Archive for May, 2009

New judge appointed in Drew Peterson case

May 21, 2009

Updated: Drew Peterson posts (5-21)

May 21, 2009

Will County States Attorney James Glasgow won round one – he got his new judge.

Chief Judge Gerald Kinney appointed Judge Carla Alessio Policandriotes to replace Judge Richard Schoenstedt, who Glasgow ask be replaced on “grounds of prejudice.” No detail given. Thoughts were personal bias/relationship and the gun charges that were dropped when Glasgow wouldn’t hand over info to the defense. I wonder how many judges Kinney had to choose from and whether any of them asked for the case (or asked not to be appointed). Also whether the choice of a woman was intentional.

Info about Judge Policandriotes from STEVE SCHMADEKE:

Policandriotes was selected to serve as an associate judge in the 12th Circuit in 2001, then won a 6-year term on the circuit court bench in 2002. She was retained in last year’s election, and runs the drug court.

She also handled a small part of the 2002 divorce case between Peterson and Kathleen Savio, signing an early order setting child support and awarding Savio temporary custody of their children.

I don’t know if this is the judge who set Peterson off, which Kathleen Savio detailed in one of her letters. Savio said he broke in and held a knife to her throat, angry that the judge had ordered he pay child support – even though he was having an open adulterous relations with 17 y/o Stacy Peterson, which Savio learned about through an anonymous letter. It would be a little cosmic justice if it was.

Next hearing tomorrow before Judge Policandriotes, 1:30.

Better copy of anonymous letter sent to Kathleen Savio

May 21, 2009

May 21, 2009

Updated: Drew Peterson posts (5-22)

Here’s a better copy of the anonymous letter sent to Kathleen Savio informing her about Peterson’s flagrant affair with 17 y/o Stacy Peterson.

Provided by Justice Cafe

Click top right for full page.

————

View this document on Scribd

Peterson attorneys to challenge Glasgow request

May 21, 2009

Thanks Hyeridad.

I really don’t know where these posts end up. Almost two weeks went by without a disappearing posts…or so I thought. The posts about Monday’s arraignment are missing so I’ll have to see what happened. Found this. Clearly their attempts didn’t work. If you’re looking for something in particular let me know. I’ve been a little busy on other matters as well.

—————

Updated: Drew Peterson posts

May 20, 2009

Prosecutors in the Drew Peterson case asked for a change of judge during Monday’s arraignment. Evidently they don’t have to mention why. Peterson’s defense team is not pleased and referred to it as gamesmanship. The Judge is mum.

Here’s the press release on their strategy. Will be decided on tomorrow at 1:30 hearing. Emphasis added.

Drew Peterson’s defense team is challanging the Will County State’s Attorney who wants to remove Judge Richard Schoenstedt from presiding over Peterson’s murder case.

On Monday, following Peterson’s arraignment where he pleaded not guilty in the death of his third wife Kathleen Savio, Will County State’s Attorney James Glasgow filed a motion, pursuant to 725 ILCS 5/114-5(c), to replace Judge Richard Schoenstedt.

Glasgow alleged that the trial judge was prejudiced against the State.

“Although the motion does not specifically state the basis for the prejudice, many in the press and public have speculated that the State believes that Judge Richard Schoenstedt’s previous rulings showed a favoritism of bias towards Drew,” says Andrew Abood, one of Peterson’s defense attorneys.  “Some members of the press have even gone so far as to suggest that the reason for the motion was that Judge Schoenstedt had a prior relationship with Peterson himself.”

But Abood, and lead defense attorney Joel Brodsky, say that neither is true.

“Judge Schoenstedt has been very fair and even handed,” says Brodsky.  “By all accounts, he has conducted himself according to the highest standards of ethics and integrity.  On many occasions Judge Schoenstedt has made rulings which favored the State and were against Mr. Peterson’s interests.”

Judge Schoenstedt has not commented on the move by the State’s Attorney.

Abood says there are several criteria required in order to satisfy the substitution motion filed by the State’s Attorney.  He says case law suggests that the mere assertion of prejudice against the State is all that is required and then the burden shifts to the Defendant opposing the Motion to establish that the Motion was made for some improper purpose.

“The State’s Attorney will not be able to show, or establish, actual prejudice on the part of Judge Schoenstedt, or that there was a previous relationship between Drew Peterson and the Judge. Both claims are wholly without merit,” says Abood.

The defense team continues to review case law regarding the motion, and will challenge it, Abood says.

Will County Coroner’s report re: autopsy on skeletal remains found yesterday

May 21, 2009

Update: skeletal remains are male

May 21, 2009

The autopsy performed on the skeletal remains found yesterday along the Des Plaines River near Channahon did not reveal much in the way of identification even as far as race or sex. Only a partial skeleton was recovered, excluding the skull. Death estimated to be several months or more. Also found were “shreds of blue jeans” and some cash. DNA testing pending. Something tells me it will take less than two weeks.

Coroner’s statement (emphasis added)

The Office of Will County Coroner Patrick K. O’Neil is reporting the forensic examination results of partial skeletal remains that were discovered on Wednesday, May 20, 2009. The preliminary forensic examination performed today, May 21, 2009, did not reveal any significant information in reference to the identity, race or sex of the skeletal remains. The partial skeletal remains consisted of a rib cage, spinal column and partial left and right femur bones. The head, arms and below the knee extremities were disarticulated. The search continues for the missing remains. A forensic investigation continues as to whether the disarticulation is a result of a postmortem (after death) artifact or antemortem injury.

O’Neil said, “Positive identification may hinge on forensic DNA analysis which is being expedited through the Illinois State Police Forensic Crime Laboratory. “

The Will County Coroner’s Office was given a conservative time frame in receiving forensic DNA and forensic anthropology results of approximately two (2) weeks.

A preliminary estimation of how long the unidentified person has been deceased is approximately several months or more.

Additional information: Some other items that were discovered include shreds of blue jeans that contained a small amount of U. S. currency.

The Illinois State Police is investigating the incident.

The cause and manner of death remain under investigation.

Notre Dame Students Stand for Life Video

May 21, 2009

May 21, 2009

The students who ultimately had no say in the matter.

jimblazsik.com

Fr Weslin arrest/Notre Dame Commencement posts

Fr Weslin arrest/Fr Jenkins/Notre Dame posts

May 21, 2009

May 21, 2009

It’s a lot easier to link and update this way. The most recent added at top.

Fr Weslin/Fr Jenkins/Notre Dame posts

(12-7) Fr Weslin ND court date postponed – DC case dismissed

(11-22) Fr Weslin ND court date – December

(11-5) Fr Weslin arrested protesting healthcare bill (video)

(11-6) Released from jail

==============
General

The hood of honor vs the humiliation of handcuffs (pix)
Fr Weslin’s earthly reward for defending sacred vows (pix)

Cosmic Karma for Fr Jenkins & Notre Dame
Fr Jenkins where is your conscience?

