General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTop Catholic Bishop Affirms Need For Government Programs To Help The Poor
By Travis Waldron
The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and its head, Cardinal Timothy Dolan, have stood fast in their support of government programs that benefit the poor as lawmakers in Washington move to cut funding for many of those programs in the name of debt and deficit reduction. In a blog post honoring the feast day of St. Vincent DePaul, considered by many to be the star saint of Christian charity and concern for the poor, Cardinal Dolan issued a joint statement with Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio of the Diocese of Brooklyn that reaffirmed the importance of government programs in fighting poverty and helping low-income Americans.
While (g)overnment programs provide enormous support to poor Americans, Dolan and DiMarzio wrote, it is not enough, and the constant portrayal of the poor in a negative way is hurting efforts to aid the worse off:
However, two things must be said.
1) It is not enough. Even with the generosity of the American people, and the work of groups like the Saint Vincent de Paul Society and so many others, much more needs to be done, and not just by private charity. The government must continue to play its part as well.
2) There are very dark clouds. Too much rhetoric in the country portrays poor people in a very negative way. At the same time, this persistent sluggish economic and slow pace of recovery does two things that hurt the poor: it does not provide sufficient jobs for poor people to earn decent living to support themselves, and it provides less resources for government to do its part for Americans in need.
The comments come at a time when cuts to poverty programs are becoming more prominent in Americas budgetary debates, and when rhetoric is, indeed, portraying the poor in a very negative way. A video surfaced recently showing GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney decrying Americas welfare programs and their beneficiaries. Ill never convince them that they should take personal responsibility and care for their lives, Romney said.
Dolan also seems to echo the group of Catholic nuns who are crisscrossing the country on the Nuns On A Bus tour, which has highlighted the role government plays in protecting the poorest Americans. The nuns visited nine states this summer and have continued their push in recent weeks, announcing their opposition to Republican-led budget cuts to food stamps, Medicaid, and other assistance programs.
- more -
http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2012/09/28/926171/top-catholic-bishop-affirms-need-for-government-programs-to-help-the-poor/
Mitt, when your policies and 47 percent comment are being implicitly criticized by the likes of Dolan, you've gone too far right.
hifiguy
(33,688 posts)will damn them eternally because the POTUS is in favor of letting those horrible gays get married and letting wimmens make up their own minds about their pregnancies. The RCC is one fked up institution without which the world would be better off. Except for those feisty nuns. They are cool!
ProSense
(116,464 posts)Dolan deserves contempt. Mitt agrees with him on the points you cite, but here is a line Mitt crossed that even Dolan wouldn't. On a human level, Mitt's comments were despicable and disqualifying. On a political level, Mitt doesn't have the sense to know that he has to appeal to many voters who are among those he dismissed.
Obama campaign: Mitt Romney's Crocodile Tears
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10021430957
Dawson Leery
(19,348 posts)Still, we know how the Bishops and Cardinals will vote on November 6th.