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KIWI
10-24-2009, 04:06 AM
has the pope got the fencing gear out again?....no lover of organized relgion me, but the if lives of even a few people improve, it doesnt really matter who is ladling the soup.....whatever comes of it ....good on them I say, ha ha...Im gonna watch that space !

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/8323536.stm

[offsite:tnkc9q01]More than 200 Roman Catholic bishops from across Africa have called on corrupt political leaders in the continent to repent or step down.

The bishops accused Catholic leaders in Africa of having fallen "woefully short" and also condemned non-Catholic leaders and outside foreign interests.

These included multinationals that had damaged the environment and exploited natural resources, they said.

The BBC's David Willey said the 12-page message was unusually strong.

Reporting from Rome, he said that the message was issued from the Vatican at the end of a three-week closed-door synod.

Our correspondent says the bishops named no names, but the Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe and the Angolan President Eduardo Dos Santos are two prominent Catholic leaders accused by their critics of corruption.

'Saints needed'

"Many Catholics in high office have fallen woefully short in their performance in office," the bishops' statement said.

"The synod calls on such people to repent, or quit the public arena and stop causing havoc to the people and giving the Catholic Church a bad name."

The bishops also said Africa needed "saints" who could "clean the continent of corruption, work for the good of the people".

One former African leader, the late Julius Nyerere of Tanzania, is being considered by Church authorities as a possible candidate for sainthood.

The bishops' statement also offered a stinging rebuke against multinational companies operating in Africa.

"Multinationals have to stop their criminal devastation of the environment in their greedy exploitation of natural resources," it said.

But the bishops added: "Whatever may be the responsibility of foreign interests, there is always the shameful and tragic collusion of the local leaders."

They said these included "politicians who betray and sell out their nations, dirty business people who collude with rapacious multinationals, African arms dealers and traffickers who thrive on small arms that cause great havoc on human lives".

They also listed "local agents of some international organisations who get paid for peddling toxic ideologies that they don't believe in", a reference to groups that promote abortion rights.[/offsite:tnkc9q01]

boycotteverything
10-24-2009, 04:22 AM
has the pope got the fencing gear out again?....no lover of organized relgion me, but the if lives of even a few people improve, it doesnt really matter who is ladling the soup.....whatever comes of it ....good on them I say, ha ha...Im gonna watch that space !amen to that. there have been thousands of progressive Catholic leaders- most of the Jebbies- who have brought light and good to the poor. they're the ones who take the Beatitudes seriously.

KIWI
10-24-2009, 04:31 AM
"Multinationals have to stop their criminal devastation of the environment in their greedy exploitation of natural resources," it said.

ooh ,this may have some potential......there a lot of unhappy Africans out there, I guess its all about exposure now....where and when will the MSM apply the "full-nelson" ?

boycotteverything
10-24-2009, 04:39 AM
Africa has become a capitalist feeding frenzy. The worst offender appears to be state capitalist China.

KIWI
10-24-2009, 05:02 AM
aah so - -

Chorlton
10-24-2009, 08:28 AM
The only worthwhile title for this thread should be

'Bishops castrate African leaders'

KIWI
10-24-2009, 08:54 AM
were you a rejected alter-boy?

Chorlton
10-24-2009, 09:15 AM
Yeah, they wouldnt let me chat-up the nuns

KIWI
10-24-2009, 09:34 AM
bastards!......unless your into into "body fluids" you wont get fuck all change off a priest

boycotteverything
10-24-2009, 01:53 PM
All I can add is that Liberation Theology, despite the popes, is still alive and well. Quoting Dr. Exile quoting Dr. Einstein in a different thread:
All religions, arts and sciences are branches of the same tree. All these aspirations are directed toward ennobling man’s life, lifting it from the sphere of mere physical existence and leading the individual toward freedom. It is no mere chance that our older universities have developed from clerical schools.Why should we care about this? Simply because the guy who inspired such activism spoke of methods by which the seemingly endless circle of violence and despair might be ended. And while you and I are not particularly 'religious' in the ordinary (trivial) sense of the word we remain both in awe of human potential and discouraged by human degradation. And what is the methodology he spoke of? Simply love- for one another, for wisdom, for the planet. Love comes about not by any willful act but by the gift of imagination. That is the first principle- and that is what he, the Liberationists, and Einstein continue to teach.

And quoting Dr. Guevara- Let me say at the point of seeming ridiculous that the true Revolutionary is motivated by great feelings of love.

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