=============
ND arrests (May 15 & 16)

Arrest #1 Fr Weslin (Video)
Arrest #2 Fr Weslin (Video)
Side by side video: barry/Fr Weslin

Alan Keyes message from jail
“Emergency ruling” was not directed at Notre Dame protesters (lie)

Fr Weslin: court date, October 1st

==========
Fr Jenkins

Fr Jenkins exonerated legally, not morally
Fr Weslin statement re: arrests (6-8)
Fr Jenkins receives “Millstone of the Century Award”
Fr Jenkins on Board of pro-abortion organization

Fr Jenkins: “we must seek steps to witness to the sanctity of life”

===============
Laetare Medal/Professor Glendon

Notre Dame Laetare Medal
Professor Mary Ann Glendon declines Notre Dame’s highest honor
Professor Mary Ann Glendon declines Notre Dame’s Laetare Medal (copy but had comments so it was left)
Fr Jenkins statement re: Professor Glendon
Fr Jenkins: No Laetare Medal awarded this year
Gibbs non-answer re: Professor Glendon

================
ND Commencement ceremony

Quinnipiac poll re: Notre Dame Commencement

President of Notre Dame Fr Jenkins’ letter to 2009 Graduates
President of Notre Dame, Fr Jenkins: Commencement remarks (pix + video link)

barry’s Notre Dame Commencement Address (video)
barry’s Notre Dame Commencement Address (text)

Notre Dame Students Stand For Life (video)

Match not made in heaven: Francis Cardinal George & barry (videos)

============
ASU

ASU: barry can speak, no honorary degree
ASU caves: The President Barack Obama Scholars Program
CNN’s Preston: barry’s degree enough for ASU honorary degree

barry was awarded the Nobel Prize but couldn’t qualify for an honorary degree from a state school.

The hood of honor vs the humiliation of handcuffs

May 21, 2009

May 21, 2009

Fr Weslin/Fr Jenkins/Notre Dame posts

I can’t get past this.

fr Weslin arrest

Fr Weslin Arrest #1: Four minutes of pain and humiliation while he sings

And is has nothing to do with my personal views on abortion or stem cell research or Notre Dame or Catholicism or Father Weslin’s foundation or even barry. I’m not debating the issue of abortion – the morality or ethics – or my personal thoughts. I am looking at it from the Catholic viewpoint.

I can’t get past the vision of a 78 y/o Catholic priest–who was doing what the Lord asked of him and what he vowed to the Lord he would do–getting manhandled, disrespected and humiliated in front of the world on the grounds of Catholic University because the president of the alleged Catholic University, an alleged Catholic priest, chose to award a man who thinks it’s okay not only to kill fetuses, but to withhold from them medical care should they survive the attempt on their life.

Father Weslin, hands bound behind his back, propped up by policeman asks:

We’re Catholic priests. Why are you arresting a Catholic priest for trying to stop the killing of a baby? Use your mind. What are you doing that for? Why are you  arresting a priest for trying to stop the killing of a baby? You’ve got it all backwards.

In what world, let alone Catholic institution, is this even remotely okay?

And how is it a Catholic University when it allows a devout Man of God to be manhandled, bound and humiliated for the sake of a man who disregards the most sacred tenet of the Church? A man who believes killing a fetus is not murder.

As of Friday, Notre Dame ceased being a Catholic University. By censoring a priest, who was defending the Church, they unequivocally sanctioned abortion. They put honoring a man how has vowed never to allow abortion to become illegal before God, before a Man of God  and before the sanctity of human life.

Over what?

An ego-feeding honorary degree that means absolutely nothing because  man receiving it has done absolutely nothing other than talk and read a teleprompter.

These honorary degrees are apparently pretty hard to come by

POL/

(JEFF HAYNES/Getty)

This smiling man, who made Father’s arrest necessary, could have gotten his fix of adoration, given his teleprompter reading and been feted like a king even without accepting the honorary degree.  But his sense of entitlement prevented Professor Mary Ann Glendon, a Harvard Law Professor and former Ambassador to the Holy See, a woman truly deserving of the the honor that was to be bestowed upon her — the highest honor awarded an American Catholic to have to decline. A 120 year tradition broken for a man who is not even Catholic and who disregards the most sacred teaching of the Church.

But his ego wouldn’t budge — his needs more important than the Catholic electorate and ND graduates opposed to his presence – graduates who would have to miss their own graduation through no fault of their own. ASU wouldn’t give him anything but naming rights to an already established scholarship. He was not about to go 2-0. He even admitted so in his Commencement Address. So he chose to accept an honorary degree that was based on nothing and had no inherent meaning other than a token given out to dignitaries during commencements.

But that meaningless token now has meaning. It will forever be linked to the image of Father Weslin, helpless on the ground, alone, hands bound behind his back and his torso held in place, not by human hands, but by a booted leg and anonymous material. Instead of some trivial degree given away to a man who speaks but does not act – it will represent the actions of a man who stood behind  his words, willing to suffer the consequences.

The hood of honor vs the humiliation of handcuffs

Obama Delivers Notre Dame Commencement Address in South Bend, Indiana

(UPI Photo/Brian Kersey)

Fr Weslin handcuffed

Arrest #2
Side by side video of barry’s and Weslin’s respective welcomings

Gen Ann Dunwoody receives honorary doctorate from SUNY

May 21, 2009

(more…)

Warner Saunders retires

May 21, 2009

May 21, 2009

Last night NBC 5′s Warner Saunders signed off from Brant’s seat. It’s a very sad thing. He was one of the very rare people left in news who enjoyed, understood and excelled at his job with not a wit of personal venom. Someone who understood that news, news bias and personal bias are different things and that he was there to report the news. Plus there was a nice chemistry between him, Allison Rosati and Brant Miller, especially on Fridays when it seemed they had some cocktails for dinner. They may be able to replace him on the News – unnamed -  but who is going to replace him in the black community? He says he will continue his work as a diversity trainer once his health is back in order. He still looked weak. His believes that everyone, including himself, has racist thoughts and that “our simple task is to recognize it, admit to it and then move to change it”.

They devoted the last 10 minutes to him  which seemed rushed – but they a 30-minute tribute: “Never Give Up: A Tribute to Warner Saunders” that will be aired on Sunday, May 24th at 7:30 am and Monday May 25th at 4:30 pm. I think he deserves something a little more prime time than that.

Liboman

Tells a nice story about breaking in Allison Rosati and how honored he was that barry made a point of honoring him: “When I think of the city, I picture all the great Chicago monuments — Soldier Field, the Sears Tower, the Art Institute and, of course, Warner Saunders.”

WARNER SAUNDERS:

I’m just in awe that you have allowed me to come into your home for all of these years. We bring some pretty nasty news from time to time, and I’m just glad that you didn’t kill the messenger.

Thank you.

Patti Blagojevich will be on ‘I’m a Celebrity…Get Me Outta Here’!

May 21, 2009

May 21, 2009

Haha. Appears Selig is having the last laugh on this one. He sends out a press release: Leave the blagos alone! and today it’s yep she’s gonna be on the show. And yep Blago got another Today Show appearance out of the deal and will also be on the show in some “surprise” capacity. Isn’t everything Milorad does a surprise – which is really no surprise? Here’s the press release. Wonder if his next press release will have anything to do with a blue barrel….

GLENN SELIG:

The former first lady of Illinois, Patti Blagojevich, will go to Costa Rica to compete in ‘I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!’ Patti and her husband, former Gov. Rod Blagojevich, appeared on NBC’s Today show to make the official announcement.

“The job was originally offered to her husband but when the judge said he couldn’t go to Costa Rica NBC asked Patti to go in his place,” says Glenn Selig, founder of The Publicity Agency, the public relations firm which represents Patti and Rod Blagojevich.  “She accepted and went to LA. earlier this week to take part in a promotional shoot and to prepare for the show.”

While Patti Blagojevich goes to work for her family, the former governor will be ‘Mr. Mom’ to his two daughters, ages 12 and 6.

“He jokes that in a way she will have it easier competing in the jungle,” says Selig.  “He knows how hard it is to take care of the kids and to run a home.”

The former governor will be pulling for his wife as she competes on the show for a chance to be win top prizes for charity and for her family.

Even though he won’t be traveling to Costa Rica to be a contestant, the former governor will be involved in the program in other ways which will be a surprise, says Selig.

9:30 autopsy for human remains found in Will County

May 21, 2009

Update: Will County Coroner’s statement

Update 2: skeletal remains are male

May 21, 2009

Will County coroner set to do autopsy at 9:30 this morning on the unidentified remains from on the bank of the Des Plaines River yesterday.

