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2016 lines
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31 page printout
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Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
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This file, its printout, or copies of either
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are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
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Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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**** ****
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Edited by E. Haldeman-Julius
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THE BLACK INTERNATIONAL No. 12
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THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
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CATHOLICS THE MOST PRIEST-RIDDEN OF ALL PEOPLE
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by Joseph McCabe
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HALDEMAN-JULIUS PUBLICATIONS
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GIRARD -- : -- KANSAS
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**** ****
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CHAPTER
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I Poisoning the Mind of the Young ..................... 1
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II The Priest Rules the Family ......................... 8
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III The Priestly Censors of Morals ...................... 16
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IV The Shame of the Confessional ....................... 22
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V Catholic Action a Clerical Maneuver ................. 27
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**** ****
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Chapter I
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POISONING THE MIND OF THE YOUNG
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In the preceding booklet I showed that the structure of the
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Church of Rome is such that an alliance with Fascist powers is its
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inevitable attitude. It is an institution that survives from the
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Feudal Age and, since it is not now permitted to exercise the
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physical tyranny over men which it still claim's, it must, whenever
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wealth and privilege are threatened, associate with any forces
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which disown the democratic restraints of our age and by violence
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and bloodshed suppress the critics of privilege and seek an
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extension of their wealth and power. Historically it always did
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this; and nearly all who are not Catholics, and very many
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Catholic's, now see that this is in our time the meaning of the
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diplomatic activity of the Vatican during the last ten years, the
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shameless applauding of bestiality by the high priests of Germany
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and Italy, the treason of the priests of Austria, Fiance, Spain,
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Portugal, Belgium, and Czechoslovakia, and the support of
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isolationism in the British Empire until 1939 and in the United
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States until 1941, and in South America today.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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1
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THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
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But how do the half-million agents of the Black International
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contrive to win the support for such a policy of tens of millions
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of men and women half of whom professed to be free Citizens of
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democratic lands until the Papal-Fascist paralysis began to creep
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over them and a very large part still live in such countries and
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swear loyalty to their ideals? I have shown and will further show
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in the fifth booklet of this series, that Catholic priests and
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writers change their political philosophy with startling rapidity
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when their country turns Fascist. In country after country in which
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but a few years ago they talked about the principles of freedom and
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democracy with all the gush that is so familiar on clerical lips in
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America -- in Germany and Italy, in Franco Spain and Salazar
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Portugal, in Vichy France and Belgium, Czecho-Slovakia and Austria
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-- they now find those principles as demoded as drawers or corsets,
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even "poisonous" and inconsistent with the authoritarian state
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which the Pope urges upon all good Catholics. They have not yet
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reached the stage in America and Britain. Will they do so? And if
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not how can the Black International use the vast sums it extracts
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from the people to help on a regime of tyranny and exploitation?
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First let us get a clear idea of the body of subscribing
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members of the Church. How many Catholic's there are in the world
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it is less easy to say than to ascertain the number of bacteria in
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a cubic inch of soil. Comparing the figures given even by Catholics
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is an ironic pastime. They are meticulously "accurate" down to the
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last unit, yet they differ from each other by tens of millions;
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which surely afford's some excuse even for a hardened skeptic like
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myself. I consult the new Encyclopedia Americana, which has an odor
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of sanctity as well as of scholarship, and learn, in an article by
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a member of the editorial board (and apparently a Catholic) that
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the number of Catholics in the world is 294,583,000. That sounds
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admirably precise and moderate compared with the 350,000,000 or
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even 398,277,000 (British Catholic Directory) which other Catholic
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writers claim, but study how the figure is made up. In Europe, says
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the writer, there are 183,760,000; and he then analyzes this into
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35,000,000 in France (where optimistic Catholics do not claim more
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than 10,000,000), 20,000,000 in Spain (where, when there were free
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elections, the people so long overruled the Church that it had to
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take to the long knife), 26,000,000 in Austria (where the total
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population is only 7,000,000), 13,000,000 in Hungary (where the
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population is about 9,000,000 and the Catholics are about half),
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and so on.
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It is a greater miracle than the Immaculate Conception. But
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Catholics absorb miracles as babies absorb milk. A distinguished
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Catholic journalist D. Gwynn (Pius XI, 1932) quotes with approval
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the agstirqnec of Macaulay that "there were certainly not fewer
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than 150,000,000" in 1840. The population of most countries has
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trebled since then, where not greatly affected by the birth control
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of these wicked skeptics, yet Gwynn thinks that the growth of these
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150,000,000 into 350,000,000 (his figure) in a century, and with
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fertility joyous and unrestrained, "must astonish all inquirers."
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And this writer, who is an expert on France, knows that the total
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figure of Catholics he gives includes 30,000,000 Frenchmen and
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proves in his special work on the subject (The Catholic Reaction in
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France, 1924) that there cannot even be 10,000,000.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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2
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THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
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Similarly in regard to the number of Catholics in America,
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which concerns us most. The Encyclopedia Americana gives 50,000,000
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for North America, of whom 20,000000 are in the United States. As
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there are only about 4,000,000 Catholics in Canada and the whole
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population of Mexico (which the Vatican does not regard as very
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orthodox) is only 16,000,000, the arithmetic again transcends my
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profane intelligence. But when I turn to the Census of Religion,
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taken (that is to say, supplied by the clergy) in 1936 and
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published as the official record in 1940, I learn that Roman
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Catholics in the United States number only 19,914,957; and you
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really must trust a figure that is so definite even to the last
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unit. The official compiler reflects on the remarkable growth since
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1926 (18,605,003 -- not a baby or a village idiot left out, you
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notice). But an unconsecrated calculation seems to yield that in
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that decade the general population of America, in spite of a
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tremendous traffic in contraceptive's rose by more than 8 percent
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while the Catholics, who abhor those diabolical devices, increased
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by less than 7 percent.
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I should love to linger in this pious and stimulating field of
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the statistics published by the Black International but we have
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sterner business to approach, and I have written much elsewhere on
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the subject. I have concluded, after many weary days spent in
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analyzing the results of months of research, that the number of
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genuine Catholics in the world is between 150,000,000 and
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200,000,000, and it seems generous to use for practical purpose the
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round figure of 190,000,000. It will be understood that I do not
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include here the new compulsory Catholics of Italy, France,
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Belgium, Spain, Portugal, Brazil, etc. If an American Catholic is
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proud of them, and insists on including them let him do so; but is
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it too much to ask that he state also, at least to himself, that
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they have "returned to the Church" only while every priest is ready
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to denounce rebel's to the firing squad or the torturer?
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But our figure invites further consideration. It includes
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about 50,000,000 illiterate American Indians. Add the illiterates
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of the Philippines (7,000,000), and the French, Belgian, and
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Portuguese colonies, a large percentage of the peasants of Spain,
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Portugal, Poland, Slovakia, etc., and you see that more than a
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third of the grand Catholic total are folk whom we need not
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consider here. It is no mystery how the priests keep them servile.
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It is hardly more mysterious how they keep their despotic hold on
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further tens of millions: the peasants of Spain, Portugal, Poland
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and Italy who are called literate because they mastered their A B
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C's and the dense masses of descendants of these who fester in the
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poorer quarters of our cities and industrial towns. The domination
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of these also by priests requires no profound explanation; and
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quite a large number at the other end of the social scale are very
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easy victims of clerical bossing of a subtler sort. Of the
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remaining half of this grand total of 180,000,000 more than one-
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third are children.
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We will discuss in the next book the whole question of
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ignorance or culture, and varieties of culture, in the Roman
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Church, but it is well to get clearly in mind here that when the
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Catholic writer boasts of his 300,000,000 or 350,000,000, "Subjects
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of the Pope," or when a statesman thinks that this gross figure
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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3
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THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
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compels him to speak with profound respect of the Pope and his
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Church, the suggestion is nonsensical. We shall further see that
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the stuff imposed upon pupils in Catholic secondary schools and
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colleges as "science" and "history" is a gorgeous tissue of untruth
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that differs from the reality almost as much as a Theosophist's
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view of ancient Egypt differs from that of an Egyptologist, so that
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even in their case we are not greatly puzzled. However, let us
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take the matter broadly. Leaving out of account the babes and
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sucklings and the poor folk who either never open a book or could
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not read one, how does the Church of Rome ensure the submissiveness
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to a body of generally ignorant priests of some millions of men and
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women in modern civilization?
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The first part of the answer is the Catholic school. Cardinal
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Hayes, who had an astounding success in talking rank nonsense with
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the utmost gravity, once said, referring to American preeminence in
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education: "It is the Catholic contribution which has enabled the
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United States to take the world's leadership in this field." Horace
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Mann was, I suppose, a Roman Catholic, not a skeptic as the
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Dictionary of American Biography represents him. . . . But, no one
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will expect me to argue on that point. The Catholic hierarchy in
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America never professed to have any other aim in collecting vast
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sums -- they spent $23,000,000 on new schools in 1927 -- for the
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erection of schools of their own than "the good of the Church," the
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safeguarding of the faith (the docility to the clerical Gestapo) of
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their people. They care nothing whatever about the general cultural
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level of a country. They just whip up the laity to a fanatical zeal
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for having schools of their own. Catholic ladies have told me,
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defiantly, in England, where a question about the treatment -- that
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is to say, the amount of subsidy they will vote out of public funds
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-- of Catholic schools is prepared by the clergy and sternly
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pressed upon candidates for election, that they would not for a
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moment hesitate to vote for a candidate who promised to favor their
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schools no matter what his views were on national or local policy.
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Once the question of the Catholic school was raised by the priests
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at an election they ignored every other issue.
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The zeal of the priests to whip up this fanaticism suggests at
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once in what the Catholic differs from the national school. In most
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parts of America today where there are large bodies of Catholics
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the national school dare not permit a teacher or a class-book to
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say a word that Catholics resent. Educational experts have shown
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that in Boston and Chicago the Catholic clergy, acting through
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their lay dupes, control education in this respect in the national
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as well as their own schools. Even from third or fourth-rate towns
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mothers have written me that the teachers of their children in the
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national schools were so subject to Catholic influence that they
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used real Catholic language. Possibly this partly explains why in
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the United States Catholic schools, of all grades, have a less
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proportion of pupils to the general membership of the Church than
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in other countries. There are not many more than 2,000,000 pupils
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in Catholic elementary schools, and if you multiply this by five,
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the usual ratio of such pupils to total membership in Catholic
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quarters, it would give America only 10,000,000 Catholics. One of
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the drives of the hierarchy in recent years has been to spread
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Catholics or Catholicism over the more thinly-populated regions so
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as to get everywhere sufficient to claim a school or to eviscerate
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the teaching in the local national school.
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|
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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4
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THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
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It is, of course, chiefly in regard to history, science, and
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general knowledge classes (with reference to current events and
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institutions) that the priests are so keen to, "protect" the child,
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but even more important than this, the Church says, is "the
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Catholic atmosphere." Every school is a church. Statues of Mary and
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the more popular saints, painted in all the colors of the rainbow,
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and Catholic colored pictures crowd the walls and window-ledges.
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Prayers and hymns open and close the day, and specific lessons on
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the faith are given or the children march to the church to hear
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them. Holidays may be given in honor of distinguished
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ecclesiastical visitors or important Church events. Mass must be
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heard on the Church's "holy days" and children of seven and over
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are conducted to the church periodically to confess their "sins."
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From the age of five to sixteen or seventeen -- it is just the same
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in the secondary school and the "academy" for girls -- the hypnotic
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influence continues. Catholic books of the most mendacious
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character are given as prizes. Semi-magical talisman's (blessed
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medals, little pictures, scapulars, Agnus Deis or tiny wax lambs
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enclosed in cloths, etc.) must be bought and worn next the skin
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night and day. A Catholic adult goes to church once a week: a
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Catholic child spends half the day in it every day. And the theme
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of the myriad influences that seep into the child's mind all the
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time is "Our Holy Faith:" our unique, incomparably superior,
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exclusive, god-given creed.
