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Thursday 4 February 2010

Jobs at Telegraph

Tuesday, 2nd February 2010

Pope Benedict XVI is correct: the Equality Bill is fundamentally un-British

David Blackburn 3:39pm

I doubt His Holiness and I would hit it off, but he is right that Harriet Harman’s Equality Bill would impose strictures upon religious communities that run contrary to their beliefs.

The coalescence of British and EU anti-discrimination law is but an immodest garment for trenchant ideology. Harman’s bill strives to subjugate individual freedoms, such as that to religious expression, beneath state-imposed rights. This legislation is the progeny of faith in social engineering, not social mobility; it ignores that toleration and freedom in Britain were derived from the right to religious observance free from state proscriptions.

If enacted, the bill will require organisations to employ without thought to suitability, and allocate resources under the perverse dictates of positive-discrimination. In practice it will conflict with the stupendous fabric of precedents that define rights to individual expression as supreme. Ironically, anti-discrimination measures will be invoked to ensure that religious groups may practice their faith without hindrance. Equality defers to liberty.   

Filed under: Equality (5 more articles) , Harriet Harman (30 more articles) , Liberty (2 more articles) , Religion (40 more articles) , UK politics (991 more articles)

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THX1138

February 2nd, 2010 3:47pm Report this comment

And hating gays is fundamentally Catholic.

Walsingham's Ghost

February 2nd, 2010 4:02pm Report this comment

Am I the only one wondering why we have heard not a peep from Muslim Imams over this issue?

Are they assuming an automatic 'opt out' for the Islamic faith?

Curious...

WG

Sacre Bleu

February 2nd, 2010 4:07pm Report this comment

I assume Ms Harpic has informed all residents not just the newly arrived and registered immigrants, that we look forward to seeing the first female Rabbis and Mullahs very soon. As part of the right to vote Labour it is a small price to pay to keep this present government in power. Men will have limited and non exclusive rights for all religeous and non religeous groups so beware but then it is just a small part of the Charter for citizenship of Great Britain so that's alright then.

Vulture

February 2nd, 2010 4:08pm Report this comment

Shurely shome mishtake THX? Without gays, the Catholic Church couldn't muster enough priests to form a hurling team.
Come to think of it, nor could the C of E.

mjc

February 2nd, 2010 4:14pm Report this comment

"If enacted, the bill will require organisations to employ without thought to suitability...."
And there's nothing worse than having to deal with an unsuitable poof....

Anne Wotana Kaye 1

February 2nd, 2010 4:17pm Report this comment

This government won't pay attention to a Catholic Pope, but just watch if a Muslim Iman pronounced.

TGF UKIP

February 2nd, 2010 4:22pm Report this comment

And, THX 1138, pandering to gays is fundamentally Blairite and Heirite.

TGF UKIP

February 2nd, 2010 4:25pm Report this comment

Come to think of it, I don't recall hearing much from Dave & Co on the Harman Bill. As I recall, they usually jump on board every PC wagon Labour start rolling - just ask the Christian adoption agencies.

ajs

February 2nd, 2010 4:26pm Report this comment

Atheistic homosexuals must not feel abandoned.

David Ossitt

February 2nd, 2010 4:38pm Report this comment

“The Equality Bill is fundamentally un-British.

If enacted, the bill will require organisations to employ without thought to suitability, and allocate resources under the perverse dictates of positive-discrimination.”

Everything about this horrid government is un-British; it has done damage with every act, it has perverted our traditional values of, fairness, moderation, tolerance and tries to impose its own perverted diktats.

Anne Wotana Kaye 1

February 2nd, 2010 4:54pm Report this comment

Sacre Bleu: Ms Harpic is an amusing name for a most unamusing harridan, but it is not apt. The creature in question does not kill germs and leave the atmosphere smelling fresh and clean. Filth and rubbish breed around her, its called Nu Labour.