According to CBS 2 News, the remains were found approximately 2 pm and that they consisted “mainly of bones”, “weighed no more than 30lbs” and appeared to be a “small female wearing underwear”.

Concern of course centers around whether the body could be Lisa Stebic, who disappeared on April 30, 2007 – last seen by husband Craig.

Stacy Peterson was reported missing on October 28, 2007 by husband Drew, who maintains the young mother of two young children ran off with another man. Peterson’s stepbrother Thomas Morphey maintains he helped Peterson move a “warm” blue plastic barrel out of the Peterson home and that he is concerned it might have contained Stacy’s body. A blue plastic barrel was found floating in the water on the 17th approx 1 mile downstream from the remains. Other blue barrels have been found as well and lead to nothing.

They also report that Peterson attorney Joel Brodsky was aware and “unconcerned”. Same as he was on April 29th when he said Drew Peterson would never be indicted in relation to Kathleen Savio’s death.

Initial ABC7 news report (video).

(Tribune: ZBIGNIEW BZDAK)

5-20 Des Plaines River bank, near Channahomn, Will County, Illinois

Human remains found, Des Plaines River bank, Channahon

May 20, 2009

Update 1: 9:30 autopsy scheduled Will County coroner
Update 2: Will County Coroner’s statement
Update 3: skeletal remains are male

May 20, 2009

From ABC 7 BEN BRADLEY

A river clean-up crew found human skeletal remains on the Des Plaines River bank in Will County, near Channahon, about a mile upstream from where a resident reported a blue barrel floating in the water. Blue barrel being of significance in Stacy’s disappearance. Investigators from both the Lisa Stebic and Stacy Peterson investigations were present at the site but Illinois State Police are not commenting. An autposy will be done tomorrow.

Eerily, a local bar owner had talked with the crew about how he had helped search for Stacy Peterson and to keep an eye out. That was four days ago – about when the blue barrel was first seen.

Pam Bosco, Peterson family spokesperson is hopeful that the remains will be Stacy Peterson:

It’s quiet anticipation but we’ve been through this situation before so we’ve learned not to be too anxious about the situation.

We’re patient. We’re hopeful. We’ll see what happens. We’ve always prepared ourselves this way. It’s inevitable.

Melanie Greenberg, Lisa Stebic’s cousin:

The not knowing is what’s worse. Frankly it would be such a relief if it was Lisa, just to know that we could put her to rest.

Selig: Leave the Blagojevichs alone!

May 20, 2009

May 20, 2009

Yo, Cyrus, pay up!

Blagojevich publicist tells the media leave the Blagos alone. Hard to believe they would be out with their trucks again. Won’t be now that a body’s been found. They might be visiting his other client….What kind of sound bites are they looking for? Selig doesn’t deny that she is/will be on the show. Why doesn’t he get Rod a radio gig?

PRNewsChannel: Reports that Patti Blagojevich will be traveling to Los Angeles today for the show “I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!” are false.  Mrs. Blagojevich is not traveling anywhere out of town today or this week for that matter.

Both Patti Blagojevich, and her husband, the former governor of Illinois, ask that for the sake of their children that you give them their privacy.

“There is no need for the media to park live trucks outside of the Blagojevich home,” says Glenn Selig, founder of The Publicity Agency (www.ThePublicityAgency.com) which represents Rod and Patti Blagojevich.  “They are living their day to day lives and they’d very much appreciate some privacy.  Cameras and trucks outside their home are jarring to their children.”

“When and if there is something of news value to report I will make sure you know about it.”

Quinnipiac poll re: Notre Dame Commencement

May 20, 2009

May 20, 2009

Fr Weslin/Fr Jenkins/Notre Dame posts

Quinnipiac University poll
April 21-27
2041 voters
MOE +/- 2.2%

Should Notre Dame rescind invite to POTUS?
Yes 31%
No 56%

Catholics
Yes 34%
No 60%

Catholics attend service weekly
Yes 43%
No 49%

Less observant Catholics
Yes 26%
No 70%

Protestants
Yes 33%
No 51%

Evangelicals
Yes 42%
No 44%

Given four choices on abortion:

  • 15% of all voters, including 13% of Catholics and 10% of observant Catholics, say abortion should be legal in all cases;
  • 37% of all voters, including 37% of Catholics and 19% of observant Catholics, say abortion should be legal in most cases;
  • 27% of all voters, including 28% of Catholics and 40% of observant Catholics, say abortion should be illegal in most cases;
  • 14% of all voters, including 16% of Catholics and 26% of observant Catholics, say abortion should be illegal in all cases.

Pres Notre Dame Fr Jenkins’ letter to 2009 Graduates

May 20, 2009

May 20, 2009

Fr Weslin/Fr Jenkins/Notre Dame posts

President of Notre Dame (and priest who allowed Fr Weslin to be manhandled, disrespected and humiliated) FATHER JENKINS’  letter to the 2009 graduating class of Notre Dame. Found at rpinet. In closing he says “there is much to admire and celebrate in the life and work” of barry and that he is a “remarkable figure in American history”.

What? And for what?

How many graduates – because of their Catholic consciences – could not attend their own graduations?

What special type of letter did they get?

A refund?

—————–

May 11, 2009

Dear Members of the Notre Dame Graduating Class of 2009:

This Sunday, as you receive your degrees at Commencement, your joy – and that of your families – will be shared by the faculty, staff, and administration of the University. We have had the privilege of laboring with each of you to inquire and discover, to teach and to learn, and we will send you off with affectionate and fond hopes for the future.

For those of you who are undergraduates, I feel a special kinship. You arrived in your dorm rooms as I arrived in the President’s Office. You have learned much; I may have learned more. I am grateful for the opportunity I had to learn with you, come to know you, and to serve you during our time together at Notre Dame.

During your years here we have endeavored to train you in the various disciplines and urged you to ask the larger questions – discussing not only the technical and practical but also the ethical and spiritual dimensions of pressing issues. I have been proud of you as you’ve grappled with intellectual, political, and spiritual questions. But I have never been more proud than I have been watching the way you’ve conducted yourselves over the past several weeks.

The decision to invite President Obama to Notre Dame to receive an honorary degree and deliver the Commencement address has triggered debate. In many cases, the debate has grown heated, even between people who agree completely on Church teaching regarding the sanctity of human life, who agree completely that we should work for change – and differ only on how we should work for change.

Yet, there has been an extra dimension to your debate. You have discussed this issue with each other while being observed, interviewed, and evaluated by people who are interested in this story. You engaged each other with passion, intelligence and respect. And I saw no sign that your differences led to division. You inspire me. We need the wider society to be more like you; it is good that we are sending you into that world on Sunday.

I am saddened that many friends of Notre Dame have suggested that our invitation to President Obama indicates ambiguity in our position on matters of Catholic teaching. The University and I are unequivocally committed to the sanctity of human life and to its protection from conception to natural death.

Notre Dame has a long custom of conferring honorary degrees on the President of the United States. It has never been a political statement or an endorsement of policy. It is the University’s expression of respect for the leader of the nation and the Office of the President. In the Catholic tradition, our first allegiance is to God in Christ, yet we are called to respect, participate in, and contribute to the wider society. As St. Peter wrote (I Pt. 2:17), we should honor the leader who upholds the secular order.

At the same time, and born of the same duty, a Catholic university has a special obligation not just to honor the leader but to engage the culture. Carrying out this role of the Catholic university has never been easy or without controversy. When I was an undergraduate at Notre Dame, Fr. Hesburgh spoke of the Catholic university as being both a lighthouse and a crossroads. As a lighthouse, we strive to stand apart and be different, illuminating issues with the moral and spiritual wisdom of the Catholic tradition. Yet, we must also be a crossroads through which pass people of many different perspectives, backgrounds, faiths, and cultures. At this crossroads, we must be a place where people of good will are received with charity, are able to speak, be heard, and engage in responsible and reasoned dialogue.

