segunda-feira, 4 de julho de 2011

Sex and the Empire State: Losing marriage to sexual liberalism - by Robert P. George

In National Review

If you ask, "What can be done going forward around the country to protect religious liberty?" the answer is this: Win the fight to preserve the legal definition of marriage as the conjugal union of husband and wife. Period.

Marriage was already in bad shape when New York’s governor rewrote its meaning in the state on Friday night with his signature on the “Marriage Equality Act.” Princeton politics professor Robert P. George, McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence and Director of the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions at Princeton University, who has written and lectured extensively on marriage and conscience rights, the natural law, and public policy (and served on the President’s Council on Bioethics and the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights), discusses the fallout and future with National Review Online’s Kathryn Jean Lopez.

KATHRYN JEAN LOPEZ: What’s your reaction to what New York did to marriage on Friday night?

ROBERT P. GEORGE: Let’s examine the matter from a philosophical and historical perspective.

The vote in New York to redefine marriage advances the cause of loosening norms of sexual ethics, and promoting as innocent — and even “liberating” — forms of sexual conduct that were traditionally regarded in the West and many other places as beneath the dignity of human beings as free and rational creatures. Early advocates of this cause, such as Margaret Sanger, Alfred Kinsey, and Hugh Hefner, proposed to “liberate” people from “repressive” moral standards that pointlessly deprived individuals of what they insisted were harmless pleasures, and impeded the free development of their personalities. They attacked and ridiculed traditional norms of sexual conduct as mere “hangups” that it was long past time for sophisticated people to get over. By the early 1970s, their basic outlook had become the mainstream view among cultural elites in the U.S. and elsewhere in the West. Although Sanger was a racist and a eugenicist, though Kinsey was a liar and a fraud, though Hefner was a buffoon, the liberationist view they had championed eventually hardened into something very close to a matter of orthodoxy in elite circles, and liberalism as a political movement went for it hook, line, and sinker. Devotion to “sexual freedom” had been no part of the liberalism of FDR, George Meaney, Cesar Chavez, Hubert Humphrey, or the leaders and rank-and-file members of the civil-rights movement. Today, however, allegiance to the cause of sexual freedom is the nonnegotiable price of admission to the liberal (or “progressive”) club. It is worth noting that more than a few conservatives have bought into a (more limited) version of it as well, as we see in the debate over redefining marriage.

As Sherif Girgis, Ryan Anderson, and I argue in our Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy article, once one buys into the ideology of sexual liberalism, the reality that has traditionally been denominated as “marriage” loses all intelligibility. That is true whether one regards oneself politically as a liberal or a conservative. For people who have absorbed the central premises of sexual liberation (whether formally and explicitly, as liberals tend to do, or merely implicitly as those conservatives who have gone in for it tend to do), marriage simply cannot function as the central principle or standard of rectitude in sexual conduct, as it has in Western philosophy, theology, and law for centuries. The idea that sexual intercourse (the behavioral component of reproduction) consummates and actualizes marriage as a one-flesh union of sexually complementary spouses naturally ordered to the good of procreation loses its force and even its sense. The moral belief that sex belongs in (and only in) marriage, where it is of unitive as well as procreative significance, and where the unitive and procreative dimensions are intrinsically connected (though not in a mere relationship of means to end), begins to seem baseless — the sort of thing that can be believed, if at all, only on the authority of revealed religion. As a result, to the extent that one is in the grip of sexual-liberationist ideology, one will find no reason of moral principle why people oughtn’t to engage in sexual relations prior to marriage, cohabit in non-marital sexual partnerships, form same-sex sexual partnerships, or confine their sexual partnerships to two persons, rather than three or more in polyamorous sexual ensembles.

Moreover, one will come to regard one’s allegiance to sexual liberalism as a mark of urbanity and sophistication, and will likely find oneself looking down on those “ignorant,” “intolerant,” “bigoted” people — those hicks and rubes — who refuse to get “on the right side of history.” One will perceive people who wish to engage in conduct rejected by traditional morality (especially where such conduct is sought in satisfaction of desires that can be redescribed or labeled as an “orientation,” such as “gay” or “bisexual,” or “polyamorist”) as belonging to the category of “sexual minorities” whose “civil rights” are violated by laws embodying the historic understanding of marriage and sexual ethics. One will begin congratulating oneself for one’s “open-mindedness” and “tolerance” in holding that marriage should be redefined to accommodate the interests of these minorities, and one will likely lose any real regard for the rights of, say, parents who do not wish to have their children indoctrinated into the ideology of sexual liberalism in public schools. “Why,” one will ask, “should fundamentalist parents be free to rear their children as little bigots?” Heather’s two mommies or Billy’s two mommies and three daddies are the keys to freeing children from parental “homophobia” and “polyphobia.”