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Why should one call this poisoning the mind? Isn't it a
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scheme, devised and perfected by thousand's of educators of the
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young before Pestalozzi and Froebel were born, for forming the
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character of the child or training it in habits of decency, self-
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restraint, truthfulness, and regard for others? When you read a
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non-Catholic writer who says that sort of thing inquire if he has
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ever taken the least trouble to ascertain whether the Catholic
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children who have spent nine or ten years in this atmosphere are in
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fact any better than any body of children who have been reared in
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a purely, or almost purely, secular school-atmosphere. I wager that
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you will find that these "liberal" writers have never even glanced
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at the question. They could discover with very little trouble that
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in any of the blacker areas of our cities -- the areas in which
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chronic poverty and ignorance have created a tradition of unsocial
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conduct -- the Catholics are not a bit less drunken, violent, and
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prone to vice and crime than their neighbors. They could learn
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authoritatively that Catholic's have a higher percentage in the
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jails and brothels than they have in the general population. They
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can learn the facts about social behavior in Ireland or any
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predominantly Catholic country. They know that in our class or
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social environment Catholics are not superior to others in sound
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qualities. of character.
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The Catholic primary school which I attended 60 to 70 years
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ago was in a poor industrial suburb of a large city. I often go
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back to it to observe the very great progress it has made in
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cleanliness, sobriety, restraint, public decency, and all important
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social qualities. It was very foul in my boyhood, and I knew all
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its vices and crimes. Catholic workers as a body behaved like
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others all round me, and what a boy did not see he did not fail to
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learn from others. Vividly do I remember how, when the master left
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us in the higher forms for a half-hour, the older boys from the
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Bank of Wisdom
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||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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5
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THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
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poorest and least restrained quarters told us, joyously, every bit
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of foulness they had picked up, while Mary and the Saints looked
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down at us from the walls, and how behavior out of school was such
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as one would expect.
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The real function of the school was to make loyal Catholics of
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us, to din into our ears until it was ineffaceable impressed that
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our religion was not a religion like that of the Protestant
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schoolboys, but the truth from God that could tolerate no
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comparison. A favorite sport was for the whole body of us to
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"Scuttle" (stone) the pupils of some Protestant school and chant
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some doggerel like "Prodidog, Prodidog, go to hell, while all the
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Catholics ring the bell"; and the priests and teachers never
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preached to us on that. They would today, of course; Catholics must
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show that they are good neighbors; but beneath all the smiles and
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recognitions that "there is good in all religions" you see the same
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arrogance and intolerance. Catholics are unique. All the world
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belongs to us, and will come back to us when the work of the devil,
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which began at the Reformation, is finally undone. The parallel
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with Nazism is again perfect; and the aim is the same -- the power
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and wealth of the Leaderg and the Gestapo. The whole purpose of
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this ceaseless droning about the uniqueness of our Holy Church and
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Holy Faith and Holy Mother and Holy everything down to the water
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for chasing devils is to make and keep Catholics submissive. So
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they can be raised, almost without explanation, to a blind fury
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||
against Russia or Mexico, can be turned into howling mobs to
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||
prevent their neighbors from seeing films which the priests do not
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||
like, can be fooled for years about the real meaning of the policy
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||
in which they are induced to cooperate.
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||
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If this blind devotion, with its inevitable submissiveness to
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authority, be not thought poisonous enough, remember that it is in
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large part secured by a monstrous and mischievous untruth. Belief
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in hell and devils belongs to a stage of human development that is
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||
not consistent with modern ideals. Probably the majority of priests
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||
do not believe in them today. But they are as essential to the
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Catholic school and journalism as a heroine is to a novel. They are
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essential, not for moral purposes -- this flimsy scaffolding of
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character is one of the chief reasons why the Catholic training
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breaks down in post-school years -- but as an instrument of moral
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||
terrorism and to protect the myth of the holiness and uniqueness of
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the Church. The Church, the child gradually learns, has so many
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||
"enemies" (critics) just because it is so holy and precious. The
|
||
devil, who is picturesquely represented to every child as a sort of
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super-Nazi with a devouring thirst to bring more and more million's
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of souls into his overcrowded and insanitary domain, is at the back
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||
of all this opposition to the Church. The good Catholic must not
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||
even listen to what his agents say, most particularly when they
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assume the disguise of honest and decent men. For "sins of the
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flesh" the Catholic can get pardon at any time and escape hell by
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||
confessing but to leave the Church, to read or hear anything that
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||
might cause one to leave the Church, is the most terrible sin of
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all because one obviously cuts oneself off from the tribunals of
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forgiveness and the "channels of grace" (sacraments). So from the
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age of seven the children are made to sing, lustily, hymn's with
|
||
lines such as "hell is raging for my soul" and "earth and hell
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||
unite, and swear in lasting bonds to bind us."
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
It would take a whole book to analyze adequately the
|
||
comprehensive poison of this "Catholic atmosphere." A psychologist
|
||
would find it a fascinating study in social psychology but of
|
||
course, no psychologist in America dare publish a book on it. I
|
||
will give in the next book some weird evidence, which has just
|
||
reached me, of the ripe results of it in Catholic countries, but I
|
||
must here be content with a bare outline of this first part of the
|
||
mechanism of the clerical Gestapo for making and keeping the people
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||
blindly submissive and zealous for "the good of the Church."
|
||
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||
It is hardly necessary to add that the lessons are carefully
|
||
arranged to suit the atmosphere. The Bible is rarely seen -- in my
|
||
youth few Catholics ever saw a Bible -- but there are lessons, on
|
||
Fundamentalist lines on "biblical history" as a gradual preparation
|
||
of the world for the coming of Christ and his instructions (mainly
|
||
secret) to found the wonderful Church. Science is fearfully
|
||
mutilated. Colleges can have admirable chemical and physical
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||
laboratories because inorganic science is quite harmless, and
|
||
botany is fairly safe. The mutilation begins with geology and
|
||
paleontology. They are today manuals of evolution, so you can
|
||
imagine what the Catholic version of them looks like. General
|
||
biology and physiology must be adulterated so as sustain the myth
|
||
of a "vital principle," and Catholic psychology is as far removed
|
||
from science as the Civil War is from modern politics. Prehistoric
|
||
archeology, the science of prehistoric man, is, when any notice at
|
||
all is taken of it, a sheer caricature.
|
||
|
||
But history is the great field of the poisoner. A very
|
||
familiar jibe speaks of liars, damned liars, and statistics. It is
|
||
a clumsy absurdity as regards statistics but a neat classification
|
||
if you change the word to "Catholic historians." I need not here
|
||
examine the manuals used in Catholic schools. In my various works
|
||
I have nailed many thousand Catholics to the counter and shown that
|
||
even the Catholic Encyclopedia, the flower of American Romanist
|
||
scholarship, is full of them. You can therefore gather what kind of
|
||
stuff they impose upon their own children in their own schools and
|
||
colleges.
|
||
|
||
I repeat that it is not merely mendacious but poisonous. When
|
||
a Jesuit can say in what all American Catholics consider to be the
|
||
cream of their scholarship (the Encyclopedia) that all branches of
|
||
the Church recognized the supremacy of the Pope in the first four
|
||
centuries, which is the exact opposite of the truth, you know what
|
||
to expect. The version of history, from the alleged and mythical
|
||
years of Peter in Rome to the exploits of the present Pope, that is
|
||
imposed upon Catholics, beginning in the elementary school, is the
|
||
richest tissue of brazen lies that I know. And, which one need not
|
||
tear one's hair because children are taught as history those lives
|
||
of saints and martyrs which Catholic authorities denounce as
|
||
forgeries, the story as a whole is profoundly mischievous and
|
||
antisocial. Its one aim is like the purpose of all the rest, to
|
||
keep Catholics so submissive to their caste of consecrated guides
|
||
that they will swallow every statement or instruction without
|
||
serious inquiry into its justice or injustice.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
Chapter II
|
||
|
||
THE PRIEST RULES THE FAMILY
|
||
|
||
It would be a mistake to imagine the troops of Catholic boys
|
||
and girls who issue from the primary or the secondary school every
|
||
year as just as solidly enthusiastic for their Holy Faith as a
|
||
troop of boys or girls issuing from an Adolf Hitler School in
|
||
Germany. I take it that the conditions are much the same in urban
|
||
America as in urban Britain, and in the latter there is plenty of
|
||
Catholic evidence that boys desert the Church in very large numbers
|
||
during the three or four years after leaving school. At Catholic
|
||
conferences of teachers and priests it has been stated that in
|
||
British cities 30 to 60 percent (in different localities) of the
|
||
boys abandon the Church. This can surprise only those folk who
|
||
lazily admit, as most do, the Catholic boast of "marvelous
|
||
numerical progress", in Britain and America. In neither country are
|
||
they making any numerical progress. I have shown over and over
|
||
again, and have in the last chapter pointed out that the latest
|
||
Census figures confirm this, that the Catholic body, in spite of
|
||
its higher birth rate, does not increase as much as the general
|
||
body of the population. It is a pity there is no American who can
|
||
force this truth into the official mind at Washington.
|
||
|
||
The transfer of the Catholic children from the artificial
|
||
atmosphere of the school to the secular life is something like
|
||
transplanting hot house seedlings to the open air in a late spring.
|
||
There would, in fact, be a still larger number of casualties if it
|
||
were not for the fact that the boy has already spent two hours on
|
||
the street or outside the school for every hour he has spent in its
|
||
theatrically insincere atmosphere. He has already learned that
|
||
there is considerable doubt about these picturesque devils who are
|
||
raging for his little soul and about the holiness of his priests
|
||
and popes. The girl who passes from the nuns' academy to a city
|
||
store or workshop finds that the section of her anatomy which the
|
||
good sisters told her, with bated, breath and downcast eyes, is the
|
||
Temple of the Holy Ghost now learns that that is not the general
|
||
view. Of course they have been prepared for this by warnings that
|
||
"the world" is like "the flesh" and the devil, a deadly enemy of
|
||
the good Catholic. Somehow the world, when the child enters it,
|
||
does, not quite resemble the villain of an old-time melodrama. The
|
||
hold of the Gestapo begins to slip.
|
||
|
||
The priest prepares for this by his grip on the family.
|
||
I say that Catholics are the most priest-ridden of all people but
|
||
it will not be forgotten that the power of the priest differs
|
||
enormously in different places: in Quebec and in Ohio, in rural
|
||
Mexico or Brazil and in New York City, with every shade of
|
||
difference between those two extremes. No one who knows the "really
|
||
Catholic country" (even Eire) will question that the people are far
|
||
more priest-ridden, more bullied and intimidated by the clergy,
|
||
than people are in rural Protestant areas, to say nothing of people
|
||
under Buddhist, Hindu, Shinto, Taoist, Moslem, or Jewish
|
||
authorities. The Jews and Moslem have no priests, in the ordinary
|
||
sense, and the priests of the Asiatic nations do little more than
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
perform ceremonies. Yet, although the priest in America has not yet
|
||
the despotic power his colleague has in Quebec or Portugal -- he
|
||
expects to have it someday -- I am inclined to say that even in
|
||
America Catholics are amongst the most priest-ridden of people.
|
||
|
||
The clergy dominate the family as they do the school. It is
|
||
the priest's duty to visit every home in his parish once in
|
||
(usually) three months. Naturally he shirks unattractive homes and
|
||
spends more time in those where the company is jovial and the
|
||
bottle travels freely. He generally has a little directory or note-
|
||
book with particulars about each. I do not suggest that Catholic
|
||
married women are more pliant than others but it will occur to most
|
||
people that the visit of the priest in the afternoon, when the
|
||
husband is at his job and the children are in school, comes pretty
|
||
close to G.B. Shaw's explanation of the popularity of marriage: it
|
||
combines the maximum of temptation with the maximum of opportunity.