The President’s visit to Notre Dame can help lead to broader engagement on issues of importance to the country and of deep significance to Catholics. Ultimately, I hope that the conversations and the good will that come from this day will contribute to closer relations between Catholics and public officials who make decisions on matters of human life and human dignity.

There is much to admire and celebrate in the life and work of President Obama
. His views and policies on immigration, expanding health care, alleviating poverty, and building peace through diplomacy have a deep resonance with Catholic social teaching. As the first African-American holder of this office, he has accelerated our country’s progress in overcoming the painful legacy of slavery and segregation. He is a remarkable figure in American history, and I look forward to welcoming him to Notre Dame.

As President Obama is our principal speaker, there will no doubt be much attention on your Commencement. Remember, though, that this day is your day. My fervent prayer is that May 17 will be a joyous day for you and your family. You are the ones we celebrate and applaud. Congratulations, and may God bless you.

In Notre Dame,

Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C.

President

barry’s Notre Dame Commencement Address (video)

May 20, 2009

May 20, 2009

Fr Weslin/Fr Jenkins/Notre Dame posts

TEXT

Video of barry’s commencement speech at Nortre Dame

Courtesy of joegerarden http://townhall.com/blog/

PART 1

PART 2

PART 3

barry’s Notre Dame Commencement Address (text)

May 20, 2009

May 20, 2009

Fr Weslin/Fr Jenkins/Notre Dame posts

Provided by the South Bend Tribune. Note the absence of the transcription of the “heckling”. And how much press were the hecklers given? And if it would have been President Bush hecklers? Media bias that needs no polling.

[Emphasis and comments added]

VIDEO

President Barack Obama’s commencement address Sunday at the University of Notre Dame.

Thank you, Father Jenkins, for that generous introduction even though you said what I want to say much more elegantly. You are doing an outstanding job as president of this extraordinary institution, and your continued and courageous and contagious commitment to honest, thoughtful dialogue is an inspiration to us all.

(heckler)

Good afternoon Father Hesburgh, Notre Dame trustees, faculty, family, friends, and the Class of 2009. I am honored to be here today, and grateful to all of you for allowing me to be part of your graduation.

I want to thank you for this honorary degree. I know it has not been without controversy. I don’t know if you’re aware of this, but these honorary degrees are apparently pretty hard to come by. (laughter) So far I’m only 1 for 2 as President. (applause) Father Hesburgh is 150 for 150. I guess that’s better. Father Ted, after the ceremony, maybe you can give me some pointers to boost my average. I also want to congratulate the Class of 2009 for all your accomplishments. And since this is Notre Dame, I mean both in the classroom and in the competitive arena. We all know about this university’s proud and storied football team, but I also hear that Notre Dame holds the largest outdoor 5-on-5 basketball tournament in the world — Bookstore Basketball.

Now this excites me. I want to congratulate the winners of this year’s tournament, a team by the name of “Hallelujah Holla Back.” Well done. Though I have to say, I am personally disappointed that the “Barack O’Ballers” did not pull it out. Next year, if you need a 6’2″ forward with a decent jumper, you know where I live.

Every one of you should be proud of what you have achieved at this institution. One hundred and sixty three classes of Notre Dame graduates have sat where you are today. Some were here during years that simply rolled into the next without much notice or fanfare — periods of relative peace and prosperity that required little by way of sacrifice or struggle.

You, however, are not getting off that easy. You have a different deal. Your class has come of age at a moment of great consequence for our nation and the world — a rare inflection point in history where the size and scope of the challenges before us require that we remake our world to renew its promise; that we align our deepest values and commitments to the demands of a new age. It is a privilege and a responsibility afforded to few generations — and a task that you are now called to fulfill.

This generation, your generation, is the one that must find a path back to prosperity and decide how we respond to a global economy that left millions behind even before the most recent crisis hit — an economy where greed and short-term thinking were too often rewarded at the expense of fairness, and diligence, and an honest day’s work.Your generation must decide how to save God’s creation from a changing climate that threatens to destroy it.

(heckler)

We must seek peace at a time when there are those who will stop at nothing to do us harm, and when weapons in the hands of a few can destroy the many. And we must find a way to reconcile our ever-shrinking world with its ever-growing diversity — diversity of thought, of culture, and of belief.

(Others in crowd yell at heckler)

In short, we must find a way to live together as one human family. (Heckler is escorted out.)

[Short it was. Take em out and haul em to jail]

It is this last challenge that I’d like to talk about today, despite the fact that Father John stole all my best lines. For the major threats we face in the 21st century — whether it’s global recession or violent extremism; the spread of nuclear weapons or pandemic disease — these things do not discriminate. They do not recognize borders. They do not see color. They do not target specific ethnic groups.

Moreover, no one person, or religion, or nation can meet these challenges alone. Our very survival has never required greater cooperation and greater understanding among all people from all places than at this moment in history.

[PART 2 VIDEO STARTS HERE]

‘Common effort’

Unfortunately, finding that common ground — recognizing that our fates are tied up, as Dr. King said, in a “single garment of destiny” — is not easy. Part of the problem, of course, lies in the imperfections of man — our selfishness, our pride, our stubbornness, our acquisitiveness, our insecurities, our egos; all the cruelties large and small that those of us in the Christian tradition understand to be rooted in original sin. We too often seek advantage over others. We cling to outworn prejudice and fear those who are unfamiliar. Too many of us view life only through the lens of immediate self-interest and crass materialism; in which the world is necessarily a zero-sum game. The strong too often dominate the weak, and too many of those with wealth and with power find all manner of justification for their own privilege in the face of poverty and injustice.

And so, for all our technological and scientific advances, we see here in this country and around the globe violence and want and strife that would seem sadly familiar to those in ancient times.We know these things; and hopefully one of the benefits of the wonderful education you have received is that you have had time to consider these wrongs in the world … impulses in yourself that you want to leave behind … and grown determined, each in your own way, to right them. And yet, one of the vexing things for those of us interested in promoting greater understanding and cooperation among people is the discovery that even bringing together persons of good will, bringing together men and women of principle and purpose, even accomplishing that can be difficult.

The soldier and the lawyer may both love this country with equal passion, and yet reach very different conclusions on the specific steps needed to protect us from harm.

[Was it coincidence he picks lawyer - himself - vs the military?]

The gay activist and the evangelical pastor may both deplore the ravages of HIV/AIDS, but find themselves unable to bridge the cultural divide that might unite their efforts. Those who speak out against stem cell research may be rooted in admirable conviction about the sacredness of life, but so are the parents of a child with juvenile diabetes who are convinced that their son’s or daughter’s hardships might be relieved.

(applause)

The question, then, is how do we work through these conflicts. Is it possible for us to join hands in common effort?

(Heckler shouts as he’s escorted out.)

[It can't get much funnier than this. Working together through handcuffs.]

As citizens of a vibrant and varied democracy, how do we engage in vigorous debate? How does each of us remain firm in our principles, and fight for what we consider right, without, as Father John said, demonizing those with just as strongly held convictions on the other side?

Nowhere do these questions come up more powerfully than on the issue of abortion.

‘Fair-minded words’

As I considered the controversy surrounding my visit here, I was reminded of an encounter I had during my Senate campaign, one that I describe in a book I wrote called “The Audacity of Hope.” A few days after the Democratic nomination, I received an e-mail from a doctor who told me that while he voted for me in the Illinois primary, he had a serious concern that might prevent him from voting for me in the general election. He described himself as a Christian who was strongly pro-life, but that’s not what was preventing him from voting for me.