Now, New York is obviously one of the most socially liberal states in the Union. There are, to be sure, many New Yorkers who reject sexual-liberationist ideology and believe in true marriage, which is why pro-marriage forces in the state were able to put up quite a fight, but they are not well-represented in the elite sector of society and at the moment they lack the powerful political leadership one finds on the other side. There is no Chris Christie at the helm in New York. Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Mayor Michael Bloomberg, the state’s two most powerful and influential politicians, plainly buy much, if not all, of the ideology of sexual liberalism and publicly lead their lives in accordance with it. Although they claim to be supporters of marriage who merely want to “expand” the institution (or expand “access” to the institution) out of respect for what they regard as the civil rights of people to have their romantic partnerships (whatever their shape) recognized and legitimated by the state, both are reported by New York media to openly cohabit with women with whom they are not married. They do this not in defiance of their stated beliefs about sexual morality and marriage, but in line with those beliefs. Neither supposes that he and his mistress are setting a bad example for children or undermining the public’s faith in important marital norms. As orthodox sexual liberals, neither the governor nor the mayor believes in a conception of marriage in which marriage is normative for sexual partnering; indeed, neither believes in norms of sexual morality as traditionally conceived, even apart from any question about same-sex partnerships. Both regard “civil marriage” as nothing more than the legal blessing of romantic partnerships, and neither gives any indication of ever having remotely considered an alternative view. Both have so thoroughly absorbed the premises of sexual liberal ideology that the possibility of an alternative doesn’t cross their minds. For them, it is all a matter of “us urbane, sophisticated, tolerant, open-minded, defenders of civil rights, against those ignorant, intolerant, hateful homophobes.”

LOPEZ: What does it mean for the meaning of marriage in New York?

GEORGE: It means that New York has abolished marriage as a matter of civil law and replaced it with a counterfeit that New Yorkers’ children and grandchildren will be taught to accept and approve as if it were the real thing. What New York now offers its citizens is “marriage” in name only. In reality, it doesn’t give marriage to same-sex partners — the nature of marriage makes that impossible, just as it makes it impossible to offer marriage to parties of three or more persons in polyamorous sexual partnerships. Rather, it takes away the legal recognition of marriage — a comprehensive union of persons ordered to having and rearing a family (on procreation’s intrinsic link to marriage, see here and here) — and offers in its place legal recognition of a form of domestic partnership for romantic-sexual partners (in pairs for now, but that will not hold), be they same-sex or opposite-sex. Because these domestic partnerships are not actually marriages, despite the appropriation of the label; there is no intelligible basis in them for the norms of monogamy, exclusivity, and the pledge of permanence that structure and help to define marriage as historically understood in our law and culture. Of course, many people’s understanding of, and authentic commitment to, these norms has already eroded substantially since the 1960s under the pressure of sexual-revolution ideology. They will now erode further, though for a while some people who are still “evolving” (as President Obama might put it) toward the complete embrace of that ideology will be moved by sentimentality (which will seem increasingly quaint) and the residue of the “old morality” to cling to the belief that “marriages” (same-sex or opposite-sex) should be monogamous and sexually exclusive. And the erosion of these beliefs (and practices in line with them) will further wound our communities — especially mothers, children, and the poor.

Of course, among the activists and leaders of the movement to redefine marriage, it is already difficult to find anyone who believes that same-sex marriages demand as a matter of moral obligation sexual exclusivity. If you have time to poke around a bit on the Internet, just try to find leaders in the movement who say that they do. Hardly anyone among the leading activists will say that it is immoral and contrary to the integrity of marriage for same-sex marriage partners to agree to sexually “open” marriages. Rather, most will say that the “commitment” that makes a marriage (as in the slogan “commitment, not gender, makes a marriage”), is fundamentally an emotional commitment and a commitment to provide mutual care and support; it does not exclude a formal or implicit agreement by the partners that sex outside the partnership is acceptable. As a recent San Francisco State University study (as reported by the New York Times) shows, the “open secret” (as the Times puts it) about same-sex “marriages” is that a huge proportion of them are sexually open. Sexual activity with parties outside the relationship (sometimes with disclosure to the other partner, sometimes without) is accepted and practiced. Monogamy and sexual exclusivity are simply not regarded as integral to “marriage.” (This shows just how far the redefinition of marriage takes us from what has historically been understood as marriage in our law and culture.) For anyone who has examined the sexual-liberationist ideology whose hegemony in the elite sector of the culture makes the idea of same-sex “marriage” even possible, this is as unsurprising as the sun rising in the East. On sexual-liberationist premises, there is no reason (apart from the subjective tastes of this or that particular set of partners) for “marriages” to be monogamous and demand sexual fidelity.

