This letter is associated with the following article:
Letters
Wednesday, September 20, 2006 12:00 AM

Back to the Dark Ages

Pope Benedict's animosity toward other faiths reveals a deep arrogance rooted in a blinkered Catholicism utterly out of place in the 21st century.

Read other letters about this article

  • Wednesday, September 20, 2006 12:15 PM

    Fellow Travelers

    Madeleine Bunting, frequent columinist of the Guardian newspaper of the UK, is know for her outrageous and controversial columns. A regular in "Comment is Free" on the Guardian site, she attracts a huge amount of ire (as well as support) from the public. But in this and in several similar editorials published in the past few days on Benedict's remarks, she has placed herself so far into the lunatic gallery of "blame the messenger" that I fear she will never recover.

    The Pope made a speech that advanced the thought that conversion or religious discourse through the sword was unacceptable. That is the thesis that should be debated. Who cares about the Pope's past - and using it as a flail to discredit anything that the man can ever utter is unfair. The point is that the man said that faith must not be forced - and rational discourse should be the rule now.

    No where does it say that both sides of this "debate" - Islam or Catholcism - have clean hands - Tours, the Siege of Vienna, the Crusades and the Inquisition are all dark spots on both sides. So please don't start the "he hit me first" school of debate to justify why the subject cannot be broached for debate.

    I find the most troubling passage this one from the story:

    An elderly Catholic nun has already been killed in Somalia, perhaps in retaliation for the pope's remarks;

    and contrast it with similar remarks by Ms Bunting on the Guardian site on September 18 (which ignited a firestorm of debate):

    An elderly Catholic nun has already been killed in Somalia and tragically other good people could lose their lives for the foolishness of this global leader. (september 18)

    Which essential holds Benedict responsible for her murder. So to speak is now to kill.

    This attitude was echoed on NPR (Diane Rehm - Sept 19) by a Islamic scholar of a major US university - that the Pope's statements "themselves are acts of violence".

    So we now have a situation where mere words are violence and justify all actions taken against them. Sorry - Western liberal tradition says not. People like Ms Bunting are just the fellow travellers that try to gloss over the facts that rational discourse cannot sacrificed on the altar of political correctness, no matter who is the person doing the speaking. Dark Ages indeed: Muzzling speech by writers like this to vent their dislike of others will send us back into that period faster than they can imagine.

Most Active Letters Threads

405

I'm thankful I'm not President Obama

Backers deride Katrina-style negligence, haters hate him more each day. Can this presidency be saved? Of course
320

Greg Craig and Obama's worsening civil liberties record

A new Time account of the fall of Obama's White House counsel sheds much light on rule of law issues.
317

Tough-guy John Bolton, hiding under his bed

As usual, right-wing pseudo-warriors are drowning in extreme cowardice.
153

Phil Carter's resignation from key detainee policy post

Many of the "War on Terror" policies he spent years condemning were ones expressly embraced by Obama.
107

A key British official reminds us of the forgotten anthrax attack

A vast array of establishment and expert sources do not believe this episode was really resolved.

View all »

Letters Help

Currently in Salon