What bothered the doctor was an entry that my campaign staff had posted on my Web site — an entry that said I would fight “right-wing ideologues who want to take away a woman’s right to choose.” The doctor said that he had assumed I was a reasonable person, but that if I truly believed that every pro-life individual was simply an ideologue who wanted to inflict suffering on women, then I was not very reasonable. He wrote, “I do not ask at this point that you oppose abortion, only that you speak about this issue in fair-minded words.”

Fair-minded words.

After I read the doctor’s letter, I wrote back to him and thanked him. I didn’t change my position, but I did tell my staff to change the words on my Web site. And I said a prayer that night that I might extend the same presumption of good faith to others that the doctor had extended to me. Because when we do that — when we open our hearts and our minds to those who may not think precisely like we do or believe precisely what we believe — that’s when we discover at least the possibility of common ground.

Open hearts

That’s when we begin to say, “Maybe we won’t agree on abortion, but we can still agree that this is a heart-wrenching decision for any woman, is not made casually, but has both moral and spiritual dimensions.”

So let’s work together to reduce the number of women seeking abortions by reducing unintended pregnancies (applause). Let’s make adoption more available (applause). Let’s provide care and support for women who do carry their child to term. Let’s honor the conscience of those who disagree with abortion, and draft a sensible conscience clause, and make sure that all of our health care policies are grounded not only in sound science, but also in clear ethics, as well as respect for the equality of women.

[How honored was Fr Weslin's conscience as a Catholic priest protesting an award given by an alleged Catholic institution rewarding a man who believes in abortion? As always, barry's words sound nice but the actions that proceed from never jive. ]

Understand, Class of 2009 — I do not suggest that the debate surrounding abortion can or should go away. No matter how much we may want to fudge it — indeed, while we know that the views of most Americans on the subject are complex and even contradictory — the fact is that at some level, the views of the two camps are irreconcilable. Each side will continue to make its case to the public with passion and conviction. But surely we can do so without reducing those with differing views to caricature.

Open hearts. Open minds. Fair-minded words. It’s a way of life that has always been the Notre Dame tradition. Father Hesburgh has long spoken of this institution as both a lighthouse and a crossroads. The lighthouse that stands apart, shining with the wisdom of the Catholic tradition, while the crossroads is where “differences of culture and religion and conviction can co-exist with friendship, civility, hospitality, and especially love.” And I want to join him and Father John in saying how inspired I am by the maturity and responsibility with which this class has approached the debate surrounding today’s ceremony.

(Standing ovation from audience.)

‘A saintly man’

This tradition of cooperation and understanding is one that I learned in my own life many years ago — also with the help of the Catholic Church.

You see, I was not raised in a particularly religious household, but my mother instilled in me a sense of service and empathy that eventually led me to become a community organizer after I graduated college. A group of Catholic churches in Chicago helped fund an organization known as the Developing Communities Project, and we worked to lift up South Side neighborhoods that had been devastated when the local steel plant closed. It was quite an eclectic crew. Catholic and Protestant churches. Jewish and African-American organizers

[PART 3 VIDEO STARTS HERE]

Working-class black and white and Hispanic residents. All of us with different experiences. All of us with different beliefs. But all of us learned to work side by side because all of us saw in these neighborhoods other human beings who needed our help — to find jobs and improve schools. We were bound together in the service of others.

And something else happened during the time I spent in those neighborhoods. Perhaps because the church folks I worked with were so welcoming and understanding; perhaps because they invited me to their services and sang with me from their hymnals; perhaps because I was really broke and they fed me. Perhaps because I witnessed all of the good works their faith inspired them to perform, I found myself drawn — not just to the work with the church, but to be in the church. It was through this service that I was brought to Christ.

[The truth? He didn't find Jesus until he wanted to get elected and realized he needed some "street cred". He had no church ties when he was an organizer like he's trying to make people believe. He didn't join Wright's Church until after he had gone to Harvard.]

At the time, Cardinal Joseph Bernardin was the archbishop of Chicago. For those of you too young to have known him, he was a kind and good and wise man. A saintly man. I can still remember him speaking at one of the first organizing meetings I attended on the South Side. He stood as both a lighthouse and a crossroads — unafraid to speak his mind on moral issues ranging from poverty, AIDS, and abortion to the death penalty and nuclear war. And yet, he was congenial and gentle in his persuasion, always trying to bring people together; always trying to find common ground. Just before he died, a reporter asked Cardinal Bernardin about this approach to his ministry. And he said, “You can’t really get on with preaching the Gospel until you’ve touched hearts and minds.”

My heart and mind were touched by the words and deeds of the men and women I worked alongside with in Chicago. And I’d like to think that we touched the hearts and minds of the neighborhood families whose lives we helped change. For this, I believe, is our highest calling.

‘An abiding example’

You are about to enter the next phase of your life at a time of great uncertainty. You will be called upon to help restore a free market that is also fair to all who are willing to work; to seek new sources of energy that can save our planet; to give future generations the same chance that you had to receive an extraordinary education. And whether as a person drawn to public service, or simply someone who insists on being an active citizen, you will be exposed to more opinions and ideas broadcast through more means of communication than ever existed before. You will hear talking heads scream on cable, and you’ll read blogs that claim definitive knowledge [birthers], and you will watch politicians pretend to know what they’re talking about. [As they are LIVE!] Occasionally, you may have the great fortune of seeing important issues debated by people who do know what they’re talking about. By well-intentioned people with brilliant minds and mastery of the facts. In fact, I suspect that many of you will be among those bright stars.

[As he believes he is and this is one of those occasions.]

In this world of competing claims about what is right and what is true, have confidence in the values with which you’ve been raised and educated. Be unafraid to speak your mind when those values are at stake. Hold firm to your faith and allow it to guide you on your journey. Stand as a lighthouse.

But remember too that the ultimate irony of faith is that it necessarily admits doubt. It is the belief in things not seen. It is beyond our capacity as human beings to know with certainty what God has planned for us or what He asks of us, and those of us who believe must trust that His wisdom is greater than our own.

This doubt should not push away our faith. But it should humble us. It should temper our passions, and cause us to be wary of too much self-righteousness. It should compel us to remain open, and curious, and eager to continue the moral and spiritual debate that began for so many of you within the walls of Notre Dame. And within our vast democracy, this doubt should remind, even as we cling to our faith, to persuade through reason, through an appeal whenever we can to universal rather than parochial principles, and most of all through an abiding example of good works, charity, kindness, and service that moves hearts and minds.

‘The call to love’

For if there is one law that we can be most certain of, it is the law that binds people of all faiths and no faith together. It is no coincidence that it exists in Christianity and Judaism; in Islam and Hinduism; in Buddhism and humanism. It is, of course, the Golden Rule — the call to treat one another as we wish to be treated. The call to love. The call to serve. To do what we can to make a difference in the lives of those with whom we share the same brief moment on this Earth.

So many of you at Notre Dame — by the last count, upwards of 80 percent — have lived this law of love through the service you’ve performed at schools and hospitals; international relief agencies and local charities. That is incredibly impressive; a powerful testament to this institution. Now you must carry the tradition forward. Make it a way of life. Because when you serve, it doesn’t just improve your community, it makes you a part of your community. It breaks down walls. It fosters cooperation. And when that happens — when people set aside their differences even for a moment to work in common effort toward a common good; when they struggle together, and sacrifice together, and learn from one another — all things are possible.

After all, I stand here today, as president and as an African-American, on the 55th anniversary of the day that the Supreme Court handed down the decision in Brown v. the Board of Education.

[There it is folks. Right there in black and white is why he is standing there. So that Notre Dame can be added to the list of historical events and presidential re-creations - along with the convention speech, the Inauguration, the train ride..]