LOPEZ: It’s a significant thing, isn’t it, that this was brought about by elected representatives, not judicial fiat?

GEORGE: That’s not the news here. The news is that a state senate controlled by the Republican party caved in to a liberal Democratic governor’s agenda to redefine marriage. It’s bad that it happened — bad for the party and bad for the state and nation. But if it was going to happen, it is better that it happened by the actions of the people’s elected representatives, and not by the fiat of judges pretending to be enforcing constitutional guarantees while, in truth, usurping democratic legislative authority. What happened in New York further damages marriage, to be sure, but it does not damage the Constitution and the rule of law, as Roe v.Wade notoriously did (and will continue to do until it is overturned), and as state judicial decisions redefining marriage did in Massachusetts and Iowa. Whatever one’s views on the question of how marriage should be defined, any friend of the Constitution should pray that the Supreme Court rejects the invitation on offer from Ted Olson and David Boies to pull another Roe v. Wade by redefining marriage for the whole nation in Perry v. Schwarzenegger.

LOPEZ: Could marriage’s Roe be a legislative endeavor, given the organizational pressure surrounding the issue of gay marriage?

GEORGE: In that sense, perhaps we’ve already had marriage’s Roe: It is known as “no-fault” or “unilateral” divorce. That was a major advance in the sexual revolution and paved the way for what came afterward. Many people have observed that the movement to redefine marriage is a symptom rather than a cause of the fundamental loss of understanding of the meaning of marriage, especially among elites. They are right. The divorce culture, though itself in some ways a symptom, is also a major cause of our problems. As we fight in other states and at the national level to prevent the redefinition and legal abolition of marriage, it is important to remember that this is merely the first step in a much larger struggle to renew and rebuild a healthy marriage culture.

It is worth noting that what has happened in New York will have at least one significant good effect for the pro-marriage cause. It will re-nationalize the marriage issue and propel it into the 2012 presidential primaries and general election. Republican candidates will be judged on how sincerely and forcefully they intend to fight to preserve marriage against redefinition, and the issue is likely to play a positive role for the eventual Republican nominee in critical swing states such as Ohio and Missouri, and possibly Pennsylvania, Michigan, and New Mexico. Advocates of redefining marriage (with a few savvy exceptions) are making the predictable error of overreading the significance of their victory in New York. They believe it will demoralize their opponents and finally make effective the argument that they have long waved around as if it were a magic wand: “Same-sex marriage is inevitable; you might as well surrender and get on the right side of history.” Although the loss for marriage in New York has damaged the morale of pro-marriage people in some places, especially in more liberal states where pro-marriage forces have long felt beleaguered, it seems to be reenergizing pro-marriage forces in more conservative states, including Ohio, Missouri, and Pennsylvania. They are determined to act now to make sure that what happened in New York does not happen to them. This is why you will see virtually all the Republican presidential aspirants pledge fidelity to marriage as the union of one man and one woman, and vow to protect marriage by vigorously defending the Defense of Marriage Act and supporting a Federal Marriage Amendment. It is also why we could see Barack Obama, who is no fool and whose chief political advisers are certainly not fools, suddenly hit the “pause” button on his “evolution” towards explicit support for redefining marriage.

LOPEZ: Can this be undone in New York?

GEORGE: Sure. Let’s not be under any illusions, though. The people who will lead the fight to preserve their victory in New York and use it as a springboard to victory in other states are formidable. They have enormous political and financial resources and, as they have proven, they know how to deploy them to win political battles. They are sincerely dedicated to their cause and filled with moral passion to advance what they deeply (albeit, in my view, mistakenly) believe is a civil-rights agenda. If I could choose opponents, I would choose different ones. Moreover, among them are people for whom I personally have great respect and even affection. They are good, patriotic people with whom I am proud to be allied in other very important struggles, and sad to be in political conflict with in this battle. I know how deeply they believe in their cause, and how determined they are to prevail. For some it is an intensely personal matter. So, those of us who seek to restore marriage in New York have our work cut out for us. If we are to succeed, it will take remarkable dedication, an enormous amount of hard work, some fervent prayers, and a bit of luck. Successful populist revolts against powerful, well-entrenched elites are not easy to pull off. But they are not impossible.

