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The two comments cited above were completely predictable and could have been written by any of us well in advance of the Pope’s trip. They are essentially meaningless. More important is to compare Benedict to John Paul. An excellent 2002 essay titled The Pope’s Left Turn On Immigration by Catholic convert and Turnabout blogger Jim Kalb summarized John Paul’s immigration radicalism. Kalb, in an e-mail exchange I had with him, pointed me to a double-speak 2006 quote about immigration from Benedict that leaves indicates he may be less strident. Speaking from Clementine Hall in Vatican City, thousands of miles away from the political correctness of Washington, D.C. Benedict said in tones more delicate than anything ever uttered by John Paul: “Single believers are called to open their arms and their hearts to every person, from whatever nation they come, allowing the authority responsible for public life to enforce the relevant laws held to be appropriate for a healthy co-existence." Open your arms and hearts but enforce the law! (Read Benedict’s entire speech here.)
Despite his relative lack of sway in the U.S., it is nevertheless it is possible for Pope Benedict to have an impact on immigration and create the “humane solutions” he seeks if he would turn his attention to Mexico where his views are more persuasive. Here’s what we—and the Pope—know.
Human Rights Watch concluded that Mexico “has helped create an atmosphere of distrust that hinders human rights progress." [“Report Reveals Human Rights Abuses in Mexico,” Manuel Roig Franzia, Washington Post, April 8, 2008] To which country then should the Pope (and his U.S. Cardinals) address his immigration suggestions? Which country is to blame for the immigration mess? The answers are obvious. Let the Pope preach to Mexico’s Roman Catholic president Felipe Calderón. Encourage the Mexican Cardinals to light a fire under the 90 percent Catholic population of the country to demand internal reforms. Catholic authority in Mexico is declining but still powerful. In an official statement issued by the White House and the Holy See, Pope Benedict and Bush agreed to “respect the dignity of the human person…and human rights…” Again, that’s a message that needs to be heard in Mexico. We in the U.S. have done our part to promote humanity by accepting waves of illegal immigrants, mostly from Mexico, into our country and nurturing them while they flout the law. Now its Mexico’s turn to show compassion for its own. Joe Guzzardi [e-mail him] is the Editor of VDARE.COM Letters to the Editor. In addition, he is an English teacher at the Lodi Adult School and has been writing a weekly newspaper column since 1988. This column is exclusive to VDARE.COM. |
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