David Lindsay

February 2nd, 2010 4:58pm Report this comment

One hardly knows whether to laugh or cry. The demonstrations against the Pope's visit to Britain are to feature Peter Tatchell, who, by lowering the age of consent to 14, would legalise practically all of the acts that have brought scandal on the Church.

Except when Catholic priests engage in them, sexual acts between men and teenage boys are glorified by the Political and Media Classes, who vilify anyone who objects. Tatchell's treatment as a National Treasure illustrates this. As does the political role of Harriet Harman of the Equalities Bill, formerly legal advisor to the Paedophile Information Exchange and to Paedophile Action for Liberation, as reported in The Daily Telegraph last March. What does a story have to do to make the front page?

Perhaps the Holy Father expected the Tories to take the cue, and pipe up that they would repeal the Equalities Bill and other anti-Catholic, anti-Christian legislation. But I doubt it. Their votes, on this and on eighty-five per cent of the Government's programme, speak for themselves. So his point is made precisely by their, and the Lib Dems', failure to say a word: do not vote for any of them, but make alternative arrangements instead.

David Ossitt

February 2nd, 2010 5:01pm Report this comment

ajs

"Atheistic homosexuals must not feel abandoned."

Why ever not?

Fergus Pickering

February 2nd, 2010 5:05pm Report this comment

Abandoned atheistic homosexuals! Hallo SAILOR! Sounds like the great George Melly to me.

Carroll Barry-Walsh

February 2nd, 2010 5:16pm Report this comment

THX1138 - "And hating gays is fundamentally Catholic". No it isn't and what a disgraceful thing to say. Doubtless Labour think that they can invoke the latent anti-Catholicism present not far from the surface in Britain so that people will ignore what the Pope is saying and what the real issue is.

There are 2 issues here: the right of gays not to suffer discrimination and the right of religious groups to practise their faith freely. I see no good reason why religious groups should not be able to say that if you want to join them, work for them then you need to subscribe to the faith i.e. if a gay person wishes to work for the Catholic church then he should be expected to be a Catholic. To say otherwise, to say that a synagogue or a church or a mosque should be required by law to employ someone who does not share their faith, indeed, may be hostile to it or behaving in a way incompatible with it is abhorrent. This is not about equality or toleration: it's about an intolerant secular world view seeking to impose its view on those who are religious.

The second issue follows from the first: when minorities have rights which clash with each other, whose rights come first? Or do we have a sort of Top Trumps where this group's rights trump that group's rights?

Labour have led us into this cul de sac because they simply do not (or refuse to) understand what true toleration is in a liberal democracy - live and let live - but rather think that there is only one approved way of thinking or living and that it is the state's job to ensure that everyone should share that view.

More generally, if Judeo-Christian values which - in their broadest sense - underpin Western civilization, are pushed out of the public domain, there will be a vacuum into which all sorts of nasty, un-Western and/or definitely not liberal or tolerant views will come rushing in: Fascism and Communism in the last century and their bastard child - political Islam in this.

Interestingly, the National Secular Society and the rest have not said that they will be demonstrating against the visit later this year by the President of Iran who has in a recent speech (see Cranmer) specifically instructed Muslims in Britain to challenge British laws in a way which is much more potentially dangerous than anything the Pope has said. Funny that.

Noa Zrk

February 2nd, 2010 5:25pm Report this comment

It's niave I know, but anti-discriminatory laws are by definition - discriminatory.
As one of the remaining post middle age hetro male, of Catholic origin if not practice, my fear of persecution is becoming realised.
Number plate- Nope, sorry but you're misinformed, Catholics don't hate gays, but homosexuality is considered a sin, this is of course an almost obsolete concept for Protestants and irrelevant to atheists and agnostics, who must judge this practice, or preference, on different criteria.
So it is perfectly common and reasonable for people to accept the personal right for individuals to practice homosexuality, as with hetrosexuality, within the limits considered acceptable by society, whilst finding its practice personally unappealing and repugnant.
On the same basis, neither hetro nor homosexuals, of whatever religion, age or gender, should be subject to discrimination or its concomitant, woefully misconceived equality legislation.