LOPEZ: Was there anything that specifically surprised you about the debate in New York?

GEORGE: Well, I was hoping that the Republican leadership would be more faithful to its base, but I can’t say that I was expecting it. Leaders in the Democratic party tend to be very faithful to their base. Just look at what they did for the unions in Wisconsin, with legislators even fleeing the state to stop legislation the unions didn’t like from going forward. Leaders in the Republican party tend to be faithful to . . . . well, I’m not quite sure what Republican leaders are faithful to. It used to be sound money, but they don’t even seem to be faithful to that any more.

LOPEZ: How significant is it that this governor is Catholic?

GEORGE: Is he? There are many devout Protestants and even Jews and Muslims whose moral beliefs and practices are far more closely in line with Catholic teachings than Andrew Cuomo’s are. Andrew’s father’s views and policies gave scandal (as Catholics use that term) precisely because people took him to be a serious Catholic. No one is scandalized by Andrew’s beliefs or conduct because no one takes him to be a serious Catholic, that is, a Catholic who is serious enough about his faith to live by its tenets. Indeed, he quite publicly flouts Catholic principles, and doesn’t even seem to wrestle with it or be anguished about it, as his father at least liked to give the appearance of being. In word and deed, he has made it clear that he simply does not believe what Catholicism teaches about sexual morality and marriage. There is no reason to suppose that he regards the Catholic Church as having the authority to teach definitively on these issues or anything else. If there is a sense in which he is a Catholic, it does not involve believing what the Catholic Church teaches or even that the Catholic Church has any authority to teach. So I don’t see Cuomo’s Catholicism as a significant part of this story. He doesn’t even pretend to be serious enough about it to make anyone care or even take much notice.

LOPEZ: Why weren’t churches able to stop it?

GEORGE: As I’ve noted, New York is one of the most socially liberal states in the country. The governor is a powerful, quasi-dynastic figure who knows how to brandish both carrots and sticks. He’s a tough hombre who knows how to get what he wants. He had the support not only of rich and powerful Democrats, but of wealthy, socially liberal Republicans as well. And, of course, he had the enthusiastic support of the entertainment industry, the intellectuals, people who are famous for being famous, the media, and other cultural elites. All Cuomo needed was to peel off two or three Republicans in the state senate. In a way, it’s amazing that the task proved as difficult as it did. In any event, New York is scarcely representative of the rest of the country. It is quite unlike Minnesota (where the next big marriage battle will occur), for example, or Missouri, or New Mexico, or South Carolina.


LOPEZ: Religious liberty came up in New York as it has elsewhere as both a final argument for freedom, but it also became cover here for some who were, perhaps, looking for an excuse to vote for the bill. How important is the religious-liberty component in the marriage debate? In these legislative contexts can the religious-liberty debate become a sideshow and pawn? What more can we do for marriage and religious liberty, which are two separate issues, however interrelated here?

GEORGE: Religious-liberty “protections” simply functioned to provide cover for Republican politicians such as Buffalo-area state senator Mark Grisanti who, having been elected on pro-marriage platforms (and in Grisanti’s case having personally solicited and received pro-marriage campaign contributions in 2008), decided for whatever reasons to flip-flop and cave to Governor Cuomo and his supporters on redefining marriage. In the next election cycle, they will claim, ludicrously, to have protected the rights of Catholics, evangelicals, Orthodox Jews, and other pro-marriage believers. The truth is that the so-called protections are hardly adequate to protect the rights of institutions and individuals who reject the sexual-liberationist orthodoxy. They are vague in certain key respects, and will almost surely be interpreted narrowly by the courts as providing only minimal protections. If some of the protections actually survive the judicial process as meaningful constraints on what can be imposed by the state on believers and their institutions in the cause of “marriage equality,” these protections will be the targets of legislative repeal over the next few years. If you ask, “What can be done going forward around the country to protect religious liberty?” the answer is this: Win the fight to preserve the legal definition of marriage as the conjugal union of husband and wife. Period.

LOPEZ: Why should anyone care about this debate anymore? A man and a man can legally get married in New York. The die is cast. Besides, who wants to be an intolerant anti-civil-rights bigot — or so my inbox has called me all weekend, again.