Brown was of course the first major step in dismantling the “separate but equal” doctrine, but it would take a number of years and a nationwide movement to fully realize the dream of civil rights for all of God’s children. There were freedom rides and lunch counters and billy clubs, and there was also a Civil Rights Commission appointed by President Eisenhower. It was the twelve resolutions recommended by this commission that would ultimately become law in the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Not that simple

There were six members of the commission. It included five whites and one African-American; Democrats and Republicans; two Southern governors, the dean of a Southern law school, a Midwestern university president, and your own Father Ted Hesburgh, president of Notre Dame. So they worked for two years, and at times, President Eisenhower had to intervene personally since no hotel or restaurant in the South would serve the black and white members of the commission together. Finally, when they reached an impasse in Louisiana, Father Ted flew them all to Notre Dame’s retreat in Land O’Lakes, Wisconsin, where they eventually overcame their differences and hammered out a final deal. Years later, President Eisenhower asked Father Ted how on Earth he was able to broker an agreement between men of such different backgrounds and beliefs. And Father Ted simply said that during their first dinner in Wisconsin, they discovered that they were all fishermen. And so he quickly readied a boat for a twilight trip out on the lake. They fished, and they talked, and they changed the course of history.

I will not pretend that the challenges we face will be easy, or that the answers will come quickly, or that all our differences and divisions will fade happily away. Because life is not that simple. It never has been.

But as you leave here today, remember the lessons of Cardinal Bernardin, of Father Hesburgh, of movements for change both large and small. Remember that each of us, endowed with the dignity possessed by all children of God, has the grace to recognize ourselves in one another; to understand that we all seek the same love of family and the same fulfillment of a life well-lived. Remember that in the end, in some way, we are all fishermen.

If nothing else, that knowledge should give us faith that through our collective labor, and God’s providence, and our willingness to shoulder each other’s burdens, America will continue on its precious journey towards that more perfect union. Congratulations Class of 2009, may God bless you, and may God bless the United States of America.


Match not made in heaven: Francis Cardinal George & barry

May 20, 2009

Fr Weslin/Fr Jenkins/Notre Dame posts

May 20, 2009

Francis Caedinal George is not a fan of barry’s politics. barry of course doesn’t like that – he takes it as a personal attack. And it came to play at Notre Dame. Why did barry speak of Cardinal Bernadin and not Cardinal George, who is alive and the current president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops? Because George spoke out against Notre Dame and barry – early and loudly and before that because of his stance on abortion.

(4-30) CARDINAL GEORGE: Whatever else is clear, it’s clear Notre Dame didn’t understand what it means to be Catholic when they issued this invitation and didn’t anticipate the kind of uproar that would be consequent to the decision, at least not to the extent that it has happened.

There are only two things one needs to know about who barry:

1) He works solely out of political expedience.
2) He cannot and will not stand for anyone to saying anything less than glowing about him.

He seeks not just to win but to destroy his opponent as well. Born out in his political career if one has the honesty to look. If you haven’t seen it or are still denying it – stay tuned.

Other video comments by Cardinal George re: Notre Dame, barry’s intent to reverse the healthworker “conscience clause” and that voting for barry was  a “Hobson’s Choice” for Catholics.

April 3, 2009

Addresses his previous comments re: Notre Dame’s decision to invite barry in which he told Catholics “to call, to e-mail, to write letters” about the “extreme embarrassment” the University of Notre Dame has caused and that “Notre Dame doesn’t know what it means to be Catholic”

CatholicChicago

March 16, 2009

Francis Cardinal George in response to barry’s announcement on Feb 27th to remove the conscience clause for health care workers.

USCC

barry’s Notre Dame Commencement speech:

Let’s honor the conscience of those who disagree with abortion, and draft a sensible conscience clause, and make sure that all of our health care policies are grounded not only in sound science, but also in clear ethics, as well as respect for the equality of women.

————

March 2, 2009

Parish Leadership Day 2009 at Maria High School. Cardinal Francis George is talking about who voted for barry and abortion.

CatholicChicago

You have to have a very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, good reason to vote or somebody who is pro-abortion, as is the president.

Abortion is fundamental to the common good of the country. It does away with a human right, namely the right to life, which is fundamental to every other right. If you’re dead you have no other rights.

But it was a Hobson’s choice.

Hobson’s choice as in something’s better than nothing – not exactly praise. Then he goes on to quote barry saying at the National Prayer breakfast that God never permits the killing of an innocent person. Which clearly doesn’t square with abortion unless the fetus in not a person and/or is not innocent.

barry can’t stand for awyone to criticize him and takes it as a personal affront rather than an idealogical one where we “can agree to disagree”. He is very good at saying lofty things about what others should do that never seems to apply to him. At this stage folks still believe his words – hear only his words. They have refused to look at his actions, which have no relevance to those lofty words. Once they do (he’s counting on it never happening) there are going to be some really angry people. His recent reversals on the photos and tribunals have woken some folks up. Be prepared for some more stumping to keep the folks mesmerized…

“Emergency ruling” was not directed at Notre Dame protesters

May 20, 2009

May 18, 2009

It seems Notre Dame was getting ready for a police state just like Denver. God forbid freedom of speech and religion and the right to assembly interrupt barry’s adoration. A 78 y/o Catholic priest, who was doing nothing more than peacefully protesting and singing to the Virgin Mary, was manhandled like he was a meth head threatening to assassinate someone.

Four policemen layed hands on him, forcibly restrained him, roughly bound his arms behind his back, shoved him down, pinned him there with a booted leg and let him lay humiliated on the ground – surrounded by gawkers and media who captured the humiliation on cellphones and video and camera but did absolutely nothing – before they hauled him off to jail. Four minutes of violence perpetrated ON him and he was arrested for trespass and resisting arrest.

I sure hope Father Weslin fights his arrest in court – as humiliating and demeaning as that video is – so that the media will be forced to show what they have censored and Fr Jenkins will have to be forced to explain why he didn’t simply have a wheelchair waiting to take Fr Weslin away. If there was anyone who was absolutely certain Fr Weslin was coming it was Fr Jenkins and he allowed his fellow priest — who was actually following his vows — to be dehumanized and humiliated.

And also so all of those mindless folks who chanted Change! and Yes, we can! can see what exactly Change! means and that Yes, they did! assault a priest in the name of barry’s ego.

Why doesn’t the absolute media corruption not concern folks?

Here’s what St. Joseph Superior Court judges got together and decided. Guess they figured the sight of a Catholic priest getting assaulted day after day might just have to be picked up on the media somewhere so they made themselves a little ruling under the darkness of night and cover of media embargo that on the second arrest on a misdemeanor charge [for instance, trespassing at Notre Dame], the arrestee would not be able to bond out until a hearing before a judge, at which time the judge would have the discretion to set a new (higher) bond.

Yep. A second misdemeanor arrest would warrant a special hearing before a judge on a weekend before the violent misdemeanor offender could safely be released back into society on Monday with the commencement long over. But Judge Jerome Frese made an appearance on Saturday and they were allowed to bond out. Why?

(5-17) WSBT.com SUE LOWE:

….However, the St. Joseph County prosecutor’s office and St. Joseph Superior Court Judge Jerome Frese reviewed the cases Saturday and Frese set the bonds, allowing the six to be released, St. Joseph County Police Sgt. Bill Redman said.

The only person arrested for a second time Saturday was the Rev. Norman Weslin, 78, of Council Bluff, Iowa.

Redman did not know if Weslin’s case will be reviewed today or if the priest will have to stay in jail until Monday.

Weslin was one of four people arrested Saturday on charges of trespassing and resisting arrest. Another 15 were arrested only on trespassing charges.