Bloody Bill Brock

February 2nd, 2010 5:29pm Report this comment

For some time after he took the leadership, I ran with Cameron the social liberal. After all he did get BBC staff to say "conservative" without gobbing on the floor. However, this matter would be a good time to start acting like a proper Tory.

Herbert Thornton

February 2nd, 2010 5:34pm Report this comment

What next? Ordain that medical schools must award all people who attend the the schools - even the ones who fail the examinations – the same degrees, with the right to practise as doctors, because to withhold the degree from a group that has failed denies them "equality" and "discriminates" against them?

And what about the nation's security services or whoever is charged with maintaining its nuclear weapons in a state of readiness? Are they to be compelled to recruit people from the community that is the source of virtually all so-called "home grown" terrorists on the grounds that they are entitled to equality and to freedom from discrimination?

Anybody who believes that blind enforcement of "equality" is a good thing or who believes the mantra that "discrimination is wicked" must be either malevolent or very stupid indeed - or insane.

TGF UKIP

February 2nd, 2010 5:54pm Report this comment

Carroll Barry-Walsh, my compliments on a splendid post which speaks so eloquently on this subject for, I would guess, a large number of Coffee Housers.

JONNY

February 2nd, 2010 6:13pm Report this comment

'Without gays, the Catholic Church couldn't muster enough priests to form a hurling team'

The graffiti seem to get cruder.

Steven Rhodes

February 2nd, 2010 6:25pm Report this comment

There is an error in this piece, a serious error. Nothing in the proposed legislation would enact so called 'positive discrimination' There are no quotas to demand that a proportion of gay men must be shortlisted. Instead, no religion will be able to deny employment on grounds of sexuality per se. They are still free refuse if they think the candidate is not suitable on general grounds. I know so many gay priests that to suggest they cannot undertake this ministry merely through their sexuality is near laughable.

Incidentally, now that we have openly gay servicemen in our armed forces has anyone noticed that, far from initiating the terminal decay of British military effectiveness, they have given us reason to be as proud of them as we have ever been.

Ivy Eileen

February 2nd, 2010 6:36pm Report this comment

@ Carroll Barry - Walsh

"This is not about equality or toleration: it's about an intolerant secular world view seeking to impose its view on those who are religious."

Agree entirely .... and the self-trumpeting son of the manse promotes this stuff (or, as Macavity, permits Harridan to do so).

THX1138

February 2nd, 2010 6:37pm Report this comment

Carroll Barry Walsh The Catholic Church calls gays "disordered and morally evil" sound like hate to me..

The Catholic Church is the biggest force for evil that human beings have ever the misfortune to encounter .. Islam is but a rank amateur in human misery in comparison.

Can I suggest you watch the church of hate and superstition thrashed out of site in a recent IQ2 debate.

http://www.intelligencesquared.com/iq2-video/2009/catholic-church

Before the debate, for the motion: 678. Against: 1102. Dont know: 346. This is how it changed after the debate. For: 268. Against: 1876. Dont know: 34. In other words, after hearing the speakers, the number of people in the audience who opposed the motion increased by 774.

2trueblue

February 2nd, 2010 6:40pm Report this comment

Yet another situation where to get around discrimination you discriminate in favour of the discriminated. But isen't that discrimination?

badman

February 2nd, 2010 6:41pm Report this comment

This post is bilge, I'm afraid, although I'm sure that's down to ignorance and not just hysteria.

The Equality Bill does not impose positive discrimination; in fact, it makes it illegal.

The Equality Bill will not require organisations to employ without thought to suitability: if they do that, they will be in breach of the Bill.

Despite its grandiose title, the Equality Act is an act against prejudice, not an act in favour of equality. It is a human rights measure. All human rights instruments derive from the post war precedents put through the United Nations with the support of the British Government and the churches. Many of them were then developed by governments of both UK main parties when drafting constitutions for former colonies. These provisions are as British as any internationally recognised rights can possibly be: we practically invented them.

