Yesterday he took a swipe at arms manufacturers and dealers
People who manufacture weapons or invest in weapons industries are hypocrites if they call themselves Christian, Pope Francis said on Sunday.
Francis issued his toughest condemnation to date of the weapons industry at a rally of thousands of young people at the end of the first day of his trip to the Italian city of Turin.
Demographic growth is NOT fully compatible with an integral and shared development.
He makes a fair point that rich people are generally more responsible for resource consumption than poorer people, but totally ignores the effect of the sheer numbers and seems to be advocating an EVER GROWING population...... Until the Catholic Church come to their senses on this fundamental issue, they can't preach on environmental issues with any credibility. This is the same organisation that said the earth was flat and persecuted Galileo, despite a huge body of evidence to the contrary.....
Doing something about it is another issue, as it would impinge on Human Rights....
Mrs Ghandi tried a programme of forced sterilisation and the Chinese have tried a 1 child policy.....
It's going to require something a lot more concerted, radical and global....
But will we do it to protect ourselves ???
biffvernon wrote:Yesterday he took a swipe at arms manufacturers and dealers
The root of many wars is access to land/oil/food/water etc. which all have over population at their core. More people = more pressure on resources = more wars. Fewer people = less pressure on resources = less conflict.
The arms manufacturers & dealers, unpleasant as they are, are only one of the symptoms...
Simples.
Last edited by Mark on 22 Jun 2015, 17:31, edited 1 time in total.
Mark wrote:seems to be advocating an EVER GROWING population......
Exactly where in the encyclical does he actually advocate an EVER GROWING population?
The Catholic Church is an extremely conservative institution and any change comes very slowly. My late father spent much of his life campaigning for the Church to change its stance on birth control and his arguments were accepted by some, even some cardinals, within the Vatican. But it was never sufficient. Today there is still more division below the surface, even though a united front is maintained. For Pope Francis to swing the church round on this issue would be an enormous achievement, unlikely but just conceivable. Right now with this encyclical he is focussing on the more urgent tasks related to global warming and social justice. He may realise that with greater social justice and the women's education and healthcare that come with it, population will take care of itself despite the dinosaurs in the Church. You only have to look at the less than replacement level birth rate of Catholic Italy to realise the limits of the Church's influence in this area.
I do think it is wrong to criticise Laudato Si for the sins of commission and omission that are outwith the purpose of this encyclical.
it must nonetheless be recognized that demographic growth is fully compatible with an integral and shared development
Semantics maybe, but this reads to me that he is happy to advocate an ever growing population.....
The influence of the Catholic Church may be reduced in western democracies such as Italy & Spain, but it is still alive and kicking in South America, the Philippines, parts of Africa..... If he believes that global warming is such an issue, he should use his influence in areas where he can have the greatest impact (birth control) rather than areas already well covered (such as advising people to switch the lights off).
If this sounds like an anti-Catholic rant, I think that the leaders of the other major religions should also be speaking out about birth control.... They won't though - more kids = more followers.... Very few politicians will touch the subject either, as there are no votes in it.....
it must nonetheless be recognized that demographic growth is fully compatible with an integral and shared development
Semantics maybe, but this reads to me that he is happy to advocate an ever growing population.....
The influence of the Catholic Church may be reduced in western democracies such as Italy & Spain, but it is still alive and kicking in South America, the Philippines, parts of Africa..... If he believes that global warming is such an issue, he should use his influence in areas where he can have the greatest impact (birth control) rather than areas already well covered (such as advising people to switch the lights off).
If this sounds like an anti-Catholic rant, I think that the leaders of the other major religions should also be speaking out about birth control.... They won't though - more kids = more followers.... Very few politicians will touch the subject either, as there are no votes in it.....
Mark wrote:Until the Catholic Church come to their senses on this fundamental issue, they can't preach on environmental issues with any credibility.
I don't subscribe to the idea that because someone says something stupid we should dismiss everything else they say as stupid. Equally, just because someone said/did something amazing in the past it doesn't follow that there'll be any sense in anything else they say or do.
Sure, the Catholic Church has some major and inexcusable problems - but that shouldn't detract from them when they say something eminently sensible - as much of this encyclical is.
Latest from Richard Heinberg at the Post Carbon Institute regarding the Pope's encyclical:
This could be big.
Religious and ethical impulses are powerful shapers of human behavior. That’s why, here in the US, corporate leaders long ago found ways to use religion to promote the notions that extreme economic inequality is perfectly fine with the Almighty, and that government regulations are the work of the devil (the story is recounted in this helpful article).
Today we are faced with the mother of all environmental crises (otherwise known as climate change), to which markets and pro-growth governments can provide no adequate response. Meanwhile the rapid economic expansion that characterized the late 20th century is ending, and the winners of that fossil-fueled lottery are intent on maintaining and strengthening their hold on the world’s eroding wealth. If humanity is to alter course toward environmental and social sustainability, only a profound, pervasive change of heart can inspire the kinds of shared sacrifice and collective effort that will be needed.