Please watch the videos of Fr Weslin’s arrest and decide for yourself whether he resisted arrest or whether he was a victim of excessive police force.

(5-15) Arrest #1 Trespass (Four minutes of excessive force while Fr Weslin sings)
(5-16) Arrest #2 Trespass/Resisting arrest (Takes less than a minute, no handcuffs, no manhandling)

Then decide how much the video of Father’s first arrest played into his additional charge and the sudden reversal of the judge’s ruling allowing the violent misdemeanor offenders posing a threat to society at large to bond out after all.

And the best part?

The police, the St Joseph Superior Court, the DA and evidently the media in and around South Bend must think the entire country either loves barry or just too damb dumb to reason because they expect the world to believe the “emergency ruling” did not come about because of protests at Notre Dame and that it was just a coincidence that it didn’t come to light until after the first set of arrests were made on Friday.

How many turnip trucks are there driving around South Bend?

South Bend Tribune, PABLO ROS (5-16):

Reported that the ruling was signed on Thursday, went into effect Thursday, but wasn’t announced until after the policed captured their first wave of Notre Dame insurgents, and that it will expire on Dec 31st if not adopted. He interviewed Judge Scopelitis who would have folks believe that it was something brewing and that Notre Dame had nothing to do with and that the timing was, you know, strictly coincidental and that it’s meant really for drunks and not to keep 78 y/o (real) Catholic priests and barry naysayers from taking the spotlight away from obamessiah and making ND look bad.

Too late for that.

ROS: The new rule is something “we, or at least I, have been thinking about for quite some time,” Chief Judge Michael P. Scopelitis said Friday. The arrests of protesters at Notre Dame brought the need for such a rule into focus, but the need existed also in other cases, he said.

A classic example, Scopelitis said, is of an individual arrested for driving while intoxicated, posting bond, then being arrested a second time for driving while intoxicated and posting the presumptive bond yet again.

How often does/has that happen in that jurisdiction? Is it a common problem? Has it been talked about by prosecutors? MADD? Is $1K bond the norm for a simple trespass charge? It would have been nice to know that the reporter at least looked into something. What else would the Judge say?

ROS: Notre Dame officials did not ask the judges to implement such a rule at this time, Scopelitis said.

This local rule is not for Notre Dame’s benefit,” he said. “It was not created to benefit Notre Dame in some way.”

Why the need to say it? What are the chances any reporter will actually become a reporter and investigate this further for the non-South Bendians?

Are there any reporters not corrupted by barry? Any with even a microgram of curiosity? An outraged law student?

Forget the national press corps. Their corruption is complete. They are now the National Press Corps.

There has to be someone locally who saw that video of Fr Weslin being “arrested” – the word punishment and scapegoat come to mind – with the wherewithal to investigate and continue documenting this insanity.

A real old fashioned American who could tell folks the connection of the St Joseph Superior Court Judges personally and professional to Notre Dame University, Father Jenkins and barry; whether they’re alumni, board members, contributors, have family members involved in the Commencement or barry’s campaign; whether they’re Catholics; appointed (most likely), elected, running for re-election; the precedence for the ruling, whether it had been brought up before, how often these emergency rulings are made; explain why St. Joseph Superior Court Judge Jerome Frese did what he did; and then document the quid pro quo resulting from the ruling – especially from the White House.

Remember those days?

barry’s idea of Change! is becoming clearer and clearer, isn’t it, Comrade?

Alan Keyes message from jail

May 20, 2009

May 18, 2009

Fr Weslin/Fr Jenkins/Notre Dame posts

A view from Notre Dame from Alan Keyes.

DISCALIMER: Provided for informational purposes only. This website neither espouses or denounces Alan Keyes’ message.

Speaking only for myself – I find what was done to Fr Weslin nothing short of police brutality/excessive police force and think it should be prosecuted as such. Change his race and/or his religion and it would have been plastered all over the media. As is, it recevied very little media attention. Why? Because of how it would reflect on barry. Media corruption persists.

===========================

Sent: Sunday, May 17, 2009 12:08 PM
Subject: FROM: Alan Keyes at Notre Dame

Last Friday, and again this week, I and others profoundly concerned with the University of Notre Dame’s scandalous invitation and extension of an honorary degree to Barack Obama were engaged in peaceful, prayerful witness to truth on the Notre Dame campus…

then it happened…

We walked onto the campus praying the rosary and bearing witness to the Church’s teaching against the objective evil of abortion. At the behest of Father John Jenkins, the President of the University, we were detained by the UND police and turned over to the civil authorities!

So I went twice to jail, along with two Catholic priests and other brothers and sisters in Christ. I am told that on Thursday unpublicized action was taken by a local Superior Court judge to enforce new, harsher procedures for posting bond in cases such as ours, so that those of us persistent in our witness could be unjustly incarcerated without relief or any opportunity to post bail for days. This judge cooperated with the “powers and principalities” who disgrace Notre Dame with the Obama “honors,” and now violate our constitutional and canonical legal rights to our witness for life. During our arrests we were not defying civil law, but merely obeying the laws of God and the directives of the Church and its leadership!

We sought to counteract the scandalous impression given by University authorities that it is compatible with Christian faith and Catholic teaching to honor and hold up as an example of good conduct someone who has made himself the focus of abortion evil in the world today.

Unlike Father Jenkins, we are acting with respect for Christ’s instruction that people of faith should work out their differences within the communion of the faithful before calling upon civil authorities, who may not act with respect for the laws of God and the teachings of the Church.

This is why I sought to meet with Father Jenkins before I joined in the spiritual rescue efforts occasioned by the University’s scandalous behavior. He refused to respond to my request!!!

In this, Father Jenkins displayed the same obdurate indifference to spiritual considerations that has exemplified his conduct throughout this scandalous affair. He has encouraged a bunker mentality within the University of Notre Dame community, by treating other members of the Body of Christ, even those in communion with the Holy See, as if we are “outsiders.”

This mentality contradicts the “emphasis on Community in Catholicism” cited in the University’s mission statement but utterly ignored by Father Jenkins and his colleagues.

Archbishop Burke of the Vatican and the some 70 American bishops who have demanded that the invitation and honorary degree be withdrawn; the hundreds of thousands who have signed the petition with the same plea; the millions of Catholics and prolife Christians they represent — although part of the Church communion, the body of Christ, and a community of the faithful, all are apparently to be treated as criminals if they dare to set foot on the Notre Dame campus to protect life and protest the University administration’s scandalous judgment!!

Where is the humility that should characterize Christian leadership?

Where is the love toward other believers that should give glory to God?

And where is the respect and the will to stand up and protect innocent, vulnerable life?

Instead of ordering arrests and persecution of those – including PRIESTS – bearing true witness, a faithful Catholic and Christian heart should seek to converse in order to instruct or to learn!

Instead, Father Jenkins has reacted with a harshness that bespeaks fearful guilt, using force to dispose of opposition. If, despite the opinion of the Vatican, the bishops and so many of the clergy, religious and the laity, Father Jenkins and his colleagues are right to honor evil, why are they afraid to deal openly and respectfully with both the Church authorities and fellow believers who disagree?

They react with forceful abuses of their authority because they cannot properly defend their actions in terms of the laws of God and the teachings of the Catholic Church.

They therefore substitute force for persuasion. In this too they honor evil, by imitating its methods.

Please help us expose this grave injustice, as this shocking scandal unfolds!