|
||
There is, of course, a good deal of misconduct, for the priest of
|
||
amorous disposition can learn on which day the "help" is away, but,
|
||
whatever else happens, the priest takes this opportunity to inquire
|
||
about the loyalty of the husband and the children who have left
|
||
school. An unsatisfactory report will bring him in the evening to
|
||
see them.
|
||
|
||
In order to appreciate the priest's peculiar control over the
|
||
family one must understand the power which the Church claims and
|
||
exercises over marriage. From the 4th Century it fought for 700
|
||
years to get this power, and the laity successfully resisted until
|
||
the bloody-minded "saintly" Popes Gregory VII and Innocent III
|
||
perfected the Roman scheme of priestcraft, and the "great"
|
||
Schoolmen proved to demonstration that this scheme, a transparent
|
||
clerical fabrication of comparatively recent date, was established
|
||
by Christ. How the priests won this power just when gaiety and
|
||
skepticism were increasing in Europe must be read elsewhere.
|
||
Briefly the Church brought matrimony under its iron authority by
|
||
making it a sacrament, an indissoluble contract, a ceremony
|
||
essentially requiring the presence of a priest. It discovered
|
||
"impediments," some of which were subject to removal by
|
||
dispensation (to the great profit of the Vatican) and some,
|
||
theoretically, not. This not only led to a prodigious traffic in
|
||
dispensations, which still continues in large part as I explained
|
||
in the last book, but it gave the archbishops and Popes a very
|
||
important authority over the lives of nobles, princes, and monarchs
|
||
in the matter of their marriage's.
|
||
|
||
Three cases which have been fully discussed by American
|
||
critics like Boyd-Barrett, Marshall, and Selde's and may here be
|
||
recalled briefly, will illustrate this tyranny. The late Count
|
||
(then Mr.) Marconi married the Hon. Beatrice O'Brien in a
|
||
Protestant church in London -- "she was a Protestant and he an
|
||
apostate" -- in 1905. They had three children but separated in 1918
|
||
and were divorced in 1924. The Church very generously concedes that
|
||
it does not claim authority over non-Catholic marriages, but it
|
||
also claims that one who has been baptized a Catholic, as Marconi
|
||
had been, remains subject to it. In any case Marconi wanted to
|
||
marry the Catholic Countess Bizzi-Scala, and he applied to Cardinal
|
||
Bourne in London for a declaration that his marriage was null and
|
||
void from the start: in other words, that he had never been married
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
to Beatrice O'Brieri -- though the Church, with great charity and
|
||
ingenuity, declares that the children of these sham marriages are
|
||
legitimate. The canonists at Rome fastened upon the fact, or the
|
||
allegation -- you know what evidence is worth in divorce suits --
|
||
that Marconi and his bride had agreed before marriage that if it
|
||
proved unhappy they would seek a divorce. Therefore there was no
|
||
real marriage, said the learned priests of London, pocketing their
|
||
fees. But Beatrice did not altogether like the idea that her
|
||
children were only saved from being bastards by the sophistry of
|
||
priests and she appealed to the Rota tribunal at Rome. Marconi was
|
||
now rich and he "paid the expenses" of the trial. He got his decree
|
||
of nullity, married his countess, and was in high favor at the
|
||
Vatican until he died in 1937.
|
||
|
||
In the second famous case Consuelo Vanderbilt, who had married
|
||
the Duke of Marlborough in 1895, left him in 1905 (after bearing
|
||
two sons) and got a divorce, applied to these learned and ingenious
|
||
Catholic authorities in London to ease her conscience by declaring
|
||
the marriage null from the start. You see, she now wanted to marry
|
||
the Catholic Count Balsan. The London authorities had to share so
|
||
promising a case with the Roman Rota, and the decree of nullity was
|
||
granted. She had, she swore, married against her will and because
|
||
her mother said that she would die of heart-disease unless Consuelo
|
||
married the Duke. No internal consent, said Rome, so no marriage.
|
||
Consult the authors I have named if you want to read the testimony
|
||
of these aristocratic folk in detail and learn how the Vatican
|
||
authorities proved to the hilt, when a storm arose, that they were
|
||
absolutely compelled to declare the marriage null and money had
|
||
nothing to do with it. What interests me is the Church of Rome here
|
||
claims a power that is not only greater than but antagonistic to
|
||
that of the State. What, you probably ask, would be the social
|
||
situation if every girl who thought her husband a beast could go to
|
||
a court and get it to declare that she was not married to him
|
||
because "I didn't want to marry him -- mother made me," or "he,
|
||
said he would let me get a divorce if I wasn't happy"? But, don't
|
||
be too nervous. First, She would get no alimony. Secondly, Rome
|
||
does not deal with a hundred cases a year and says that half of
|
||
them are "free." We already know something about Rome's "free"
|
||
services. The certificate may be free, but the frame may cost a
|
||
mighty lot of dollars.
|
||
|
||
A third case confirms us in these cynical reflection's. Miss
|
||
Anna Gould -- how the names in these cases do smell of money --
|
||
married the Marquis de Castellane in 1895, went through the usual
|
||
routine until they quarreled, divorced him in 1906 and married the
|
||
Duke de Sagan. He was a Catholic, but with true French chivalry he
|
||
deserted the Church for his loved (and wealthy) Anna. The elegant
|
||
Castellane, being a Catholic, felt himself out in the cold and
|
||
applied to Rome for a nullity-decree so that he could marry again.
|
||
Anna had, he said, spoken about divorce before their marriage. The
|
||
cardinals of the Rota rejected his application, accepted it on
|
||
appeal, then rejected it again. Castellane appealed to the Pope,
|
||
who referred the matter to a committee of cardinals, and they
|
||
declared the marriage invalid. To be quite sure on so sacred a
|
||
point the Pope enlarged the committee, and it declared the marriage
|
||
valid. Don't imagine that a count, a marquis, or a millionaire
|
||
always gets this previous decree. But you might care to ask me
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
whether all the marquis's money had gone or whether American
|
||
dollars were weighed against his thin French francs. I regret that
|
||
the finances of these spiritual transactions are kept in a decent
|
||
secrecy.
|
||
|
||
A fourth case differently illustrates this beneficent power of
|
||
the Church to tie and untie indissoluble marriages. A few years ago
|
||
a Catholic American actress fell in love with a married producer.
|
||
He got a divorce from his Jewess wife but the austere Church will
|
||
no more allow a marriage to a divorced person than it will grant a
|
||
divorce. The man however became a Catholic and married his Catholic
|
||
actress. Now, there's a pretty conundrum: so pretty that when I
|
||
published the facts in London two years ago one of the chief
|
||
writers on one of the chief Catholic papers howled that here I
|
||
displayed either my gross ignorance of Catholic matters or . . .
|
||
The rest was silence. They delicately refrain from calling me a
|
||
liar -- in print.
|
||
|
||
But it is simple, and this Catholic journalist would have
|
||
learned a little about her own religion if she had read the article
|
||
"Pauline Privilege" in her Catholic Encyclopedia. Paul -- remember,
|
||
in mitigation, that he did not know that marriage is a sacrament
|
||
and indissoluble -- advised lady-members of the little group called
|
||
Churches that when one was married to a pagan who was contemptuous
|
||
of his faith she was free, after gently expostulating with him in
|
||
vain, to leave him and marry a Christian. Those learned theologians
|
||
of the Middle Ages who made a stalwart defense of the whole scheme
|
||
of priestcraft and are now pressed upon us by Catholic apologists
|
||
as modern-minded thinkers, worked out that this was quite
|
||
consistent with marriage being a sacrament and indissoluble, and it
|
||
is part of the law of the Church today. In the case I have given
|
||
above we have a simple application of it. The gentleman becomes a
|
||
Catholic, doubtless after profound meditation on the beauty of the
|
||
faith and not because priests had told him about the Pauline
|
||
Privilege. To meet American civil law he has already divorced his
|
||
wife, but in the eyes of the Church he is still married. All that
|
||
he had to do however is to ask his late wife, whose answer you can
|
||
imagine if you know the riper Yiddish, if she cares to become a
|
||
Catholic or to live with him without ever making any reflections on
|
||
his religious adventures. Even from this, however, Rome claims
|
||
(clause 1211 of the new Canon Law) that it can grant a
|
||
dispensation, and, the lady being already divorced, it was probably
|
||
not done. The emancipated partner is then free without any further
|
||
fuss to marry a good member of the Church.
|
||
|
||
Other aspects of Catholic law and practice illustrate this
|
||
power of the clerical Gestapo, even to the extent of flouting the
|
||
civil law, in a matter which is generally regarded as the supreme
|
||
personal concern in the life of a man or woman. Although this
|
||
control of marriage is so obviously priest-manufactured that the
|
||
laity, as I said, defeated for many centuries every attempt to
|
||
obtain its legislation about marriage fills one of the longer
|
||
sections of the new Code of Canon Law, and from the elaborate
|
||
nature of the clauses you will understand that very large and
|
||
profitable body of the appeals to the Roman Congregations which I
|
||
described. Probably the most lucrative dogmas (to the Italian
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
caucus) in the Whole Roman scheme are the sacramental nature of
|
||
marriage and the doctrine of purgatory (through indulgences), and
|
||
both are transparent medieval fabrications in so far as they are
|
||
dogmas.
|
||
|
||
Notoriously the Church goes beyond any civil law in assigning
|
||
the degrees of relationship within which it is forbidden to marry.
|
||
In the Middle Ages they stretched so far that in a small town or
|
||
village everybody was related to everybody, and it was a golden age
|
||
of dispensations; or it would have been if folk had taken their
|
||
religion seriously in the Middle Ages. The new Canon Law says that
|
||
Catholics must not marry (without a Roman license) if they are
|
||
related by blood within three degrees, by marriage, within two
|
||
degrees, or by spiritual relationship (god parents in baptism). So
|
||
it is no longer possible for canonists to say, as they did in the
|
||
Middle Age's, that a marriage from which a rich person wants to
|
||
escape, never was a marriage because (as in the case of "Saint"
|
||
Louis and the very un-saintly Queen Eleanor) the man is related to
|
||
the woman through some incident they have succeeded in discovering
|
||
in the lives of their great-great-grandparents, or through an act
|
||
of fornication, which in that age might be taken for granted
|
||
between their fifth cousins or other remote relatives. But the
|
||
field is still rich in possibilities; note carefully that marriages
|
||
which are valid in civil law are not valid in Church law and vice
|
||
versa.
|
||
|
||
Mixed marriages are another interesting field. I have recently
|
||
been consulted on two cases in England. M has married N (a
|
||
Catholic) on a strict agreement of honor between themselves that no
|
||
religion shall be imposed upon children of the marriage, who shall
|
||
choose their philosophy of life when they grow up. There is one
|
||
child, now in her early teen's, and the wife repudiates the
|
||
promise, at the priest's order, and she and her relatives choke the
|
||
girl with proselytism. In the second case a man wants to marry a
|
||
Catholic girl, and she has assured him that there is no law of the
|
||
Church that all children of a mixed marriage shall be baptized and
|
||
reared in the Catholic Church.