The Equality Bill actually protects religious freedom and enforces it. The right to practise your religion and manifest your religious beliefs is entrenched in the Bill.

Finally, nothing in the Bill affects priests, clergy, or those who promote various religions. The Bill protects ordinary employees - not clergy - from religious, gender and other forms of discrimination - people like cleaners - and quite right too.

mitch

February 2nd, 2010 7:00pm Report this comment

Are they taking the piss?...no I mean really are they taking the piss?, have we run out of pressing and important matters that we can do this.
The Human race is doomed, it will discriminate against itself and step aside for pond scum as it had a bad upbringing.

PAUL GILBOY

February 2nd, 2010 7:02pm Report this comment

Peter Tatchell takes umbrage at the Roman pontiffs request for England to uphold their established legal right to freedom of conscience, by stating that he is interfering in the law of the land; blithely ignoring the fact that the equality bill is not yet the established law of the land.

A religious institution is not an industrial or corporate workplace, but an association of people who share a religious, spiritual conviction; they are not independent actors coming together to participate in a joint enterprise to fulfil some secular goal. That’s why the right to discriminate on the basis of conscience, is a right that public and private institutes should not have.

But yet again the totalitarian ideology of European liberty that Tatchell and Harriet H subscribe to is undermining the laws and liberties of the English people.

The pontiff knows there is a fog of darkness rolling over the continent and, the last stand against it will come from the people of England who have liberty and the law written into their DNA.

Fearless Frank

February 2nd, 2010 7:36pm Report this comment

Sacre Bleu: ...we look forward to seeing the first female Rabbis and Mullahs very soon...
Too late on the Rabbis, Sacre, they already have them. There's even a Radio 4 sitcom calld "The Attractive Youg Rabbi" or something.
Female mullahs - Mullettes? Mullareens? - bring it on (Inshallah, of course)!

David Ossitt

February 2nd, 2010 7:54pm Report this comment

THX1138

Come on THX; you are trying to wind everybody up, with your "disordered and morally evil" “sound like hate to me”.

No; it does not; and you know it, it sounds like what it is an opinion, not one that you could agree with but an opinion non the less, and one held by many.

Then we have your “The Catholic Church is the biggest force for evil that human beings have ever the misfortune to encounter, Islam is but a rank amateur in human misery in comparison”.

This is just laughable, complete and utter hokum.

On the other hand, it is good to see you back.

CS

February 2nd, 2010 8:06pm Report this comment

***What next? Ordain that medical schools must award all people who attend the the schools - even the ones who fail the examinations �“ the same degrees, with the right to practise as doctors, because to withhold the degree from a group that has failed denies them "equality" and "discriminates" against them?***

You really are a prat, Herbert. Do you seriously believe that banning organisations from employing people on the basis of what they do in bed is the same as banning hospitals from employing doctors on the basis of their medical qualifications?

The Church should have no more special treatment than any other social organisation. They should have the same legal rights as a tennis club - no more no less. No-one should be able to earn legal exemptions simply by claiming that their bigotry is ordained by a supernatural power. The Church and 90% of Catholics cherrypick the teachings of The Bible according to what is convenient for them. If they truly venerated the word of God, they'd never dare to take it upon themselves to decide which of His commands to observe and which to ignore.

Tim Carpenter LPUK

February 2nd, 2010 9:40pm Report this comment

Let us cut through the specifics and get to the generics.

This is about freedom of association.

Those in favour of the bill are basically saying they support the right of someone, to put it bluntly, thrusting themselves upon an organisation with the lurking threat of a lawsuit if they don't get their way.

Freedom of association is a fundamental freedom and is far more important, far superior than any employment regulations.

I do not support a special case for religious groups. I support the right of ANY group to decide who it wants to be in or not in that group. Therefore I support all-women clubs, male-only golf cliques, lesbian tennis associations if that is what they want.