My Utmost for His Highest Honor,

Alan Keyes

P.S. Father Jenkins continues to arrogantly ignore national and international pleas to hear the concerns from Christians about the injustice of honoring Barack Obama with a podium and degree from Notre Dame, in direct contradiction to the directives of the American Bishops, and in disrepute of the purpose, principles and mission of such a prestigious institution of faith. He has faithful Catholic priests and laity unjustly arrested and jailed for days to silence their witness for innocent life. Father Jenkins and the police powers collude in abuse of the faithful to curry favor with Barack Obama, who is eager for the political credential that “honors” from the University of Our Lady will bring him, to aid in duping a prolife America about his radical anti-life policies. Help us bring public pressure on Jenkins and Obama to force acknowledgement that their abuses of faith and trust diminish Notre Dame’s integrity in on-going scandal, controversy and dishonor throughout the Christian and Catholic community, and bring disillusionment to voters of conscience.

P.P.S. If you are able to help us financially in the battle, our needs are rising! We have dozens of people in jail, including Father Weslin and others with families facing a likely few hundreds of dollars each in court costs and fines, never mind the high $1,000 bail that has been set for each of us. With your faxes of protest, you will help us free our brothers and sisters still in jail, INCLUDING 78-YEAR OLD FATHER WESLIN, of the Lambs of Christ!

Adam Lambert: “A Change is Gonna Come”

May 19, 2009

Adam Lambert & Top 10 American Idol – posts/videos
Adam Lambert: “Mad World” by Tears for Fears
Adam Lambert: Smokey Robinson’s “Tracks of my Tears”

Sma Cooke’s “A Change is Gonna Come”

zagazilaLA

——-

Patti Blagojevich taking hubby’s place?

May 19, 2009

May 18, 2009

There’s no doubt they are going to need the money. For both of their defenses. Rod can’t leave the country because he is inconveniently under indictment. So his not yet indicted wife, Patti, is giving serious consideration to joining the “cast” of “I’m a Celebrity, Get me Outta Here!”, which reportedly includes flying to LA to meet with producers later this week. The amount of money she would receive is unclear as is whether viewers would be as interested in her sticking around.

—–
Blagojevich on Reality TV?
Blago’s only reality show will be his trial
NBC Statement re: no Blago
Official blago statement re: no Costa Rica
Blagojevich to promote ‘I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here.’
Blago on the Today Show

Fr Pfleger denies sending disgusting emails

May 19, 2009

May 19, 2009

Fr Pfleger, friend of barry,  is nothing if not predictable. barry and Notre Dame were getting all sorts of press. Francis Cardinal George got involved. So to garner some attention Fr Pfleger decided to fly the American Flag upside down as a means to highlight the gun violence in Chicago in particular as relates to Chicago Public School Children. The violence is real. The deaths are real. And the fact that nothing is changing is real.

Flying the American flag upside down should only be done in immediately dire circumstances.

Section 8a of the United States Flag Code:

The flag should never be displayed with the union down, except as a signal of dire distress in instances of extreme danger to life or property.

And there was nothing immediately preceding his act that qualified. Had he put it up last April when in the span of 72 hours there were 32 people shot, 2 stabbed and at least 6 died in 72 hours – then it would make sense.

That’s the background. The fallout – emails that he received and emails that were returned are quite disturbing and at best unpriestly. Fr Pfleger maintains he was not involved. Ahern doesn’t specify who brought them to Fr Pflerger’s attention. From the way it reads, it sounds like the original email sender reported them. Just a guess.

From NBC’S MARY ANN AHERN. Strange to be reading her words instead of watching and listening to them.

Email sent to Fr Pfleger:

I don’t know who you think you are to show disrespect for THE American flag.If the so called leadership in the Catholic Church paid a little more attention to NIT WITTS like you there would be a lot less litle alter boys” in trouble.

Return email purportedly from Pfleger had a different email address than the one it was sent to:

Perhaps you are suffering from latent homosexuality disorder?” The tone got worse in later e-mails. One said “I guess it fair to draw the conclusion that the female sexual partner you are referring to is your mother? signed in Gods Blessing, Father Michael Pfleger.”

Father Pfleger said the responses are not from him.  He’s asked the Attorney General’s office to investigate. As well, Cardinal Francis George has asked one of his auxillary bishops to contact Father Pfleger about the e-mails.

Pfleger is hoping the investigators will be able to determine just where the e-mails are coming from.

Pfleger told NBC Chicago “it’s a criminal act. I will press charges.”


POTUS anti-Catholic stance awarded – Catholic priest arrested & jailed

May 19, 2009

Fr Weslin/Fr Jenkins/Notre Dame posts
Catholic priest arrested at Catholic Univ for protesting abortion
Fr Weslin arrested (again) at Notre Dame

May 18, 2009

A non-Catholic lay man, who believes abortion is legal and vows to made sure it never becomes illegal and who voted to withhold medical care from fetuses who happened to survive the attempt on their lives, is given a Prodigal Son welcome and honored with an award by the President of a prestigious Catholic University, who claims to be a Catholic priest–meaning he took the same vows as the Pope–while another man, a 78 y/o devout Catholic priest, who also took the same vows and because he was defending them in action on the campus of the very same Catholic University, was, with the tacit approval of the very same Catholic priest President, allowed to be disrespected, manhandled and humiliated in front of the entire world by being laid on the ground with his hands bound tightly behind his back and his torso pinned in place by a booted leg, and then hauled off, arrested and jailed.

How is any of this even remotely Catholic?

You decide.

Watch them side by side as graciously provided by max1media


———

Brodsky: lower bail, Peterson not flight risk

May 19, 2009

Updated: Drew Peterson posts (5-18)

May 18, 2009

Drew Peterson attorneys Joel Brodsky and Andrew Abood discuss Drew’s $20M bail.

Brodsky thinks it should be between $100-500K.

As far as Peterson being a flight risk?

Brodsky says he didn’t take off when he had the chance.

Problem being he wasn’t indicted before and getting out on bail would provide him the chance.

ANDREW ABOOD:

He’s charged with a crime.

He’s presumed innocent.

We’re here for arraignment.

We believe the judge will grant bail more in tune with the facts and circumstances of this case.



barry delegate, Reem Odeh, Drew Peterson lawyer

May 19, 2009

(more…)

Officially official: 13 y/o Alfie is not the father

May 19, 2009

(more…)

Tim Geithner: “Economy has stabilized”

May 19, 2009

May 18, 2009

Tim Geithner’s take on the economy at present.

He has a very strange way of speaking. No punctuation. Like he’s memorized bullet points and then tries, as he speaks, to adapt them to the question. And as long as he isn’t challenged, he keeps adding more.

Does he inspire confidence?

What would happen if someone challenged him on of his bullet points? Do you think he could defend it?

NEWSWEEK’s JON MEACHAM: Do you think  the economy has bottomed out?

US TREASURY SECRETARY TIM GEITHNER: The economy has clearly stabilized.

  • The pace of decline in most measures of economic activity has slowed quite a lot and that’s an important beginning.
  • Some improvement in credit markets
  • Some markets are thawing
  • Easier to issue
  • Easier to borrow
  • Cost of credit coming down
  • Important beginnings
  • Most challenging economic crisis that this country’s seen in generations
  • Took a long time to build up – take time to work through
  • Even as growth turns positive – which will happen – unemployment is going to keep increasing for awhile
  • It’s not going to feel better for a long time for millions of Americans.
  • Need a fresh look at entire financial system
  • It failed to do some critically important things
  • Too fragile
  • Too unstable
  • Didn’t do a good enough job protecting consumers and investors
  • Incredibly archaic segmented complex oversight regime system
  • Did not prevent huge amounts of risks of building up in pockets of the system that caused a lot of damage.

He was head of the NY Fed when he was not paying his own taxes and Madoff was making off with gazillions.

Want to bring down the national debt?

Audit every politician in Washington.

The Early Show: Peterson attorneys pre-arraignment

May 18, 2009

Drew Peterson Defense Team

May 18, 2009

(more…)


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