|
||
|
||
I am not concerned with whether these girls lied on their own
|
||
account or were directed by the priest to lie -- I beg his pardon,
|
||
to make a "mental reservation." Both are equally possible. But the
|
||
law of the Church is clear. Not only is a dispensation required for
|
||
a mixed marriage but it will be granted only on four conditions
|
||
(clause 1061). There must be a serious reason: the non-Catholic
|
||
must promise never to say anything to disturb the Catholic's faith
|
||
and must agree to the Catholic baptism and education of all
|
||
children: the priest must be morally certain that the promise will
|
||
be kept: and he must have the promise in writing. The next clause
|
||
(1062) says that the Catholic party (who gets a promise that his or
|
||
her faith shall never be interfered with) must solemnly promise to
|
||
take every opportunity to interfere with the creed of ("convert")
|
||
the non-Catholic. Clause 1070 enacts that such a marriage is
|
||
invalid unless the Catholic has got a dispensation, so that the
|
||
promises cannot be evaded by concealing the marriage from the
|
||
Church.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
Another provision which flouts civil law and has led to a vast
|
||
amount of social trouble is that a Catholic (a baptized person,
|
||
whether he or she has left the Church or not) does not enter into
|
||
a valid marriage unless it is performed by a priest (1904). This
|
||
was enacted by the Council of Trent so as to prevent Catholics
|
||
secretly slipping from the power of the priest. When Catholics
|
||
multiplied in Protestant countries, some of which bitterly resented
|
||
such interference, Rome often suspended it, but in 1908 it was
|
||
declared to be in force in all countries. You see one consequence
|
||
of it. The millions in America who were baptized in the Church and
|
||
later left it and married like other citizens are to their Catholic
|
||
friends, not married, and their children are bastards.
|
||
|
||
There is a similar defiance of civil law in the enactment that
|
||
a couple who had committed adultery before marriage, or ex-nuns and
|
||
priests who had once taken a vow of celibacy are not validly
|
||
married. On the other hand, this very peculiar code of law about
|
||
marriage, which is supposed to have raised civilization in this
|
||
respect to a higher level, again drastically flouts civil law by
|
||
Saying (1104) that a priest can for "a very serious reason"
|
||
celebrate a marriage without witnesses and conceal it from the
|
||
civic authorities by entering it in a "secret register," and that
|
||
such a marriage is perfectly valid. Further, Church Law says that
|
||
youth's can validly marry at the age of 16 and girls at the age of
|
||
14 (which in Britain is two years below the legal age of consent).
|
||
And in fine this Code of the Church that never makes a moral
|
||
mistake lays great stress on that need of "internal consent" which,
|
||
as I showed in the above cases, opens a wide field for perjury and
|
||
contempt of the civil law. Some of the American judges who tell
|
||
their fellow-citizens how the Roman Church "does good" and
|
||
strengthens American civilization would not exactly be embarrassed
|
||
if married folk applied to them for divorce on the simple ground
|
||
that they were prepared to swear that they "did not really consent"
|
||
when they said "I do." They would order them out of court.
|
||
|
||
I am not in this book concerned with the defiance of civil law
|
||
and authority which is implied, if not flouted, in these clauses,
|
||
and the defiance of our modern ethic of sex-relations we will
|
||
consider in a later book. For the moment it is enough that here we
|
||
have an invasion of the most personal concerns of men and women
|
||
which really beats the Gestapo. Concerned as the Nazis are about
|
||
copulation and children, they are content with one drastic law-
|
||
forbidding copulation with Jews -- and leave the rest to the
|
||
influence of their "ideals." What will occur to any reader, even if
|
||
he is entirely ignorant of the history of these matters or does not
|
||
know that the laws were framed in an age of intense priestcraft, is
|
||
that they so obviously mean power and wealth to the clergy. To say
|
||
that they have an important moral or social significance is
|
||
preposterous. Some of the laws are plainly created for the profit
|
||
of selling dispensations from them, and all are designed to extend
|
||
and emphasize the power of the Black International over the laity.
|
||
The Fuhrer has framed them: the Gauleiter and the Gestapo see to
|
||
the observance of them.
|
||
|
||
I have said little about divorce, though the Church's refusal
|
||
to recognize the validity of it is clearly a monstrous invasion of
|
||
the civic rights of a man or woman. It is as useless to talk about
|
||
Christian duty as about the sanctity of marriage and social
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
interests. Until the 11th Century the Church recognized more
|
||
grounds of divorce than the majority of states do today. The Greek
|
||
and most of the Protestant Churches, who know just as much about
|
||
Christian duty but less about priestcraft, recognize divorce. And
|
||
the Roman Church at once, when it suppressed divorce as part of its
|
||
comprehensive assertion of power over the laity, permitted an
|
||
extraordinary development of those nullity-decrees which I
|
||
illustrated in the foregoing cases. Catholics who had money were as
|
||
free to change partners as folk are in most of the states of the
|
||
American Union today. That is no reckless statement. The highest
|
||
authority on France in the beautiful 13th Century, Prof. Luchaire,
|
||
often claimed to be a Catholic and certainly not anti-Catholic,
|
||
says that women of the noble class "had a minimum of three or four
|
||
(successive) husbands." I have fully dealt with that elsewhere and
|
||
must not be tempted to enlarge upon it here.
|
||
|
||
The law against birth-control is an even more audacious, more
|
||
purely clerical, and more recent invasion of the rights of the
|
||
individual and the family. The motive for that sacred fury of
|
||
priests and bishops against the use of contraceptives which causes
|
||
them to hound women like Margaret Sanger, get Catholic mobs to
|
||
break up meetings, and make insolent attacks on medical or civic
|
||
authorities who favor the establishment of clinics has in reality
|
||
nothing to do with either morals or religion. It is an occasion for
|
||
asserting and thereby increasing their power in the community, and
|
||
it is one way of impressing more deeply on their own people the
|
||
prohibition of birth-control. It keeps up the fiction that it is
|
||
"filthy."
|
||
|
||
There are few points on which the claim of the Black
|
||
International is as plainly based on their own material interest as
|
||
it is here. There is nothing in traditional Catholic theology that
|
||
makes birth control sinful. The question did not arise until the
|
||
19th Century when the birth rate began to gain on the death rate
|
||
and when the extensive use of crude contraceptive's began in
|
||
France. It then became apparent to the clergy that if non-Catholics
|
||
checked their natural increase by the use of preventives and
|
||
Catholics could be intimidated from using these by a threat of
|
||
eternal punishment the Church might hope in this way to cover to
|
||
some extent its large numerical losses. A Catholic mother told me
|
||
that her priest had frankly said this at one of their "mother's
|
||
meetings." It is, at all events, not only the true but the obvious
|
||
inspiration of the clerical opposition to birth control; and it is
|
||
one of the grossest pieces of Gestapo tyranny over the family and
|
||
the individual. It is one of the points on which the Pope most
|
||
naturally allied himself with Germany, Italy and Japan. They wanted
|
||
as many potential soldiers as possible: the Church wanted as many
|
||
contributing members as possible. Neither cared the toss of a coin
|
||
about the other reasons.
|
||
|
||
It is here frankly ridiculous to ask us to pay serious
|
||
attention to the solemn statements of grounds for the opposition
|
||
which Catholics are now invited to insert even in our
|
||
Encyclopedias. To quote the "divine command" to "increase and
|
||
multiply" from a piece of ancient Jewish fiction is an insult to
|
||
our intelligence; especially on the part of priests and nuns who
|
||
pretend to be superior to the rest of us precisely by ignoring the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
command and regarding the mechanism of multiplication as even more
|
||
repulsive than defecation. But the usual argument that God's will
|
||
and purpose in the organs of generation is defied, is not much
|
||
better. This also is stultified by the doctrine of the Church that
|
||
priests, monks, and nun's, who are presumably equipped with those
|
||
organs, are much dearer to God just because they forswear the use
|
||
of them. But the argument is in itself absurd. It was used against
|
||
the use of anesthetics in difficult childbirth. It is answered by
|
||
the Catholic's own defense of celibacy: that provided a sufficient
|
||
number of people marry and couple to maintain the population the
|
||
"divine purpose" is met.
|
||
|
||
In any case, now that medicine and surgery are increasingly
|
||
reducing the death rate an unrestrained birth rate is a growing
|
||
evil. When Hitler and Mussolini and the Japanese government forbade
|
||
Malthusian propaganda and whipped up the birth rate explicitly as
|
||
a preparation for war, were they cooperating with the divine
|
||
purpose? Is a great war, which checks the growth of the population,
|
||
part of that purpose? Are bacteria and fatal diseases?
|
||
Overpopulation is, notoriously, an outstanding cause of poverty,
|
||
suffering, unemployment, even war. But overpopulation would be
|
||
grave in our own time if it were not for the general use of
|
||
contraceptives and in the future it would reach heights which these
|
||
opponents of birth control on social grounds never dare consider.
|
||
Without birth control or immigration (which is ceasing) the
|
||
population of the United States would be 500,000,000 in the year
|
||
2000, 4,000,000,000 in 2110. . . . Need I continue.
|
||
|
||
The Catholic clerical attitude is a piece of blatant
|
||
hypocrisy. Its real purpose is to strengthen the power of the
|
||
clergy and multiply those who support them. Its ostensible grounds
|
||
are so flimsy that Catholic men and women are in this respect
|
||
defying their priests to such an extent that the matter is now
|
||
openly discussed in Catholic literature. For their more comfortable
|
||
and better educated people they have had to say that it is
|
||
permissible to restrict births by refusing to have intercourse
|
||
except in the wife's sterile period, but they cheat even these
|
||
because the Ogino-Kraus theory of sterility which they follow is --
|
||
and the clerical leaders must know it -- rejected by the great
|
||
majority of medical authorities. Most of us would like to
|
||
characterize their interference in such matters in even stronger
|
||
language, because at the best it is based upon a view of sexual
|
||
intercourse at which the modern world smiles, but we must be
|
||
content to point out that we have here a tyranny over a man's life
|
||
which goes far beyond the claims and practices of the Gestapo.
|
||
|
||
A final illustration of the tyranny over the family is the
|
||
childish ceremony of "churching" or Purification. When a child is
|
||
born it is rushed to church at the earliest date the doctor permits
|
||
for "baptism." This is Supposed by those who take a "broad view" of
|
||
the Roman Church to be just a registration of the newcomer in the
|
||
ranks of the faithful. It is, of course, nothing of the kind. It is
|
||
part of the scheme of clerical control and is based upon a priest-
|
||
made superstition that seems to any properly educated person
|
||
revolting. The idea of it is that all men are born with the
|
||
sentence of eternal punishment, or at least of eternal exclusion
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
from heaven, hanging over them (original sin) because a legendary
|
||
Adam broke into a legendary orchard ages ago. That pink morsel of
|
||
flesh is, on Catholic teaching, to suffer, privately, forever for
|
||
Adam's sin if it died before it is put through the weird rites
|
||
known as baptism!
|
||
|
||
Most people think that the tyranny and absurdity -- one would
|
||
almost say obscenity -- end there but they do not. Because ages ago
|
||
in the dawn of Hebrew civilization, when savage superstitions still
|
||
lingered in the tribes, the priests laid it down (Leviticus, XII:2)
|
||
that a woman was "unclean" after bearing a child -- for seven days
|
||
if it was a boy and fourteen if it was a girl -- and must go to the
|
||
priest to be purified, priests get the Catholic women of Boston,
|
||
New York, and Chicago to act upon the same childish superstition
|
||
today. It is voluntary, but the priests urge it upon every "good"
|
||
Catholic mother. Polite non-Catholics say that it is just a pretty
|
||
symbolical ceremony. As usual, they decline to look up the facts.
