By George Neumayr on 3.27.09 @ 6:08AM
Notre Dame hands him another Alinskyite victory.
The Catholic Church in America has bred her own destroyers,
graduating from doctrinally corrupt catechetical programs,
schools and colleges two generations of pro-abortion politicians.
Barack Obama, in his effortless Alinskyite style, has exploited
this phenomenon to the hilt, seeking out Catholics such as Joe
Biden and Kathleen Sebelius to serve as his agents of
destruction.
The controversy this week at Notre Dame is one more snapshot of
this self-implosion. Here we have the American bishops' most
prominent university planning to confer an honorary degree upon
Obama even as he accelerates the destruction of its moral
teachings.
Were Saul Alinsky alive today, he would have to smile at the ease
of it all. Obama can not only thwart the Church at every crucial
turn and still retain the Catholic vote; he can even expect over
the next few years prizes and pats on the back from Catholic
colleges for doing so.
Jesuit Georgetown University is no doubt itching to honor him
too; its professors ranked seventh among all university faculties
in donations to Obama during the campaign, reported the
Chronicle of Higher Education. The Jesuit magazine
America and Jesuit Thomas Reese rushed to Notre Dame's
defense this week.
Perhaps Obama enthusiast/fellow Alinskyite Father Michael Pfleger
can travel over from Chicago for ND's commencement exercises to
fill in for the boycotting Fort Wayne-South Bend Bishop John
D'Arcy.
To his credit, D'Arcy, a long and lonely opponent of Notre Dame's
secularization, wants no part in the sham, correctly noting that
the school is once again panting after "prestige" at the expense
of "truth." Four decades of surrendering to secularist culture
and championing progressive politics at Notre Dame have
culminated in an honorary degree to the most pro-abortion
president ever.
Responding to this criticism, its president, Father John Jenkins,
has had to dust off the "dialogue" defense from the recent
Vagina Monologues controversy on campus to justify his
decision.
Out rolled from the president's office the familiar cart of
clichés. "You cannot change the world if you shun the people you
want to persuade, and if you cannot persuade them…show respect
for them and listen to them," Jenkins was quoted as saying.
What's the logic here? To dialogue with a public figure a school
has to confer an honorary degree upon him? This makes no sense,
but it is the kind of head-faking non sequitur that appeals to
Jenkins.
Just as he twisted the Vagina Monologues controversy
into a beside-the-point discussion about the value of free
speech, so he is casting this recent one as some sort of test of
Notre Dame's commitment to "positive engagement."
The White House, sensing the drift of this script, joined in the
charade, saying in response to the controversy that it welcomes
the "spirit of debate and healthy disagreement on important
issues."
Which makes one wonder: When exactly will the debate take place?
Before, during or after the commencement exercises? Will it
proceed like Jenkins' "creative contexualization" panel
discussions about the Vagina Monologues? Or is Obama's
interest in "healthy disagreement" about as plausible as Jenkins'
notion of "positive engagement"?
Notice also that for additional PR protection Jenkins is playing
the race card. "It is of special significance that we will hear
from our first African-American president, a person who has
spoken eloquently and movingly about race in this nation. Racial
prejudice has been a deep wound in America, and Mr. Obama has
been a healer," he was quoted saying this week.
Again, how is this relevant to honorary-degree-conferring from a
Catholic university? Does opposing racial injustice absolve
supporting other injustices?
Imagine a reverse scenario, say a politician who supported the
Church's moral teachings down the line but had some racist blot
in his past. Would Jenkins honor him? No, he woudn't dare. But
somehow Obama's formal cooperation in the injustice of destroying
innocent lives just isn't so bad.