do what we bloody well like and if anything illegal is going on well that's for you (the state) to find out and if we choose to divulge any information we'll only do so if it is in the churches interest. Not very christian. SD
ISAW wrote: » I assume that means you won't produce the so called "first hand evidence" you claimed to have of a church coverup/conspiracy?
ISAW wrote: » No it would qualify as circular argument since the argument assumes the conclusion as a premise. i.e. when you say "given the Vatican took part in a cover up" to prove the Vatican took part in a cover up you are assuming the consequent.
When the Church's Code of Canon Law was revised in 1983, an important passage was added: "The cleric who commits any other offense against the sixth precept of the Decalogue, if the offense was committed with violence or threats, or publicly or with a minor who is under 16 years [now extended to 18 years], must be punished with just punishments, not excluding expulsion from the clerical state" (CIC 1395:2)
getz wrote: » that is very true,remember the goverment like most irish citizens were under the thumb of the church,who was going to stand up in those days and complain ?
remember all the schools,hospitals, ect were under their control ,who dare stand up and accuse them ,
no one would believe them anyway ,it was often said,before any laws were passed it would first have to be run by the bishops,
himnextdoor wrote: » In the same way that the RCC won't produce evidence to the contrary?
The RCC definitely wanted the 'paedophile Priest' scandal brushed under the carpet.
himnextdoor wrote: » Circular argument? You claim that the premise is false!
The claim being that RCC rules facilitate paedophilia rather than oppose it.
StudentDad wrote: » I don't think I have. The general tenor of your replies is aggressive and condescending. For a man who claims to be christian you don't portray Christianity in a very good light.
There is a huge gulf between faith and religion and frankly the way you try and defend the actions of the church would turn anyone away from religion.
We are not living in an era where adherence to an unelected, unaccountable institution is practiced. If the church wants people to follow its customs it has to lead from the front.
Rather than do that we get a mixture of arrogance and attempted justification for immoral and illegal behaviour.
ISAW wrote: » StudentDad wrote: » I don't think I have. The general tenor of your replies is aggressive and condescending. For a man who claims to be christian you don't portray Christianity in a very good light. When you are losing the argument do you always resort to attacking the person? Please deal with the issued of your own claims and leave me or your opinion of me out of it! There is a huge gulf between faith and religion and frankly the way you try and defend the actions of the church would turn anyone away from religion. More of the same! Waffle! Care to state what you are trying to say the Church did which is a "wrong action"? We are not living in an era where adherence to an unelected, unaccountable institution is practiced. If the church wants people to follow its customs it has to lead from the front. More waffle! 1. What are you claiming the Church did wrong? 2. What are you claiming they should be "leading" with? Rather than do that we get a mixture of arrogance and attempted justification for immoral and illegal behaviour. More waffle! Where did I justify anything illegal?
StudentDad wrote: » Well done, just the type of response I was expecting. By the way you say that the laundries were not run by clerics. Do nuns not count? Are they a special sub-category? The more you rant and rave it makes me wonder where all the anger is coming from. SD
gimmebroadband wrote: » I worked in the Magdalen Laundry over thirty years ago and the nuns I worked with were lovely - it was a married layman with family who was managing the workers! I can't vouch for the laundry in Dubln, but not all nuns were tyrants!
dclane wrote: » Where is your proof?
cybercellesta wrote: » I think the majority of abuse occurred during the early 1960s and tapering off after that. It was a sad time in Irish History for those poor girls, many of them emigrated to the UK and never recovered from the beatings they got. It was perceived as an "Irish Problem".How Ireland Hid Its Own Dirty Laundry
ISAW wrote: » and there is statistical support for your assertion.
cybercellesta wrote: » Not really, I remember that the the movie of the same name depicted abuse from 1960s to 1970s!
ISAW wrote: » No yes really. I supplied it earlier in the thread.http://www.childabusecommission.ie/rpt/03-07.php 7.13 Table 19 for males 85% ( over the 1920-1990 period) was pre 1970 43% in the sixties For females 9.74 Table 36 67% pre 1970 50% in the 60-69 decade
ISAW wrote: » StudentDad wrote: » Well done, just the type of response I was expecting. By the way you say that the laundries were not run by clerics. Do nuns not count? Are they a special sub-category? The more you rant and rave it makes me wonder where all the anger is coming from. SD Let me clarify. If you want to include all nuns brothers and priests I have produced CSO statistics on that. Cleric is taken to mean "ordained priest" and the numbers were in the thousands. If you want to change the group to all "religious" then their membership was in the tens of thousands. This means the levels of abuse are affected because the numbers of total group is bigger. You also then have to broaden the "institution" definition to non Church and non religious. So it is you who are treating nuns as a special sub category by cherry picking out a single order of nuns and picking out a subset of the Magdalen asylums both of which are not connected to the issue of the "pedo priests" myth.