|
||
The ritual enjoins that the woman must remain, as a sort of sinner,
|
||
"at the door of the church" until the priest's magic has "purified"
|
||
her, and then leads her into the church. He has made an honest
|
||
woman of her. Photographs of the ceremony in the 20th Century ought
|
||
to be preserved amongst those records of contemporary life which
|
||
are stored in some places for the future sociologist.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Chapter III
|
||
|
||
THE PRIESTLY CENSORS OF MORALS
|
||
|
||
These points do not tell the whole story of that tyranny over
|
||
the family which the priest exercises, largely through his
|
||
afternoon visitations. He wants to know if parents and children
|
||
have joined the various societies and fraternities, suited to every
|
||
age and both sexes, which are organized for the purpose of carrying
|
||
his school-control over later years, We return to these in the last
|
||
chapter. He inquires if any fail to attend the church every Sunday,
|
||
what they read, what shows and dances they attend, whether the
|
||
children who have left school have fallen into "bad company," and
|
||
so on. Whether he is really concerned about their morals or no
|
||
depends upon the character of the priest, which is generally
|
||
doubtful, but every priest is very keen on keeping them in the
|
||
Church. Where the Catholic body is strong and includes a number of
|
||
Catholic employers the priest has a very persuasive argument for
|
||
loyalty. I have known a priest in a British town of medium size to
|
||
walk into a shop in which a Catholic had a score of employees and
|
||
order him to dismiss non-Catholics and hire Catholics recommended
|
||
by himself, or order a woman who kept a small store, to cancel her
|
||
purchase's from non-Catholic sources and deal with Catholics. But
|
||
here we are mainly concerned with that form of tyranny which the
|
||
priest calls concern about the morals of Catholics.
|
||
|
||
Here the "unprejudiced" non-Catholic -- it is remarkable how
|
||
often a writer whose circulation can be injured or promoted by the
|
||
clergy or a politician with an eye on the Catholic vote -- becomes
|
||
ironical. Do we, he asks, first deny that the Church "does good"
|
||
and then quarrel with it for attempting to do good by a paternal
|
||
vigilance over the morals of the community? Or do we deny that
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
moral culture has anything to do with the welfare and progress of
|
||
a civilization? I must defer to a later book the reply to the
|
||
second question, in which we must discriminate, but we may remind
|
||
these "liberal" folk of one or two matters that concern the answer
|
||
to the first, which he regards as so easy.
|
||
|
||
One point is that the concern of the Black International about
|
||
conduct is far less than its concern about loyalty and is largely
|
||
hypocritical. Ever since the early part of the Middle Ages the
|
||
Church has insisted on its dual guardianship of faith and morals,
|
||
yet I have abundantly shown in my historical works that, while it
|
||
adopted murderous methods of guarding the faith of the people it
|
||
was so really unconcerned about their morals that the period when
|
||
the power of priests and Popes was supreme (the 11th to the 16th
|
||
Century) was the most immoral in the history of normal
|
||
civilization. I do not here take the word morals to refer chiefly
|
||
to sexual morals. I say that there was more fiendish cruelty, more
|
||
ghastly injustice to the poorer nine-tenth's of the community, more
|
||
contempt of the idea of honor and good faith, than in any other 400
|
||
years of history apart from the Dark Ages. But the verdict is
|
||
particularly sound if you make the Christian sex-code one of the
|
||
chief points of your ethical scheme of conduct; and this state of
|
||
things -- see my large History of Morals -- lasted well into the
|
||
19th Century and lingered longer in Catholic than in non-Catholic
|
||
countries.
|
||
|
||
To express surprise or incredulity at this statement is to
|
||
confess that one has never made a serious study of it. At its best
|
||
the Catholic code is false to the realities of life and largely
|
||
based upon superstitions about sex that the candid mind at once
|
||
rejects. Further, it is framed in a doctrinal system on the level
|
||
of the crude boogie-will-get-you-if-you-are-naughty of the nursery.
|
||
The moment the Catholic goes out into life, either on leaving the
|
||
school or (in the case of the Irish), by emigration to a better
|
||
educated country, the framework begins to yield to the acid in the
|
||
new atmosphere. Thirdly the Church has frustrated its moral
|
||
efforts, as far as we can respect these, by making it easy for the
|
||
people to escape what it calls "the consequences of sin" (the
|
||
confessional, indulgences, etc.). And fourthly the clergy
|
||
themselves have throughout the Catholic countries shown, and in
|
||
Catholic countries continue to show, a monumental example of
|
||
vicious conduct: lying, intolerance, cruelty, greed, and disloyalty
|
||
to their vows. I have fully developed these points elsewhere and
|
||
need only summarily recall them. The fourth point applies less in
|
||
our age, since the clergy are compelled by public opinion to mind
|
||
their own conduct, but they still apply.
|
||
|
||
But is not the zeal of the priests for good morals in our time
|
||
something new and of valuable service to the community? Is it not
|
||
on this ground that they unite with other Churches -- with "good
|
||
people everywhere," in a current phrase -- and so promote the
|
||
interests of the state that Washington is bound to treat them with
|
||
respect? Are they not now so really resentful of vicious conduct
|
||
that they go out beyond the Catholic family and parish and have a
|
||
deep influence on the morals of the whole community?
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
In discussing these matters we are up against a large problem
|
||
-- the question which moral code or which clauses of it are
|
||
socially important -- that must be deferred to the sixth book of
|
||
this series, where we will boldly challenge the whole ideal of the
|
||
Church. But we can make a provisional reply. It is that the priest
|
||
certainly wants to control the morals of the entire community. He
|
||
does not merely forbid his own people to go to see a film in which
|
||
his Church finds immorality but he brings heavy pressure to bear on
|
||
film companies and fires his Knights of Columbus and Dames of the
|
||
Holy Grail to intimidate exhibitors so that even non-Catholics
|
||
shall not see them. His Church brings the same pressure to bear on
|
||
authors, publishers, and booksellers to prevent them from supplying
|
||
the general non-Catholic public. He threatens civic authorities
|
||
with the Catholic vote unless they send the police to stamp down on
|
||
these "filthy" and "swinish" discussions (which he has never beard)
|
||
on birth control. Of all that there is so little question that I do
|
||
not think it necessary to give here proofs of Catholic
|
||
interference. Seldes and other writers give plenty of evidence, but
|
||
in point of fact Catholics boast of what thy do in this field, and
|
||
I do not suppose there is an American who has not heard of Breen
|
||
and the Catholic spiritual guides of the pious colony of artists at
|
||
Hollywood or of the campaign against birth control.
|
||
|
||
What is more important is to understand why they assert this
|
||
moral censorship. A distinguished British social writer, the late
|
||
John A. Hobson, being pressed to defend the puritanical code which
|
||
(from force of environment) he upheld though he was a skeptic and
|
||
generally addressed himself to skeptics, replied that he placed it
|
||
on an aesthetic basis. Logically that is unassailable. A man has as
|
||
much right to prefer a certain type of character as a certain type
|
||
of female figure; though, naturally, this gives him no right to
|
||
quarrel with a neighbor's different taste. But this theory at once
|
||
removes the question of chastity from the field of sociology. The
|
||
stability of civilization does not depend upon tastes but upon hard
|
||
facts, and it is now generally agreed by men who do not allow
|
||
priests to dictate their opinions that whether, for instance, an
|
||
actress in a film or on a stage has too narrow a diaper or how many
|
||
young folks decline to wait until they are married are not issues
|
||
of any serious social significance. The priest, of course, raises
|
||
a vague suggestion that civilization crumbles if we permit are to
|
||
raise the temperature a degree or two and mumbles about ancient
|
||
Greece and Rome (which were really more virtuous even in this
|
||
respect than his Beautiful 13th Century), but most of us have got
|
||
beyond those fairy-tales of Catholic history.
|
||
|
||
Why then is the Black International in America so frothy with
|
||
sacred fury about morals? Mainly because it gives them an important
|
||
place in public life and furnishes a nice-sounding excuse to the
|
||
politicians and other's who find it profitable to give them
|
||
prestige and influence or dangerous to refuse them. The priests
|
||
help to guard the foundations of the state, the American home and
|
||
family. And so on. Many of these politicians, civic authorities,
|
||
editors, etc., who smile beside the priests on public platforms may
|
||
even believe what they say because none of them know the facts,
|
||
about morals in past ages or the genuine sociological position of
|
||
morals. You might as well expect them to make deep economic study
|
||
to ascertain the truth when bankers and industrialists assure them
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
18
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
that unrestricted competition is the second chief foundation of the
|
||
state or to inquire, when they are told that something is un-
|
||
American, whether America is really better off without it. Anyhow,
|
||
statesmen, bankers, editors, judges, and employer's just take the
|
||
word of the Church that it is doing a most important work and pass
|
||
on the good news to the public. The priest goes back to his people
|
||
and says: you see whit a splendid position we have won for the once
|
||
despised Church in America. And his brewers take out their wallets
|
||
and brewers' widows open their checkbooks.
|
||
|
||
But you do not need to study either history or sociology, and
|
||
these people know it. Sex-morals have so little to do with social
|
||
welfare that the American civilization, which is the second
|
||
greatest (after Russia) in the world is also the most advanced
|
||
sexually. It tries to shut out an idealist like Bertrand Russell
|
||
for moral turpitude and then has to have a Catholic League of
|
||
Decency and other whole armies of amateurs helping the police to
|
||
prevent artists and showmen from giving the American people what
|
||
they decidedly want. One of these censors would be the first to
|
||
paint a terrible picture of the license that would ensue in novels,
|
||
magazines. theaters, films, and cabarets if you just left the
|
||
purveying to the familiar law of supply and demand. I find American
|
||
novels at a decent literary level better than British and much
|
||
better than French or German, and at least two-thirds, if not four-
|
||
fifths, of them reflect an attitude to sex in the middle-class
|
||
readers that is far from puritanical, in spite of such censorship
|
||
as there is. The sale of sexological literature confirms this.
|
||
|
||
On the other hand the American civilization has some grave
|
||
defects which are not found in the Russian. Notoriously there is an
|
||
abnormal amount of corruption in business, politics (local and
|
||
federal), and juridical and penal circles. There is too high a
|
||
proportion of serious crime, too much suffering of the poor and
|
||
helpless, too much wanton extravagance of the rich. But do you hear
|
||
(he Catholic Church thundering against these evils? Or do you hear
|
||
bankers and statesmen applauding it for some crusade against them?
|
||
Never. The G-Men made more impression in a year on the real moral
|
||
evils which injure civilization than the Church made in a
|
||
generation. Tammany, which has been one of the cess-pools of
|
||
America for a century has always been, and is, tied up with the
|
||
Church. Do not talk to me about Coughlin. Half his followers are
|
||
not Catholics, and it is just because he gets some millions of
|
||
Americans to respect a priest, and therefore in a vague way the
|
||
Church to which he belongs, that the authorities permit for the
|
||
present the blatant and -- as has repeatedly been shown --
|
||
insincere ravings of the mountebank. Just where he does represent
|
||
the Church and violates Justice and decency (in his anti-Semitism
|
||
and libeling of Communists) he is neither moral nor a promoter of
|
||
the real interests of America.
|
||
|
||
For the last few years the sacred fury of the priests has
|
||
expended itself in a crusade against Russians and Communism. I
|
||
might add the pitiless campaign of lying about democratic Spain as,
|
||
although the Catholic laity were divided, the clergy were almost
|
||
wholly on the side of the rebel who has murdered thousands in cold
|
||
blood and is torturing tens of thousands. But examine the ferocious
|
||
attacks on Communism in which the clergy generally carried the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
19
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
laity with them. To call this a moral crusade is a mockery. The
|
||
attempts to justify it by repeating discredited libels from the
|
||
London Times were exposed repeatedly yet this had not the least
|
||
influence in restraining the Catholic onslaught. Apart from these
|
||
bogus outrages the attack was not moral but immoral. A man has as
|
||
much right on decent principles and under American law to try to
|
||
persuade others that all the means of production ought to be a
|
||
national possession and all commodities and services equally shared
|
||
as he has to argue for the New Deal or universal conscription -- to
|
||
say nothing of a right to poison the minds of children and delude
|
||
adults with false statements.
|
||
|
||
Whenever You apply a genuine moral test to the work of the
|
||
clergy they fail, yet the country grants them an amazing power in
|
||
the only respect claimed to be moral but certainly not moral in the
|
||
social sense and challenged by some of the best writers in America
|
||
and probably at least half the educated class. It is the familiar
|
||
Roman story. Claim that you are rendering a service to civilization
|
||
by preventing people from seeing a film like The Birth of a Baby or
|
||
by getting censors at Hollywood who will cut out a bit of saucy
|
||
dialogue (at which the entire audience would break into laughter)
|
||
or order the alteration of a bath-room scene, and then when a
|
||
writer seriously challenges the utility of the work and the moral
|
||
standard of the censors get his book suppressed.