GEORGE: Well, people should care because the whole edifice of sexual-liberationist ideology is built on damaging and dehumanizing falsehoods. It has already done enormous harm — harm that falls on everybody, but disproportionately on those in the poorest and most vulnerable sectors of our society. If you doubt that, have a look at Myron Magnet’s great book The Dream and the Nightmare: The Sixties’ Legacy to the Underclass, or some of the writings of Kay Hymowitz and other serious people who have examined the social consequences for the poor of the embrace of sexual liberalism by celebrities and other cultural elites. Marriage is a profound human and social good; its weakening and loss is a tragedy from which affluent people can be distracted (and protected) by their affluence for only so long. The institution of marriage has already been deeply wounded by divorce at nearly plague levels, widespread non-marital sexual cohabitation, and other damaging factors. To redefine it out of existence in law is to make it much more difficult to restore a sound understanding of marriage on which a healthy marriage culture can be rebuilt for the good of all. It is to sacrifice the needs of the poor, who are hurt the most when a sound public understanding of marriage and sexual morality collapses. It is to give up on the truth that children need both a father and mother, and benefit from the security of their love for each other.

So people are calling you “intolerant” and an “anti-civil-rights bigot”? Well, for those who have absorbed the premises of sexual liberation and embraced its dogmas so fanatically that they can’t fathom the possibility that any reasonable person of goodwill could dissent from them, that’s what people like you and me seem to be. Like overly impassioned believers at all times and in all places, these folks suppose that anyone who doubts the tenets of their faith must have malign motives. Dissenters from what they regard as an unquestionable orthodoxy must be “haters” (the modern word for “heretics”). It’s ironic — and amusing — that these folks regard themselves as urbane, sophisticated people — critical thinkers — who are much smarter and better informed (not to mention more “tolerant” and “open-minded”) than their opponents. In truth, they rarely have the foggiest notion of what the arguments are in support of the view they reject or what the intellectual challenges are for the view they hold. They already know the truth, and that’s that! So what need is there for reflection, study, deliberation, and debate? Why argue with “intolerant, anti-civil-rights bigots”? To the barricades!


Of course, there is an astonishing degree of ignorance on display in all this, especially when considered in proportion to the certitude and moral passion of sexual liberalism’s true believers. Perhaps it is too much to ask of them, but for those who might (perhaps secretly, when no “sophisticated,” “urbane” friends are looking) want to know why those of us on the other side dissent, and who might be wiling to consider what we believe are the damning intellectual challenges that same-sex “marriage” advocates have not met and cannot meet, here again is the link to “What is Marriage?


— Kathryn Jean Lopez is editor-at-large of National Review Online.

El parlamento polaco aprueba un histórico proyecto de ley que prohíbe todo aborto. 600.000 firmas respaldan la iniciativa

In Religión Confidencial

La cámara baja del parlamento polaco ha aprobado por 254 votos a favor frente a 151 en contra una iniciativa popular que consagra la protección plena de los niños en el seno materno. Los defensores del proyecto debían recoger 100.000 firmas en 3 meses, pero han conseguido 600.000 en sólo dos semanas. Los obispos apoyan la iniciativa.

El proyecto ha sido promovido por la Fundación PRO de Varsovia, apoyada por un comité parlamentario pro-vida.

El aborto fue impuesto en Polonia por los nazis y, posteriormente, por los soviéticos. “Este proyecto constituye una oportunidad para rechazar completamente la herencia del nazismo y el comunismo, con los que llegó el aborto a Polonia”, ha declarado a Lifesitenews-Notifam Jacek Sapa, de la Fundación PRO. “Fueron Hitler y Stalin quienes impusieron esto a los polacos, y ya es hora de que nos disociemos claramente de estas ideologías de muerte”.

El arzobispo de Cracovia, cardenal Stanislaw Dziwisz, ha señalado que “la Iglesia enseña claramente que es obligación para los católicos lograr una completa protección de la vida. Yo apoyo todos los esfuerzos dirigidos en ampliar la protección para la vida humana”.

Desde que los comunistas fueron derrotados en 1989, Polonia se ha esforzado en recuperar su herencia cultural y religiosa. Como parte de este proyecto, en 1993 el país aprobó una de las leyes de aborto más restrictivas del mundo. Desde entonces la tasa de abortos ha disminuido de 82.000 en 1989 a unos 500 en 2008.