This is very far removed from another problem in employment, that of an individual enacting their own personal prejudices - for or against, mind - in the workplace. However, if there is any claim, to me it is by the group over the group member not conforming to the code. A prospective member has no contract with the group before, say, employment, so I fail to see why a group should be punished because of an errant employee before employment (it is another thing if an employee is subject to discrimination and nothing is done about it, for then a contract exists). Yes, it is more convenient for the State to impose its will this way, but being a supporter of the Rule of Law, administrative convenience is, IIRC, no justification for legislation.

hadrian

February 2nd, 2010 10:18pm Report this comment

I am no Roman Catholic but an old fashioned Reformed Protestant. I can assure the poster who thought Protestantism had virtually given up the concept of sin that he is much mistaken. Evangelical Protestant Christianity holds any and every infraction of Divine Law ( ie SIN) to be deadly and only forgiven through Faith alone in Christ alone.
As for the Pope's pronouncement on this bill, he is not so short of the mark. Contrary to what others posting on here in absurdly frivilous manner suggest, opposition to this benighted bill does NOT centre on opposition to sexual deviance from the Christian nor. No, it is simply that this bill will deprive groups of like minded folk the right to associate freely and voluntarily around that cause. In the case of the churches no one is forced into their membership, no one is forced to submit to their authority. We render it entirely voluntarily, knowing the expected norms of behaviour.
This bill, risibly, could quite mischievously be used to force other voluntary associations- such as political parties, pressure groups etc- to accept into membership folk diametrically opposed to their ideals and aims.
The Scottish Presbyterians have long and bitter experience of this kind of State interference in their affairs and endured the Covenanting Killing Times to secure freedom for the Church to run its on affairs, free from State control. As I say, our rights of free association for common goals is under enormous threat from this utterly miserable piece of bureaucratic bungling legislation.
That the Church alone is talked up as its main opponent does not alter the fact other groups will be affected, not least Islam, as has been pointed out. Still, I look forward to the day, if this rubbish is rammed through, when the Labour Party will be hauled before the Courts for refusing to employ a Tory!

Mark

February 2nd, 2010 10:40pm Report this comment

CS: How dare you tell me what I cannot believe as a matter of faith.
Your post is a true manifestation of liberal dicatorship - believe what you want so long as I agree with it. Truely chilling.

stephen

February 2nd, 2010 10:47pm Report this comment

I hope it's not too Un PC to say but did not Roman Catholics enjoy a status not too dissiilar to that some would accord to Muslims these days viz threats to National Security?

Edward Sutherland

February 2nd, 2010 11:59pm Report this comment

THX1138. Posting comments such as yours surely merit our knowing your real name. I know the Catholic Church, of which I am proud to be a member, has been responsible for some terrible things, not least anti-semitism and the serious abuse of trust of children. What you don't hear about are the thousands and thousands of unknown members doing their best to help their fellow men. I think of the Comboni Sisters working in hell holes in Africa and elswhere, caring, unpaid and not swanning round in air con 4x4s like the aid agencies. Have a sense of proportion and some common decency.

AndyinBrum

February 3rd, 2010 8:42am Report this comment

Anyone who claims to believe in a god loses all right to comment on anything.

Also why should we care what a deranged ex Nazi thinks about anything?

Just as bad as mainstream Islam that people get all frothy at the mouth about. Both are as mysoganist, bigoted and stupid as each other. Harumpf, garumpf and grumble etc

Linda Smith

February 3rd, 2010 9:32am Report this comment

“This bill, risibly, could quite mischievously be used to force other voluntary associations - such as political parties, pressure groups etc - to accept into membership folk diametrically opposed to their ideals and aims.”

Like the BNP ….?

sean martin

February 3rd, 2010 9:37am Report this comment

The Rawlsian difference principle comes alive!

David Blackburn

February 3rd, 2010 9:49am Report this comment

Steven Rhodes,

I'm afraid the mistake is yours. The sentence you refer to clearly contains two separate clauses. Any legislation that prescribes the allocation of resources (that is a financial not a sexual term) in favour one particular group is positive discrimination, regardless of how you dress it up.