|
||
|
||
Indeed in the matter of films the so-called moral censorship
|
||
is in large part a pretext for preventing a disturbance of Catholic
|
||
propaganda and has been so used in notorious cases. Anyone who has
|
||
seen or read G.B. Shaw's Saint Joan knows that, in his usual
|
||
defiant way (certainly not for profit) he was attacking
|
||
freethinkers and playing to the Catholic gallery. His Inquisition
|
||
scene, for instance, was a concession to Catholics at the dire cost
|
||
of historical truth. Yet the Catholic censors cracked their whips
|
||
and threatened an all-American boycott because it did not represent
|
||
as they wanted the official sanctity of Joan. It was much the same
|
||
with The Informer, which showed the real combination of cruelty and
|
||
piety in the priest-ridden Irish, and with Blockade which exposed
|
||
the lies which the priests were telling about the Spanish people.
|
||
|
||
It is, however, the principle, the fact that the religious
|
||
leaders of about 15,000,000 Americans are allowed to control the
|
||
entertainment of the entire population, that matters. It is all the
|
||
more exasperating to any man who remembers that in the Catholic
|
||
lands of Southern Europe the most licentious spectacles were
|
||
permitted by priests (who then did represent the entire community).
|
||
In the pious Middle Ages pageants and parodies of the Mass were
|
||
permitted in the churches and cathedrals which would make a
|
||
Catholic Boston lady faint, and orgies followed on the streets
|
||
which, if they were now perpetrated in private, would rouse Irish
|
||
policemen to break in with axes and mercilessly beat the audience.
|
||
If you can read French, and if there is a copy of it in America,
|
||
try to see M. du Tilliot's Memoires pour servir a I'histoire de la
|
||
Fete des Foax (1741). The Catholic author, who devoted years to his
|
||
inquiry, gives a richly documented account of monstrous scenes that
|
||
the clergy permitted (and often took part in) in the cathedrals and
|
||
churches of France (and Spain, Germany, etc.) wild orgies on the
|
||
streets on "holy" days all through the Ages of Faith. On some of
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
20
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
the illustrations he gives, from banners that had headed
|
||
processions on these days, we see men performing in the public
|
||
street acts which one of the most distinguished French writers, V.
|
||
Marguerite, was expelled from the Academy, at the insistence of the
|
||
clergy, twenty years ago for attributing in a novel (La garconne)
|
||
as secret practices to a few morbid men and women of the richer
|
||
class! Until quite recent times -- for all I know it may still be
|
||
true -- spectacles were exhibited semi-publicly -- you had merely
|
||
to charge for admission to the room and exclude children -- which
|
||
would not have been tolerated in ancient Rome. I often saw myself
|
||
when I lived in the South of France, 40 years ago, the poster at
|
||
the door announcing such shows as La mademoiselle et l' ane. That
|
||
means "The young lady and the donkey," and that is all I dare tell
|
||
you about it. In those days the French priests were pale with
|
||
indignation because a few morbid folk in Paris were said
|
||
(questionably) to attend Black Masses, in great secrecy, but
|
||
hundreds of thousands nightly paid to see these really public
|
||
shows.
|
||
|
||
Here is one more -- I could give scores -- illustration of
|
||
this hypocritical delicacy about sex. Until 1878 castrated soprano
|
||
singers were used instead of females in many churches (and operas)
|
||
of Italy and even in the Papal choir at Rome. This was as notorious
|
||
a fact as the venality of Papal officials and was noticed in nearly
|
||
every book of travel of visitors. I have met old men who have
|
||
lunched and discussed with these eunuchs in Rome. The Encyclopedia
|
||
Britannica (article "Eunuchs") continued until the latest edition
|
||
to say that these emasculated men "driven long ago from the stage
|
||
by public opinion remained the musical glory and the moral shame of
|
||
the Papal choir till the accession of Pope Leo XIII." The recent
|
||
edition was revised by Catholics, and not only is the reference to
|
||
the churches suppressed, but it is audaciously stated that Leo XIII
|
||
simply found the custom in vogue in the opera. Clerical writers,
|
||
having thus suppressed the most accessible and weighty evidence,
|
||
have already begun -- I have had proof in the last few weeks -- to
|
||
say that this story is another libel of the Holy Church! But apart
|
||
from the unexpurgated earlier editions of the Britannica it is
|
||
stated as an ordinary musical fact in Grove's standard Dictionary
|
||
of Music ("Soprani") and all the older dictionaries and books on
|
||
church-life in Rome. Every Pope, every nun, in Rome knew that the
|
||
castrati ("the castrated," as they were commonly called) or soprani
|
||
in the Papal and other church choirs were men who had been, for
|
||
church purposes, treated as men used to treat each other in the
|
||
wildest of the Wild West. Now the Black International wants to
|
||
dictate to America on the ground that its Church has an age-old
|
||
tradition of extreme delicacy in regard to sex! The claim is even
|
||
more preposterous than the shoddy version of history which
|
||
attributes the fall of Rome, etc., to sexual freedom. The real aim
|
||
is the same as in the furious campaign against Spaniards and
|
||
Bolsheviks, the alliance with the Fascist scum of the modern world
|
||
the sycophancy to the rich -- care for the power and wealth of the
|
||
Black International.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
21
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
Chapter IV
|
||
|
||
THE SHAME OF THE CONFESSIONAL
|
||
|
||
In discussing this catholic censorship of art and
|
||
entertainment I have inevitably moved beyond the priest's tyranny
|
||
over his own people and considered the outrageous interference of
|
||
the Catholic hierarchy with the freedom and tastes of the general
|
||
population. If any doubt still lingers in the mind of the reader
|
||
about the truth of my statement that the real aim of this is simply
|
||
to increase the power and prestige of the Church let him reflect
|
||
that the clerical Gestapo has in this respect a power to control
|
||
its own subjects which is far greater than the power of other
|
||
ministers of religion. A priest may tell you that in claiming a
|
||
national censorship his Church merely wants to remove "temptation"
|
||
from the eyes of its followers. That again is a hollow claim. Its
|
||
real plea is that it is rendering a Service to American
|
||
civilization and must therefore be respected as a valuable national
|
||
institution. In the domestic sphere the Church boasts that it
|
||
enables folk to "resist temptation" far more effectively than any
|
||
other Church does. The chief reference here is to its doctrine of
|
||
mortal sin and the confessional, and it is an important part of the
|
||
tyranny of the spiritual Gestapo.
|
||
|
||
Catholic teaching, stamped upon the mind from childhood onward
|
||
by myriads of sermons, books, hymns, services, etc., is that some
|
||
sins are venial (pardonable or lighter) and some mortal (or
|
||
punished with eternal torment unless they are confessed to a priest
|
||
and absolution received). Reading books or seeing pictures or shows
|
||
that in any degree stir the sexual feelings is declared very
|
||
emphatically by the Church to be one of these mortal sins. One
|
||
should understand clearly how unique the position of the Catholic
|
||
is. He believes that after reading even a passage of a book that
|
||
criticizes the faith or the clergy or seeing a film that gives him
|
||
a sexual feeling, he is under sentence of eternal damnation and if
|
||
he dies suddenly -- a street accident, bombing, heart-failure, etc.
|
||
before he has confessed this to a priest he will infallibly and
|
||
with no hope whatever of escaping it suffer terrible torture for
|
||
all eternity.
|
||
|
||
It is well also to understand the position of the Catholic
|
||
friend who smiles and tells you that he does not take this
|
||
literally. If he does not he rejects the teaching of the Church on
|
||
a point which it makes as vital to the creed as the divinity of
|
||
Christ or the atonement: more Vital, indeed, since the power of the
|
||
priests is based to a far greater extent on the doctrine of hell.
|
||
In rejecting or ignoring this dogma a Catholic necessarily rejects
|
||
the basic dogma of the teaching authority of the Church and opens
|
||
the door wide to general skepticism. He cannot honestly repeat the
|
||
simplest form of the Catholic creed and, if he is a writer, he dare
|
||
not even remotely hint at his position. is he a Catholic? Please
|
||
yourself, but you will have little difficulty in realizing that
|
||
this peculiar attitude toward one of the most fundamental dogmas of
|
||
the Church is very uncommon in the Catholic body. From the Church
|
||
angle the man who says this is in worse plight than the crook or
|
||
the fornicator. If he does not act on the belief which he
|
||
professes, to reject and confess his sins at least once a year he,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
22
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
in Catholic theology, may still be a member of the "body" of the
|
||
Church but not of its "soul." In plain English he is only a nominal
|
||
Catholic and keeps his position for social or other reasons. Any
|
||
Catholic who tells you that he is free to question or reject thins
|
||
fundamental doctrine lies. He certainly knows better.
|
||
|
||
It is through the further doctrines of confession and
|
||
indulgences that the Church makes this dogma one of the most
|
||
profitable in its theology and the chief source of its despotic
|
||
power. People who indolently, or from an amiable ignorance of the
|
||
subject, say that the Catholic Church is much the same as any other
|
||
are very far astray. The Protestant bows to the commands of the
|
||
Lord and what he believes to be doctrines in the New Testament.
|
||
Even the Church of England and the Protestant Episcopal Church of
|
||
America lay it down in the 39 Articles that the Christian need not
|
||
listen to any command or doctrine that is not found in the
|
||
Scriptures. But the Roman Church imposes as a binding dogma --
|
||
binding under the usual penalty of hell -- that "Commandments of
|
||
the Church" are on the same footing as the Ten Commandments. They
|
||
put on the same level as an act of grave injustice the failure of
|
||
a Catholic to attend Mass on Sunday morning, to abstain from meat
|
||
on Friday, or to neglect confession at Easter. The penalty is the
|
||
same for murder, adultery, or defrauding the widow or orphan --
|
||
hell.
|
||
|
||
A pleasant thought, isn't it, that some 10,000,000 adult
|
||
American's believe this. Hell and the devil have dominated their
|
||
minds from the time when they were in the infant-school. Naturally
|
||
there are millions of Protestants who are in the same condition,
|
||
but (in no Protestant Church do the authorities say that it is hell
|
||
to transgress their commands), in none is a man prevented by
|
||
priestly inquisition and periodical confession from taking a more
|
||
liberal view. The Church of Rome can deal out sentence of hell and
|
||
annul the sentence of hell when it pleases.
|
||
|
||
That is the chief root of the strange tyranny I have so far
|
||
described. A Catholic apologist would resent the word tyranny. His
|
||
people, he would say voluntarily submit to the priest who dictates
|
||
what they shall read or not-read, what shows they shall see or not
|
||
see, whom and in what conditions they shall marry, and so on. Does
|
||
he mean that they like it? Oh. no: but they hold a creed that
|
||
reconciles them to the system. And the fundamental article of that
|
||
creed is that the Church take's the place of Christ and can condemn
|
||
a child of eight years to hell or acquit a man who is as encrusted
|
||
with sins as an old ship is with barnacles. It may all sound very
|
||
flatulent to you, but you will never understand Catholic life and
|
||
action unless you know it.