Bajo la ley actual, se puede abortar en Polonia cuando al niño se le diagnostica un defecto o enfermedad grave, la madre tiene un problema de salud, o el embarazo se da como resultado de “un acto ilícito”.

El proyecto de ley elimina las tres causas que despenalizan el aborto. Si el texto es aprobado también en la cámara alta del parlamento, los médicos que practiquen abortos se enfrentarán a penas de hasta 8 años de cárcel si el niño era viable. Las mismas condenas serán aplicables a toda persona que presione o ayude a una mujer a abortar. La madre, en cambio, no se enfrentará a ningún cargo.

Liberalização do aborto - Irreversível, porquê? - Pedro Vaz Patto

por Pedro Vaz Patto

Quase por acaso, a eventual alteração da lei que entre nós liberalizou o aborto foi abordada na recente campanha eleitoral. A uma hipotética e remota possibilidade de alteração dessa lei foi dada uma veemente resposta por muitos políticos: «podem tirar o cavalinho da chuva»; «a sociedade não volta para traz»; seria «um retrocesso civilizacional». Se os partidários da liberalização não pararam enquanto não convocaram um segundo referendo depois da derrota no primeiro, igual direito não é reconhecido aos adversários dessa liberalização quanto à eventual convocação de um terceiro referendo. Parece, assim, que estamos no domínio do intocável e do irreversível.

Esta ideia de uma inexorável lei histórica choca, porém, com os princípios que regem as democracias e as sociedades abertas, onde, como também foi a propósito salientado, temas como este não podem ser “tabu”. «O futuro está aberto» - salientava Karl Popper quando contrapunha esses princípios à visão marxista de uma história fechada e pré-determinada.

E essa suposta irreversibilidade também não é confirmada pela história recente. A Polónia tem hoje, e na sequência da queda do regime comunista, uma legislação que restringe acentuadamente o aborto, com reflexos efectivos na sua prática, depois de ter conhecido uma experiência de verdadeira banalização. A opinião pública dos Estados Unidos – confirmam-no os mais recentes estudos – aceita cada vez menos o status quo da liberalização do aborto - de que esse país foi pioneiro desde o longínquo ano de 1973 - e a tendência pró-vida é aí hoje quase maioritária. Por estes dias, discute-se na Rússia uma alteração legislativa, com motivações de ordem ética e demográfica, tendente à restrição do aborto (designadamente o fim do seu financiamento público), cuja prática chega actualmente aos 74 por cada 100 nascimentos.

Quanto ao “retrocesso civilizacional”, uma ideia não deixa de me vir à mente.

No Império Romano, os primeiros cristãos distinguiam-se do comum das pessoas por não aderirem a uma prática então generalizada: a morte ou abandono de crianças recém-nascidas e não desejadas. Assim o afirma a célebre Carta a Dioneto, que traça um retrato desse grupo. Ilustres filósofos gregos e latinos aceitaram essa prática sem remorsos. Se hoje ela nos choca, devemo-lo às raízes judaico-cristãs da nossa cultura. Na tutela da vida, em especial das crianças, dos deficientes, dos mais débeis e indefesos, identificamos um sinal de autêntico progresso civilizacional. Progressos civilizacionais, encontramo-los no cada vez menos frequente recurso à pena de morte, ou à guerra como forma de resolução dos conflitos. É a cada vez mais acentuada tutela da vida humana que pode representar um progresso civilizacional. Não certamente o contrário.

Assistimos hoje, porém, ao requestionar da ilicitude moral do infanticídio. Influentes filósofos como Peter Singer e Michael Tooley defendem a licitude dessa prática. A razão fundamental tem a ver com a “desumanização” da criança recém-nascida a partir de argumentos que também serviram para “desumanizar” o feto e assim legitimar o aborto; se o feto não é pessoa, também não o é a criança recém-nascida; se o feto deficiente não tem direito à vida, também não o terá a criança recém-nascida com uma deficiência que só então possa ser detectada. Afinal, o que distingue substancialmente um ser humano pouco antes ou pouco depois de nascer?

Não será certamente este um “progresso civilizacional”. Regressamos a visões pré-cristãs que se pensariam superadas, além do mais porque também contrárias a qualquer visão humanista.

Para muitos, e por isto mesmo, a liberalização do aborto nunca poderá ser vista como “progresso civilizacional”. Têm, pelo menos, o direito de ser ouvidos e considerados, e não marginalizados como “ultra-conservadores “ ou “ultra minoritários”.