Sorry to be patronising, but it's quite simple stuff.

THX1138

February 3rd, 2010 9:54am Report this comment

I meant every word of it ,no other organization has caused more and causes human misery than the Catholic Church.

David Ossit I know it's in your nature but I find your fringe right wing views "disordered and morally evil" But hey it's only an "opinion" (not very nice is it)

Sign petition against £20m taxpayer money being used for "disordered and morally evil" Pope's visit.

http://tinyurl.com/yflnqgb

John Lea

February 3rd, 2010 10:04am Report this comment

THX1138 - what a nasty, ignorant and cowardly little individual you are! And like all cowardly individuals who use this site to spew their own bile, you hide behind a silly pseudoynm. Leaving aside your cowardice for one moment, your point - if it can even be called that - is nonsense. Did you happen to hear Iris Robinson's view on homosexuality? Or have you familiarised yourself with what her church believe should be done with such people?

The Pope is making an important point about religious freedom, and I'm glad David Blackburn has picked up on that. Once we start diluting religion, or - like the CoE - adapting faith to fit in with contemporary morality, then we risk damaging our commonly shared values.

AndyinBrum

February 3rd, 2010 10:32am Report this comment

Yes John, you do what your nice make believe god tells you to do. Whilst we're at it, the only cowardice on here is you people not brave enough to stand up against religion

AndyinBrum

February 3rd, 2010 10:45am Report this comment

The only cowardice on here is from those showing intellectual and physical cowardice by following a wholely discredited religious doctrine instead of becoming free and facing life without a fake spiritual crutch

Bloody Bill Brock

February 3rd, 2010 10:45am Report this comment

@ANDY IN BRUM
I assume the Ex Nazi you refer to is the Pope. Why do you show such crass ignorance about the man? He was a 15 year old kid conscipted into a Luftwaffe Flak unit for defence against allied bombers. Thousands of young Germans were called up to do the same thing.Do you think he had a choice?
You are as bad as the BBC with their Nazi storm troopers, Nazi U Boats and Nazi bombers. Like no ordinary Germans were involved in the war. Certainly the Bavarian boy who became Pope was nothing more than an ordinary German kid. I AM NOT A ROMAN CATHOLIC.

AndyinBrum

February 3rd, 2010 10:53am Report this comment

@bbb he was in the hitler jugend and plenty of german kids didn't join.

Dean

February 3rd, 2010 10:57am Report this comment

As so often, the lurid posts here generate much more heat than light. The Equality Bill allows churches to take sexual or gender orientation into account when selecting individuals for religious positions. So it does not require or even encourage the Catholic church to appoint gays or transsexuals to positions as priests or vicars. There is no way either the Commons or the Lords would accept this.

What it does do is prohibit them from discriminating against staff in non-religious roles, such as school caretakers or church gardeners, on grounds of sexual orientation. It is difficult to see why anyone living in a modern secular society would object to this, unless of course they are already prejudiced against the aforementioned minority groups.

There is an unfortunate tendency for some on the Right to cast themselves in the role of the "oppressed" moral majority whenever sexual or ethnic minorities have the temerity to assert themselves. To people like that, I would ask the following question: are you at risk of being murdered in Trafalgar Square, in full public view, because of your choice of sexual partner? Do you fear being beaten up at night because you dress in a way the local hoodies consider "effeminate"? If not, please do us all a favour and shut up for a change.

john lea

February 3rd, 2010 11:42am Report this comment

AndyinBrum - it's quite depressing reading - and finding myself responding - to comments like yours. I feel tarnished just reading the stuff. But, really, have a good hard think about this. Do you seriously believe that Pope Benedict is a Nazi, or an ex-Nazi for that matter? That really is low. Simply because the man was born in Germany during that period. I don't know if you're trying to be cute, or whether you seriously believe what you're saying. If the latter, then God help the whole tone of this debate.