|
||
|
||
This doctrine of hell and its annex, purgatory, is turned into
|
||
a source of power and wealth chiefly by the further doctrines of
|
||
penance and indulgences. A mortal sin -- for instance, when you
|
||
kiss a girl too ardently even for a few seconds -- incurs sentence
|
||
of hell instantaneously by an automatic spiritual machinery. All
|
||
sorts of things are mortal sins and, though, you may find it
|
||
incredible, Catholics believe that the majority of themselves walk
|
||
the streets, cheerfully, under the dire sentence. The curse holds
|
||
until the act -- in case they have forgotten this fateful act, as
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
23
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
they commonly do, they run over a charming and exhaustive list of
|
||
sins (in their prayer-books) before confessing -- is confessed to
|
||
a priest and he gives absolution. Theologians, who are really not
|
||
quite as obtuse as the gentle lady saint who in a vision saw
|
||
Catholics falling every minute "like snowflakes" into hell have
|
||
thought out the mitigation that when one is going to die without
|
||
the possibility of seeing a priest an act of sorrow will do the
|
||
trick. I doubt if many Catholic's know that piece. The only sure
|
||
way to escape the sentence is to confess. The obligation is to do
|
||
this. once a year, but fraternity rules and custom generally
|
||
prescribe once a month.
|
||
|
||
Many would like to ask one psychological question about the
|
||
mind of a Catholic. Gladys for instance, goes to confession on
|
||
February 28 and is not due again until March 31. But she has a date
|
||
on March 7 (or 17th especially) and . . . Does she go about in fear
|
||
and trembling in the meantime? Not in the least. You must work it
|
||
out for yourself but be sure of one thing: Catholics really believe
|
||
all this stuff. Nervousness about it is unusual. A priest in a poor
|
||
quarter of London told me this experience. I believe it has become
|
||
"a story" since I wrote it 45 years ago, but it's true. He was
|
||
assisting an Irish laborer, of lurid life, in his last hour and
|
||
found the man terribly afraid. When he explained how merciful God
|
||
is the man murmured: "It's not 'im, it's the other b____.
|
||
|
||
Once the "soul" has gone to hell it is all over. Almost the
|
||
one thing which the Pope "cannot do is to get a soul out of hell.
|
||
It sounds remarkable but the Catholic way of salvation is almost
|
||
fool-proof, and Catholics rarely think about going to hell.
|
||
Confession to a priest means that you glance back, in quarter of an
|
||
hour or so of preparation, over the month (or year) with the aid of
|
||
your list of sins and then tell him which you committed and how
|
||
often in each case. One priest I knew used to tell of a bright boy
|
||
who, with admirable succinctness, reeled off his load speedily as:
|
||
"Thirty b-s, 25 p-s, and 40 d-s. It is not necessary to tell venial
|
||
sins, and better-behaved children are often puzzled. A sharp little
|
||
girl, of inquiring mind, once accused herself to me -- the reader
|
||
probably knows that I was a father-confessor for years -- of
|
||
adultery. But of tales of the confessional there would be no end.
|
||
See my Twelve Years in a Monastery.
|
||
|
||
Another essential difference of Catholicism is that the priest
|
||
does not assure the penitent "that God forgives him" or her. He
|
||
says, and means "I absolve thee." It was part of the power-policy
|
||
of the Church to shape the institution (or sacrament) of penance on
|
||
those lines. Confession. to a priest is, of course, an old
|
||
religious practice. It was as familiar in ancient Babylonia as it
|
||
is in a Catholic country, though the priest did not release from a
|
||
sentence of hell, in which no Babylonian believed. Their idea was
|
||
that for sin the great God Marduk let the devils have a go at a
|
||
man, and it was relief from the tooth-aches, head-aches, belly-
|
||
aches, etc., consequent upon sin that he sought. Confession to a
|
||
priest was as common in ancient as in modern Mexico.
|
||
|
||
But all that must be read elsewhere. The Catholic theory is
|
||
that after the priest's magic formula and wave of the hand the
|
||
devil retires, baffled, and all that the Catholic has to look
|
||
forward to its purgatory. Catholics may assure you that it is one
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
24
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
of the beauties of their creed that it avoids the stark and inhuman
|
||
alternative of hell or heaven for eternity. It says that lighter
|
||
sins or those who have escaped hell by confessing must suffer or be
|
||
"purified" for a time in purgatory. It is not now essential to
|
||
believe that the torture is by fire, though the learned (and very
|
||
modern) Thomas Aquinas proved to the hilt that souls could feel
|
||
torture by fire, and since it is a spiritual state, there is no
|
||
question of time. But the Church finds it hopeless to impress the
|
||
dogma without this material terminology. A popular hymn exhorts
|
||
Catholics to "Pray for the Holy Souls that burn, This hour amidst
|
||
the cleansing flames," and the indulgences which they "win" or buy
|
||
speak of shortening the purgatorial punishment by 30 days or 100
|
||
days, or abolishing it altogether.
|
||
|
||
In short, this purgatory and indulgence business, however
|
||
beautiful and humane you may think it, has been the most profitable
|
||
religious doctrine that was invented. We need not go back to the
|
||
Middle Ages, when indulgences were sold as literally as cigars are,
|
||
or think of the sale of them by the millions a year in Spanish
|
||
Catholic lands -- no doubt Franco has restored it -- until recent
|
||
years. In discussing the Church's finances I said that a Catholic
|
||
pays for every Mass that each of the 250,000 priests says every
|
||
day, and the aim is usually an indulgence. I described the enormous
|
||
traffic in medals, small pictures, relies, scapulars (little
|
||
pictures on cloth strung over the shoulders and worn next the
|
||
skin), etc. The normal aim of all this is to secure indulgences.
|
||
But the subject is too large to be treated here.
|
||
|
||
What concerns us more is that the doctrine of hell, of a
|
||
barbarously conceived penalty for a sin from which the priest must
|
||
absolve a man, is obviously the main source of the power of the
|
||
clerical Gestapo. Let us admit that the Roman Church did not invent
|
||
the dogma of hell, as it did that of purgatory, and that priests do
|
||
not now receive money for absolution, though they assuredly did
|
||
this in the Middle Ages. But as a source of power over the laity it
|
||
is a doctrine of unrivalled value. The Church could not have any
|
||
hope of putting its own commandments in regard to church-
|
||
attendance, fasting, marriage, divorce, birth-control, reading
|
||
critical literature, etc., on the same footing as the Decalogue if
|
||
it had not first lodged the belief in eternal punishment and in its
|
||
own right to declare when and how this punishment was incurred In
|
||
the mind of the laity.
|
||
|
||
Confession is obviously and essentially based upon the dogma.
|
||
Unless one appreciates this the spectacle of 10,000,000 Americans
|
||
whispering periodically to a priest how many times they Swore or
|
||
lied, how many times they just thought that a girl was desirable --
|
||
hell drops in with the first thought -- or handled themselves,
|
||
seems grotesque. The "liberal" view, that Catholics esteem the
|
||
practice because it eases their consciences and gets them spiritual
|
||
guidance, is preposterous nonsense. Most Catholics detest the need
|
||
of it and, as a rule, hurry through it mechanically. But only the
|
||
small minority who are Catholics in name only, for social or
|
||
business reasons, shirk it. One of the first questions the visiting
|
||
priest asks the mother at Easter time is whether all members of the
|
||
family have "been to their Easter duties." The minimum obligation
|
||
is confession and communion once a year "and that at Easter or
|
||
there abouts." The priest keeps a tally.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
25
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
And the most intriguing feature of the whole business is that
|
||
this "sacrament of penance" with its dire obligation to confess to
|
||
a priest at least once a year is one of the most obviously priest-
|
||
made dogmas in the whole weird structure of Catholic teaching and
|
||
discipline. The Christian Church, one of many ascetic developments
|
||
of the Greek-Roman world, did assuredly start with a lively concern
|
||
about sins. The end of the world and general judgment -- idea which
|
||
had been borrowed from the Persians -- were believed to be near at
|
||
hand. The practice arose, therefore, of compelling members who had
|
||
strayed to confess their sins, generally in the sense of expressing
|
||
sorrow for sins which were known to the others, before admitting
|
||
them to the mystic supper. Doubtless the "overseer" (bishop) or
|
||
presiding "elder" (priest) recited some sort of formula of
|
||
absolution. In the 2nd Century, as the idea of priesthood
|
||
developed, it was claimed that the clergy could forgive sins, and
|
||
a clause in support of this was worked into the New Testament
|
||
(Matthew XVI, 19). The next step in the fabrication of the priest's
|
||
power was to declare that forgiveness could be obtained only
|
||
through the priest's absolution and the laity must be compelled to
|
||
ask for it periodically. This was so clearly an ecclesiastical move
|
||
that even the people of the Dark Age resisted it, as they resisted
|
||
the priestly control of marriage, and there was no law of
|
||
compulsory confession until the year 1215, when the truculent and
|
||
despotic Innocent III had completed the fabric of ecclesiastical
|
||
power.
|
||
|
||
It is too large a subject for discussion here, and we are
|
||
concerned only to point out how this rounds off the power of the
|
||
priest over the laity and gives him an authority and right of
|
||
inquisition that the Nazi Gestapo might envy. But one further point
|
||
must be noticed briefly.
|
||
|
||
Protestant writers insist that the confessional is actually a
|
||
corrupting institution while non-Catholic apologists for
|
||
Catholicism claim -- they never examine facts -- that it must be an
|
||
effective moral agency. In a careful analysis of my experience as
|
||
a confessor and of discussions with others I have shown (in my
|
||
Twelve Years in a Monastery) that the Protestant contention is, if
|
||
certain excesses are struck out, correct to a very wide extent. It
|
||
is true that there is no misconduct in the confessional, in which
|
||
priest and penitent are separated by a wooden partition, and of
|
||
wire grille, but assignations can be made, and the priest often
|
||
hears confessions in places where there is no separation. I have
|
||
known a priest who systematically got young women to pretend
|
||
illness, go to bed, and send for him to come and hear their
|
||
confessions. It is rare. More common is the demoralizing effect on
|
||
girls and certain types of women of the intimate sexual talk that
|
||
is not merely permitted but required by the priest. He cannot pass
|
||
a vague self-accusation of a girl that she has been "immodest" (as
|
||
the nuns teach her to say) or indecent. He must ask. Does she mean
|
||
a solitary act and how far did it go? Was it with another girl or
|
||
with a man, and just how far did that go? Was the man married or a
|
||
priest? Was it with a dog (not uncommon with certain types) and how
|
||
far did that go? If she that she saw a film or read a book he has
|
||
to know if the bad thoughts culminated in the usual way, and so on.
|
||
Since most priests are normally "fleshy" and the woman is
|
||
stimulated by the sort of sacred license the occasion permits her,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
26
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
any man can guess what the emotional development is likely to be.
|
||
The cinema from which the priest is so eager to banish temptation
|
||
for the sake of his Catholic girls, rarely reaches the temperature
|
||
that the confessional so often does.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Chapter V
|
||
|
||
CATHOLIC ACTION A CLERICAL MANEUVER
|
||
|
||
Writers who find it more convenient to make reflections on the
|
||
Church of Rome without making a close study of its history and life
|
||
-- it is much easier to pay it compliments in this way --
|
||
generously describe it as a vast body of 300,000,000 or
|
||
350,000,000, men and women who are devotedly attached to a
|
||
"venerable creed" and are therefore bound to have a priesthood and
|
||
hierarchy for organizational purposes and to preserve the necessary
|
||
discipline. We have seen, or I have shown in a score of works, that
|
||
this view is as false as the theory of a Seventh Day Adventist that
|
||
the strata of the earth's crust are heaps of rubbish left by the
|
||
great Deluge, There are not 50,000,000 lay men and women in the
|
||
Catholic world who are old enough and sufficiently educated to be
|
||
described as deliberately subscribing to a creed. The vast majority
|
||
of the 180,000,000 Catholics are children, illiterates, or semi-
|
||
literates; and most of the remainder are duped by a mendacious
|
||
literature and fooled by a dogma which prevents them from reading
|
||
exposures of its untruth.