EEUU quiere imponer ideología gay en países católicos


WASHINGTON D.C., 03 Jul. 11 / 11:45 pm (ACI)

La Secretaria de Estado de Estados Unidos, Hillary Clinton, alabó la labor de su departamento en la promoción de la ideología gay con eventos como las "marchas de orgullo" y un concierto de Lady Gaga en Roma (Italia). Dos expertos advierten que esta postura de la administración Obama también podría terminar por imponer esta ideología en países católicos.

Austin Ruse, Presidente del Instituto Catholic Family and Human Rights en Estados Unidos, explicó a ACI Prensa que "la administración Obama ha hecho que la agenda de los grupos LGBT (lesbianas, gays, bisexuales y transexuales) sea uno de los pilares en su política internacional".

"Han hecho que las embajadas en todo el mundo monitoreen y asistan a los colectivos homosexuales sin importar si la gente del país la aceptan (la agenda LGBT) o no", agregó.

Ruse dijo a ACI Prensa que "Estados Unidos es muy poderoso y puede forzar a los gobiernos del mundo a someterse a sus perspectivas para las políticas sociales".

Como nuestra de este apoyo de Clinton y la administración Obama a la ideología gay que busca destruir el concepto de matrimonio natural, compuesto por un hombre y una mujer, y la familia que se funda en ella, el pasado 27 de junio organizaron junto a la organización de gays y lesbianas de las agencias de relaciones exteriores, una celebración del orgullo LGBT.

Los miembros de estas instituciones reunieron a 20 jefes de misiones de la ONU y los hicieron firmar una declaración pública en apoyo a la marcha del 27 y alentaron "un debate respetuoso y productivo sobre derechos LGBT".

Tras una serie de iniciativas ejecutadas en Italia, el único país de Europa que no cuenta con legislación sobre este tema, y Eslovaquia, Clinton explicó en el evento del 27 de junio que el Departamento de Estado también promueve los llamados "derechos homosexuales" en Honduras, Uganda, Malawi, Rusia, Turquía, China y otros países.

También destacó el gran esfuerzo en el Consejo de Derechos Humanos de la ONU en Ginebra donde obtuvieron que se ordene realizar un estudio para medir "el grado de discriminación por orientación sexual o identidad de género en el mundo", celebrado por la prensa secular como algo "histórico" por considerarla la primera resolución de este tipo en este organismo.

Asimismo, el departamento de relaciones exteriores de Estados Unidos y su misión permanente ante la Organización de Estados Americanos (OEA) ha generado un "obsevatorio" especial para "derechos LGTB" dentro de la Comisión Interamericana de Derechos Humanos (CIDH).

Sobre este tema, Rebecha Marchinda, Directora legal de la organización World Youth Alliance, –cuya labor se realizada mayormente ante la ONU– señaló a ACI Prensa que esta política de promoción de la ideología gay, especialmente en países católicos, "puede terminar en la alienación de la Iglesia del espacio público y del debate sobre estos temas".

"En vez de reconocer que los estados tienen razones legítimas para reconocer el matrimonio y la familia como instituciones, Estados Unidos busca enfrentar a la Iglesia Católica con la sociedad civil afirmando que su oposición a esta ideología se basa solamente en ideas retrógradas", denunció Marchinda.

Algunas de estas razones legítimas, explicó, son anteriores a la cuestión religiosa y promueven la dignidad humana y el bien común.

Rebecha Marchinda dijo también a ACI Prensa que no existe una definición aceptada internacionalmente sobre lo que significa "orientación sexual" o "identidad de género" y sin embargo las autoridades de Estados Unidos siguen usando estos términos en su labor referente a derechos humanos.

Con ellos, resaltó, "se genera confusión entre los estados miembros de la ONU y especialmente entre aquellos que reciben políticas generadas con este lenguaje para ser aplicadas en sus naciones".

Estos conceptos nacen de la ideología de género, una corriente relativista que nació en Estados Unidos hace unos 30 años y se desarrolló luego en Europa de acuerdo a la ideología del feminismo y del pensamiento gay.

Lo que busca es afirmar que la diferencia entre hombre y mujer es un hecho social antes que algo biológico para dar la idea de que la orientación sexual –y con ello la identidad de género y el papel del género– contaría más que el sexo biológico natural.


domingo, 3 de julho de 2011

Cardeal Policarpo "não foi preciso ao falar do sacerdócio"

REDAÇÃO CENTRAL, 02 Jul. 11 / 04:31 pm (ACI)

O Patriarca de Lisboa (Portugal) Cardeal Jose Policarpo, não está a favor das ordenações femininas porém "não foi preciso ao falar do sacerdócio em uma recente entrevista" assinalou à agência ACI Prensa uma fonte do Episcopado português.