EC

February 3rd, 2010 12:11pm Report this comment

THX1138,

My my, they don't like it up 'em do they? It's the same old story. Scratch away the veneer of piety, expose the humbug beneath and the religionists turn into an militant, ugly, homicidal mob. Personally, based on all the historical evidence, I think that they are a threat to world peace.

Bloody Bill Brock,

There is nothing 'ordinary' about Bavaria, or Freistaat Bayern as they insist on calling it.

AndyinBrum,

I'm right behind you on this one son!

AndyinBrum

February 3rd, 2010 12:13pm Report this comment

Mainly tounge in cheek but with a hint of truth behind it

PAUL GILBOY

February 3rd, 2010 12:26pm Report this comment

andyinbrum, what an ignorant individual you are, Catholicism and nazism are polar opposites, yet you indulge in ad hominem attacks using fallacious arguments because you clearly don’t understand the concepts and principles that the rest of us are discussing. I’m sure if the rest of us wanted to read this rubbish we would buy the viz.

EC

February 3rd, 2010 1:13pm Report this comment

"Catholicism and nazism are polar opposites"

Oh really? During 1939-45 the Catholic Church was a willing collaborator with the Nazis and afterwards helped many of them to escape justice.

Bunnykins

February 3rd, 2010 2:19pm Report this comment

Fearless Frank. Female Rabbis are as anathema to Orthodox Jews as female Priests are to the Roman Catholic Church.

Edward Sutherland

February 3rd, 2010 2:32pm Report this comment

EC says "the Catholic Church was a willing collaborator with the Nazis". What a shame the message never got through to my father,who spent three years of hell as a Jap POW, or my mother's three first cousins who died in WW2,two killed in action fighting Nazis, or my mother's American cousin wounded on Omaha beach, or my naval chaplain uncle on the Russian convoys, devout Catholics all. Your posting is an insult to millions of Catholics who bravely fought Nazism. Remember, a church isn't just a place, it's a community of believers.

PAUL GILBOY

February 3rd, 2010 3:57pm Report this comment

EC@

The philosophical position of Nazism and Catholicism are polar opposites, as one is secular & specific and one is religious and universal.
If religions have to seek accommodations with secular realities its not because they find succour in them, they don’t, its merely a reality on the ground. The Americans helped far more Nazis escape justice and American liberalism is in no way sympathetic to a totalitarian existential ideology.

Moreover, your historical analysis is bears no reality to historical facts

Accordingly

February 3rd, 2010 5:26pm Report this comment

Read the exceptions section of the published Bill (especially pp.214-17) before throwing about nebulous accusations of 'unbritishness' and 'suppression of liberty'.
I think they look really quite liberal.
Unlike the Pope.

EC

February 3rd, 2010 5:49pm Report this comment

The holocaust and the Catholic Church's participation in it, by action or inaction, is a matter of public record you hypocrites. Why does the Vatican still keep silent when their church in France felt the need to apologise for it?

The Catholic church and the Pope suffered a failure to condemn the sectarian murders in Northern Ireland and that is also a matter of public record. In the 30 years of the troubles, unequivocal statements condemning the murder of innocent civilians were as rare as rocking horse sh*t.

You can shove your pious, even Pius, indignation up your fundamentalism as far as I'm concerned.

David Lindsay

February 3rd, 2010 5:58pm Report this comment

When Cortés cast down the blood-drenched Aztec idol and replaced it with a tiny statue of Our Lady, the ground shook with the anguished roar of the demons thus exorcised. Much the same has happened in Britain today, including on here. What very, very, very sore losers you are.

Well, you have seen nothing yet. We are on a roll. All three parties come out of this whole business extremely badly. So let's get rid of all of them. Bring on the Election. If we can achieve this, then why not that? Why not, at least, 10 MPs in the coming hung Parliament? Or 20? Or 50? Or 100? Of course, to have MPs, we first need candidates.