|
||
|
||
From a sociological viewpoint the Church of Rome is an
|
||
economic corporation of some quarter of a million priests, high and
|
||
low. It differs from the ordinary economic corporation in the fact
|
||
that the 100,000,000 more or less adult lay members are not
|
||
shareholders but, as in the propagandist societies, just
|
||
subscribing members. And it differs from these propagandist or
|
||
idealist bodies and societies very profoundly in the fact that it
|
||
holds, and has for centuries proceeded on, the principle that these
|
||
subscribing members must be held together by violence as well as
|
||
deceit: that they cannot leave it when they profess to believe its
|
||
creed no longer but remain subject to it and may be coerced by any
|
||
kind of suffering (privation, jail, torture, even death) when the
|
||
Church finds it feasible to inflict. Ten years ago you might have
|
||
boggled at this conception of the Church of Rome. Very many
|
||
Socialists and Communists did, saying that it was a harmless old
|
||
wreck and serious people gave all their attention to politico-
|
||
economic matter's. Now, in their tens of millions, in penury or a
|
||
miserable mental slavery, in jail or in mourning for their dead,
|
||
they lie like withered swathes of corn across the planet from
|
||
Brazil to Italy.
|
||
|
||
preserve this structure the Church of Rome had not only to
|
||
lodge certain childish basic dogmas in the minds of the subscribing
|
||
members and guard them from the contamination of truth but to draw
|
||
a magic line between clergy and laity. It invented the sacrament of
|
||
Holy Orders. It erected a sanctuary rail in the chapel. The priests
|
||
were officially "holy men," special proteges of the Holy Ghost,
|
||
separated from ordinary folk by sacred vows, rights, privileges,
|
||
and powers. They talked to you from a pulpit as if you were
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
27
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
children and ordered you to do this and that as if you were slaves.
|
||
If you laid a hand on one -- if you came home unexpectedly and
|
||
caught him, let us say, at your special bottle -- it was the
|
||
terrible crime of sacrilege. They could not be taken to a common
|
||
court of law or asked to pay taxes. To ask them to show annual
|
||
balance-sheets would be an outrage. Your business was to pay and be
|
||
meek.
|
||
|
||
The laity were always apt to be restive under this system. In
|
||
the earlier part of the Middle Ages the Romans themselves fought
|
||
the Popes off and on for two centuries for the right to govern
|
||
themselves. Everywhere, as I said, they resisted priestly attempts
|
||
to control marriage or impose such laws as compulsory confession.
|
||
Princes and nobles defied the clergy hundreds of times, but by the
|
||
terrors of excommunication and interdict the clergy worked on the
|
||
illiterate masses and won. By the 19th Century these terrors were
|
||
as vapid as those of the haunted house or the comet, and the
|
||
historic disintegration of the old Church began. The success of
|
||
science in mastering disease and death led to a rapid increase of
|
||
population, but even this could not be made to conceal the fact
|
||
that the Church was losing about a million members a decade. Slowly
|
||
and reluctantly the clergy had to turn to new methods, and one of
|
||
these, particularly during the last 20 years, is what is called
|
||
Catholic Action. Some call it Catholicism with a punch, others a
|
||
cooperation of laity and clergy. It is a combination of the two.
|
||
|
||
The laity began to take action long before the late Pope
|
||
organized this new movement or tendency. The fight of the German
|
||
Catholics against Bismarck was mainly conducted by the laity. The
|
||
militant Christian Socialism of that county and Austria was
|
||
Catholic Action. France had several powerful lay movements in the
|
||
19th Century, and a Papal Delegate was sent to America to curb the
|
||
laity long before Pope Leo XIII, in 1899, gave a public and severe
|
||
snub to the American bishops for their innovations. However, it is
|
||
usually said, the Catholic laity won the right of personality, and
|
||
in Catholic Action they march side by side with the priests, no
|
||
longer mere contributors but militant and largely self-governing
|
||
bodies.
|
||
|
||
Not quite. Catholic Action does not mean either that the
|
||
priests were forced to make concessions or that their tyranny is
|
||
less. To a larger extent it was not a new movement but a
|
||
coordination of developments due to the requirements of modern
|
||
life. The multiplication of schools and in so many countries the
|
||
exclusion of nuns and religious brothers from them caused the
|
||
appearance of a vast army of Catholic teachers, and, since the
|
||
Catholic school is, as I said, really a chapel, these men and women
|
||
formed a kind of "Third Estate," a body more or less intermediate
|
||
between the clergy and the laity. The development of Catholic
|
||
journalism created another large body of active workers in the
|
||
cause of the Church. Already the Church made considerable use of
|
||
Catholic journalists in the employment of the ordinary press, of
|
||
teachers in non-Catholic schools or education departments, of local
|
||
politicians, of civil servants in all branches of the national
|
||
administration, and so on. Lay Catholicism already was militant.
|
||
Even ordinary folk, especially women, could be wound up to make it
|
||
a very spirited fight in the few weeks before an election when
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
28
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
there was question of granting larger subsidies to Catholic
|
||
schools. Some day the question of the taxation of Church property
|
||
will be raised and you will see high-pressure Catholic Action
|
||
during election-campaigns. Most of the women would sell America to
|
||
Japan if concentration on "the danger to the Church" were to imply
|
||
this.
|
||
|
||
The present movement is an extension and organization of all
|
||
this. All sorts of existing elements were brought together. In
|
||
America the Catholic young men's National Union goes back to 1875,
|
||
and the monstrous Catholic Welfare Conference, the National Council
|
||
of Catholic Men, the National Council of Catholic Women, the
|
||
Knights of Columbus (800,000 strong), etc., go back 20 or more
|
||
years. Now we have organizations of Catholic Nurses, Teachers,
|
||
Actors, Writers, Sociologists, youth, and all sorts of oddments:
|
||
Holy Name Societies, Dames of the Grail, the Sword of the Spirit.
|
||
the Knights of America, etc. etc., All with horn-rimmed secretaries
|
||
and organizers, some with elaborate staffs in Washington or Radio
|
||
Hours; and back of all a vast network of newspapers and the
|
||
billion-dollar treasury of the Church. It is estimated that more
|
||
than 5,000,000 zealous adults, apart from the clergy, are organized
|
||
for Catholic Action in America and greatly fancy themselves as
|
||
soldiers of the Church.
|
||
|
||
I had almost described them as the Shock Troops of the great
|
||
campaign to Make America Catholic, but overt action is not their
|
||
usual line. Quiet, stealthy, conspiratorial action best suits the
|
||
situation. A city must find itself in the grip of the Church before
|
||
it perceives the white fingers closing round it. The Knights of
|
||
Columbus are quite ready to crack skulls at a Birth Control
|
||
Conference or a public meeting to tell the truth about Spain or
|
||
Russia, but they are just as ready to conspire with Wall Street to
|
||
bring on a war to annex Mexico or for a peaceful penetration of
|
||
Canada. During a tour of that Dominion I learned that they had
|
||
secretly initiated the Premier of Quebec to their ranks.
|
||
Journalists (on non-Catholic papers), civil servants, librarians,
|
||
councilors on library or education committees, etc., quietly
|
||
consult the interests of the Church. A London daily was pained to
|
||
discover that an important member of its staff altered cables in
|
||
favor of the Church before publication. Another has a sub-editor
|
||
who controls the correspondence columns in the same interest. The
|
||
zealous 5,000,000 fill America with such intrigue. It is publicly
|
||
stated by American writers that Farley used the influence of his
|
||
genial personality to prevent Roosevelt from lifting the rather
|
||
disgraceful Spanish Embargo; but I should doubt if the more elegant
|
||
dames of the movement go as far as the aristocratic French lady
|
||
who, notoriously, seduced Radical statesmen in the preparation of
|
||
the shame of France and triumph of its Church.
|
||
|
||
So the tail comes to wag the dog. Catholics in America are
|
||
about one-tenth of the whole community -- somewhere in this series
|
||
of books I will provide the material for a reasonable judgment on
|
||
that point -- yet they have such power that the average American
|
||
imagines they must be about one-fourth. They are just, as a body,
|
||
the shrunken remainder of the vast body of descendants of the
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
29
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
Irish, Italian, Polish, German, Czech, French, and other immigrants
|
||
of the last 100 years. And they set up in business at Washington
|
||
and insist that the President in his decisions shall ask them for
|
||
the Catholic view of the matter!
|
||
|
||
In other countries except Britain, where Catholic Action is
|
||
much the same as in America but more subterranean and less
|
||
effective, Catholic Action is generally Fascist. In Germany Hitler
|
||
has killed it very dead. In France, Belgium, Holland, Austria, and
|
||
Czecho-Slovakia it worked zealously for the triumph of the Nazi-
|
||
Papal plot. In Spain and Portugal, and now in Belgium and France,
|
||
it is entirely Fascist or Vichy, which is the same thing. A
|
||
correspondent just gets a letter through to me from a Portuguese
|
||
town and says that Catholic Action and Fascism are identical, hold
|
||
their meetings in the churches, and get anybody who criticizes them
|
||
sent to jail or penal colonies. Seldes describes the ghastly
|
||
medieval tortures that are used on such critic's today in the jails
|
||
of Portugal, under fanatical Catholic Salazar, who gets nothing but
|
||
compliments in the American-British democratic press.
|
||
|
||
That, in the light of the "great" encyclical (Quadragesimo
|
||
Anno.) of the late (assisted by the present) Pope, is the appointed
|
||
final phase of Catholic Action. The Catholic young men boast that
|
||
the priests, instead of exercising a tyranny over them, now welcome
|
||
them as co-workers, are fooled. The bishops ultimately control the
|
||
policy of every branch. The Gestapo preside at every meeting of the
|
||
plotters. When Catholic Action in France some years before the war
|
||
became a powerful royalist-Fascist movement on lines in harmony
|
||
with Vatican policy, the Pope scattered it by condemning its
|
||
leader's. This was part of a deal of the Vatican with the French
|
||
government. When Catholic Action in Italy took the form of a
|
||
Catholic democratic movement and became strong enough to stand up
|
||
to the Fascists (often physically), the Pope obliged Mussolini by
|
||
driving its priest-leader, Sturzo, into oblivion and paralyzing the
|
||
movement. German Catholics complain that the Pope betrayed Catholic
|
||
Action in their country to Hitler. Make no mistake about it. The
|
||
priest rules Catholic Action. The American zealots ought to have
|
||
realized it when they were taught to respect Japan as the Pope's
|
||
ally, when they were lashed to fury against democratic Spain and
|
||
Soviet Russia, when they found themselves rubbing shoulders at
|
||
their fervid demonstrations with Germans and Italians who have been
|
||
branded as conspirator's and Irish and French who are not much
|
||
better.
|
||
|
||
But in a later book on the Church and democracy we will
|
||
consider this antithesis of democratic pretensions and real aims in
|
||
American Catholicism. Catholics are the most priest-ridden of all
|
||
peoples of the civilized world: American Catholics are the most
|
||
priest-ridden in America. They take orders from their clerical
|
||
Gestapo as no other religious bodies do. The priests dictate their
|
||
schooling, reading, entertainment, courtship, marriage, diet on
|
||
certain days, and every aspect of their lives that can be brought
|
||
under the broad heading of morals. It is not submission to
|
||
dictation, they say, but compliance with a creed of the truth of
|
||
which we are convinced. Who gave you the creed? The Gestapo. Have
|
||
you thoroughly and critically examined it? No, the Gestapo forbid.
|
||
Why not test the word of your Gestapo by reading a few critics in
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
30
|
||
|
||
THE TYRANNY OF THE CLERICAL GESTAPO
|
||
|
||
defiance of them? We might lose our faith, and that would be
|
||
terrible. Why? The Gestapo says so. This reminds us of the story of
|
||
the man who, confronted with a difficulty, got under himself and
|
||
carried himself across!
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
|
||
scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
|
||
suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
|
||
Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
|
||
nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
|
||
religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
|
||
the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
|
||
that America can again become what its Founders intended --
|
||
|
||
The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
||
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
||
and information for today. If you have such books please contact
|
||
us, we need to give them back to America.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
31
|
||
|