Falando apenas como referência, posto que o Cardeal Policarpo é a figura mais importante da Igreja em Portugal, uma fonte do Episcopado disse à ACI Prensa que as informações que assinalam o Patriarca de Lisboa como partidário da ordenação sacerdotal feminina "selecionaram deliberadamente passagens de uma entrevista que em si mesma foi pouco clara".

Segundo a fonte, o Cardeal, que em maio de 2011 foi eleito presidente da Conferencia Episcopal de Portugal aos 75 anos, "tentou explicar a doutrina católica sobre o sacerdócio a um meio secular, que não está familiarizado com o catolicismo. O resultado da entrevista foi pouco feliz, mas concluir que ele apoiou a ordenação feminina é um exagero e até mesmo uma distorção do ele que disse".

O Cardeal abordou o tema da ordenação sacerdotal em duas perguntas durante uma extensa entrevista concedida à edição de maio 2011 da revista da Ordem dos Advogados (OA) de Portugal (equivalente à OAB no Brasil ou a American Bar Association nos EUA).

As respostas do Cardeal foram textualmente as seguintes:

Pergunta: As mulheres não podem ocupar cargos de responsabilidade na Igreja Católica. Qual a sua perspectiva?

Cardeal Policarpo: A sua afirmação não é exata, olhe, desde S. Paulo… O problema que foi posto recentemente é o do sacerdócio ministerial. Tirando isso, houve períodos em que as mulheres foram absolutamente decisivas; basta pensar no papel dos mosteiros, onde tinham altíssimas responsabilidades.

O problema que se colocou foi acentuado pelo fato de igrejas não católicas terem ordenado mulheres para o sacerdócio ministerial, o que gerou, digamos assim, uma polêmica. A posição da Igreja Católica está muito baseada no Evangelho, não tem a autonomia que tem, por exemplo, um partido político ou um governo em geral. Tem a sua fidelidade ao Evangelho, à pessoa de Jesus e a uma tradição muito forte que nós recebemos dos Apóstolos.

E já no tempo de Jesus havia uma complementaridade muito bonita entre o papel da mulher e o papel do homem. Não foi por acaso que Jesus escolheu para apóstolos homens e deu às mulheres outro tipo de atenção... Acho que este é um falso problema.

Uma vez, estava numa comunidade de jovens aqui na Diocese e, quando chegamos ao diálogo, houve uma jovem que lançou a pergunta: por que as mulheres não podem ser padres? E eu resolvi arriscar. E disse: tens razão, mas os outros estudarem esse assunto é necessário saber se há candidatas… qual de vocês gostaria de seguir? Ficaram todas de cabeça para baixo.

Conheci e conheço mulheres responsáveis na Igreja que não querem o sacerdócio ministerial. Uma vez, num contexto de um encontro internacional sobre a nova evangelização, em Viena, foi lançada essa pergunta e eu disse que não há neste momento nenhum Papa que tenha poder para isso. Isso traria tensões, e só acontecerá se Deus quiser que aconteça e se estiver nos planos Dele acontecerá.

Uma vez perguntei (sobre o tema) a um sacerdote (evangélico) na Dinamarca, e ele foi muito curioso e disse-me que no setor da caridade estão lá todas, com sua ternura e dedicação; no que toca à presidência da missa dominical, ela esvaziou- se assim que começaram as mulheres a presidir. Não sei por quê.

O Santo Padre João Paulo II, a certa altura, pareceu dirimir a questão. Penso que a questão não se dirime assim; teologicamente não há nenhum obstáculo fundamental; há esta tradição, digamos assim… nunca foi de outra maneira.

Pergunta: Do ponto de vista teológico, não há nenhum obstáculo…

Cardeal Policarpo: Penso que não há nenhum obstáculo fundamental. É uma igualdade fundamental de todos os membros da Igreja. O problema põe-se noutra ótica, numa forte tradição, que vem de Jesus, e na facilidade com que outras igrejas reformadas foram para aí.

Isto não facilitou a solução do problema, se é que o problema tem solução. Com certeza não é para nossa vida, hoje então, no momento que estamos a viver, é um daqueles problemas que é melhor nem levantar… suscita uma série de reações.