Barbara

February 3rd, 2010 7:58pm Report this comment

We can all look to religions and see faults, but the Pope's comments went deeper than perhaps we realise. This bill is against the people, its stops the will to be free and speak and say what a person wants. Its a truly proper ploy of communists, create laws to make you comply. We do have a fundemental right to freedom of speech, but who we employ, with this bill will be ruled by it. We cannot choose on merit anymore but by gender. Harmon's policy has done more to destroy and divide this country than Hitler, and the silence from the opposition speaks volumes. Are they all so brainwashed they no longer can argue or debate? We have a government and parliament which is under the EU and therefore is not really now necessary, they agree and pass all bills, this has been approved by them too. No, this nation is now subserviant and laws past will make us more so, our voice is now dead. God rest England for she has surrendered.

THX1138

February 3rd, 2010 9:25pm Report this comment

Indeed EC my father was nearly killed by a bomb planted in a pub in Covent Garden by Irish followers of a "peverted form of Catholicism". No doubt they were given absolution for their crimes by a priest..

And let us not forget that Ratzinger did all in his power to cover up the bestial rape of children by his priests. And to think that we have to pay £20M to protect the evil bastard, when really we should be locking him up with the other paedo's and throwing away the key..

I almost wish there was a god so Ratzinger could face him with his evil crimes when he dies.

The stench of pious hypocrisy is too much for me

PAUL GILBOY

February 3rd, 2010 10:00pm Report this comment

EC you seem to be completely losing the plot! Your analysis about anything beyond your daily human needs to be tenuous to say the least!

Your mish mash of spite and liberalism is indicative of a personality that does not like them-selves, and for what you have wrote, it appears you are spot on.

Another mooted liberal suggestion is assisted suicide, as a conservative I’m normally opposed to this, but in your case I will talk you through it, as an act of charity; as it is probably the only way your going to announce a popular decision amongst your friends and family.

Accordingly

February 3rd, 2010 11:10pm Report this comment

From David's above response:
"Any legislation that prescribes the allocation of resources (that is a financial not a sexual term) in favour one particular group is positive discrimination."
Surely this definition could include all targeted public spending? Which is a bit strong, no? Or at least, means you must concede that positive discrimination is not necessarily contemptible.

EC

February 4th, 2010 8:35am Report this comment

Yes, THX1138, do not forget that Christian Catholic 'militants,' members of the bombing fraternity, have killed more people in the UK than bombers of the Muslim persuasion. Maybe these facts need more 'analysis' so that they can be airbrushed out of history.

The hierarchy of the Catholic Church is rotten to the core, corrupt and, as you say, evil. In an unguarded moment their PR Man, Mel Gibson, left us in no doubt how they really view the Jews.

Paul Gilboy, your attempt at an ad hominem attack wasn't very good. It wasn't without a modicum of amusement but you really must try harder. We expect better.

Edward Sutherland

February 4th, 2010 9:39am Report this comment

EC and THX1138: Do you carry out all your correspondence under the cloak of anonymity? Before you ask,yes, Edward Sutherland is my real name.

John Lea

February 4th, 2010 11:42am Report this comment

Edward Sutherland - spot on! Over the years I've noticed - unsurprisingly, I suppose - that it's invariably those individuals who reduce the debate to personal attacks, who feel the need to hide behind idiotic pseudoynms. They obviously believe that disparaging a religious faith or an individual somehow makes them brave, funny or 'edgy'. It doesn't. Giving their real names and engaging in the debate without resorting to personal insults, would give more credence to their posts.

THX1138

February 4th, 2010 2:48pm Report this comment

Good old "Killing Joke"

http://is.gd/7GJ3G

EC

February 4th, 2010 4:54pm Report this comment

John Lea, February 4th, 2010 11:42am,

I have made no personal attacks, only responded to one. Perhaps you would like to re-read the comment left by Paul Gilboy on Feb 3rd @10:00pm He wants to see me dead. Nice! I think that this counts as a very personal attack. This rather detracts from the bluster and fudge of your comment.

Let the record stand.

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