Spain's King Juan Carlos Faces Excommunication if He Assents to Abortion Bill
December 7, 2009 by Patrick Madrid
Filed under Patrick's Blog
The Spanish press is highlighting the dilemma faced by Juan Carlos, king of Spain, a Catholic, who may be called upon to sign into law a bill that, if passed, would further liberalize abortion.
On November 25th, Spain’s Catholic bishops warned that those politicians who vote in favor of the law will have excommunicated themselves, having put themselves in an “objective state of sin.” The bishops wrote that “while the situation lasts,” politicians who vote in favor of the law “may not be admitted to Holy Communion.”
However, the Spanish Constitution of 1978 stipulates that new laws must be promulgated by the king, who is head of state, but who now faces possible excommunication if he gives royal assent to the bill.
Prominent Spanish Catholics are calling on the king to refuse to sign the law. In an article appearing on the website Religion en Libertad, titled, “The King should not sign the abortion law,” the head of the lobby group HazteOir, Nacho Arsuaga, said the country could be heading for a constitutional crisis over the bill.
“The king of a democratic state under the law cannot sign a law approving the right of a few to kill other human beings. With this law, the government is de facto destroying the validity of the Spanish constitution, which stipulates in its Article 15 the right to life.” Arsuaga called on the king either to refuse to sign or to abdicate.
Javier Maria Perez-Roldan, president of the Thomas More Law Center, said that the law would “contradict the principle of monarchy,” which “loses all authority if it is exercised against the common good.”
Arsuaga’s article quotes politicians and the heads of a number of Catholic organizations who have called on the king to abdicate in imitation of King Baudouin of Belgium, who in 1990 temporarily renounced his throne rather than sign his country’s law liberalizing abortion. They also cited the more recent case of Henri, Grand Duke of Luxembourg, who refused last year to sign the duchy’s law legalizing euthanasia and who may be stripped of his constitutional powers as a result.
Milian Manuel Mestre, a businessman and politician and Member of the Congress of Deputies, called it “incomprehensible from the ethical point of view,” that the government could pass a law that establishes abortion as a right.
“As a believer and a citizen of this country it does not seem appropriate for the King to sign into law the Act … Neither the king nor the government nor the Spanish Courts may violate principles of fundamental ethics,” Mestre said. (continue adding)
CBS Earns Yet Another Millstone Fitting for Its Neck
December 7, 2009 by Patrick Madrid
Filed under Patrick's Blog
Quite by accident, I happened to see this the other day as I was changing channels, and I simply couldn’t believe my eyes. It’s repugnant and infuriating what these people at CBS are doing, in the name of “humor,” to destroy whatever vestiges of innocence might remain among American children and youth today (cf. Matthew 18:6).
A video advertisement on CBS’s Web site that “mashes” material from the iconic “Frosty the Snowman” Christmastime cartoon with two of the network’s comedy series is offensive and should be pulled, media analysts told FoxNews.com.The video ad, “Frosty the Inappropriate Snowman,” takes authentic dialogue from CBS’ “How I Met Your Mother” and “Two and a Half Men” and dubs it on top of the cartoon classic, changing well-known “Frosty” scenes to contain suggestions that the snowman and his friends visit a “strip club.”The mash-up also discusses Frosty’s “porn collection” and contains repeated mentions of prior sexual conquests. The ad is intended to promote the network’s upcoming broadcasts of “Frosty the Snowman” and “Frosty Returns.”Colleen Raezler, a research assistant for the Culture and Media Institute, a division of the Media Research Center, said the spot is “highly inappropriate,” and improperly uses a Christmas special to promote an adult-oriented comedy. “The ad introduces children to the idea of strippers and pornography,” Raezler told FoxNews.com. “The people in charge obviously thought this was funny, but the question they should ask themselves is if this is appropriate, not if it’s funny.” (continue reading)
Heading Home for the Holidays? Here's a "Family Get Together Survival Kit"
December 7, 2009 by Patrick Madrid
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How in the world did I get into this situation?
December 7, 2009 by Patrick Madrid
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Ever find yourself in the middle of something you never expected to happen?
I'll Be Speaking in Stamford, CT, December 11-13 — Come if You Can!
December 6, 2009 by Patrick Madrid
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Good Times: My First Chance to Hold Killian
December 4, 2009 by Patrick Madrid
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Visualize This: the US/China Trade Relationship
December 4, 2009 by Patrick Madrid
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Dire Predictions About the Destruction of the Dollar
December 4, 2009 by Patrick Madrid
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(Courtesy of Father Steve Leake)
The Devil Never Goes on Vacation
December 4, 2009 by Patrick Madrid
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(St. Francisco Borgia performing a deathbed exorcism, by Francisco Goya)
If this is not the single most annoying Christmas gift, I don't know what else would qualify
December 3, 2009 by Patrick Madrid
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