It’s at this pivotal moment that a new pope appears on the scene urging exactly that kind of change of heart. The papal encyclical released today (written entirely by Pope Francis) is a 190-page urgent call to action on two issues—climate change and economic inequality—that frames both issues in ethical, spiritual, and religious terms.
Conservative politicians and business leaders are bound to be unhappy, but they would be foolish to try discrediting the messenger. That’s because Pope Francis has attained rock star status; he’s even graced the cover of Rolling Stone. The “Francis effect” is bringing young Catholics back to church vocations, and Raúl Castro is so smitten with the “people’s pontiff” that the communist leader says he’ll even consider going to church. After decades of allegations and court cases about priests abusing children, Catholics now have a figurehead whose positive poll numbers surpass those of any predecessor since such surveys began.
And he’s a populist environmentalist. Jorge Mario Bergoglio, born in Argentina, chose the papal name Francis in solidarity with Catholicism’s most ecological of saints. Francis of Assisi adopted a lifestyle of voluntary poverty and preached the duty of humanity to protect and enjoy nature; Pope Francis is following in those same footsteps.
Real action on issues of climate change and economic inequality will require sustained hard work, and as that work proceeds currently wealthy swathes of the world’s populace will see their living standards erode substantially. Ahead lies resistance and conflict—that almost goes without saying. But now that the world’s most iconic and popular religious figure has weighed in on the side of the underdogs, the fight could get interesting.
Sophie Yeo, writing for Carbon Brief, gave a good account of the breadth and depth of advice that the Pope received.
Thanks to the personal involvement of Francis, who himself once worked as a chemist in Argentina, the scientists' stamp appears throughout the document.
Cardinal Turkson, president of the Pontifical Council for Peace and Justice, wrote the first draft, with Francis steering it into its final shape, taking a week in March to finesse the final edition.
it must nonetheless be recognized that demographic growth is fully compatible with an integral and shared development
Semantics maybe, but this reads to me that he is happy to advocate an ever growing population.....
The influence of the Catholic Church may be reduced in western democracies such as Italy & Spain, but it is still alive and kicking in South America,...
Semantics? 'recognized' has a very different meaning to 'advocate'.
There is little correlation between total fertility rate and Catholicism and to suggest that a high birth rate is still alive and kicking in South America is at variance with the data. TFR in Brazil is 1.69, Argentina 2.3, Chile 1.9. By comparison, the UK TFR is also 1.9 and the World average is 2.5. The Philipenes does come in a bit higher, at 3.06, but even this Catholic country ranks only 53rd in the TFR league table.
No, 'breeding like rabbits', which the Pope said we do not have to do, is confined to the poorest countries, and social justice that removes these wealth disparities is at the heart of Laudato Si. This Pope wants us to stop global warming and have a sustainable population.
it must nonetheless be recognized that demographic growth is fully compatible with an integral and shared development
Semantics maybe, but this reads to me that he is happy to advocate an ever growing population.....
The influence of the Catholic Church may be reduced in western democracies such as Italy & Spain, but it is still alive and kicking in South America,...
Semantics? 'recognized' has a very different meaning to 'advocate'.
There is little correlation between total fertility rate and Catholicism and to suggest that a high birth rate is still alive and kicking in South America is at variance with the data. TFR in Brazil is 1.69, Argentina 2.3, Chile 1.9. By comparison, the UK TFR is also 1.9 and the World average is 2.5. The Philipenes does come in a bit higher, at 3.06, but even this Catholic country ranks only 53rd in the TFR league table.
No, 'breeding like rabbits', which the Pope said we do not have to do, is confined to the poorest countries, and social justice that removes these wealth disparities is at the heart of Laudato Si. This Pope wants us to stop global warming and have a sustainable population.
it must nonetheless be recognized - must be recognised ? by whom ? not by me.... demographic growth is fully compatible with an integral and shared development - fully compatible with sustainable development ? I don't think so....
Biff, you can argue that black is white if you wish, but his actual words don't back up your assertion that this Pope wants a sustainable population. A sustainable population is one with a significant reduction, not demographic growth.... As mentioned previously, when he starts speaking about birth control he might have more credibility.
LOL. I'm an atheist, I'm in favour of a woman's right to choose an abortion and to have free access to all possible means of family planning. I also think that over the centuries the Catholic Church has been generally bonkers and often a source of great harm, so I'm not rushing into defending it!
However, Laudato Si is a damn good piece of writing and as far as I can see the Pope is pushing the Church towards a better direction just about as hard as he dares. I do think it's wrong to criticise him because other people within his Church have been bad.
biffvernon wrote:I do think it is wrong to criticise Laudato Si for the sins of commission and omission that are outwith the purpose of this encyclical.
Not wrong. One can only judge by deeds, not words. Judgement day has not arrived.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
There's a difference between judging the contents of this one document, judging the Pope, which might be better done after he has had a goodly time in office, and judging the whole works of the Catholic Church.