We ordinary Catholics should be grateful to Anderson, Jennifer Haselberger and others who have exposed the guilty and those who for too long have concealed the wrongdoing, but making the average Catholic pay for these regrettable actions by endangering our schools and other valued services is unfair and unreasonable. We hope for more moderation in Anderson's demands while commending him for his good intentions on behalf of the victims.
Speaker of the House Paul Ryan said Tuesday that Donald Trump made the "textbook definition of a racist comment" with his comments about U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel, yet Ryan continues to endorse Trump for president. This illustrates the primary issue with the GOP today — bigotry is acceptable. Whether toward Hispanics, Muslims, homosexuals, women, transgender people, whomever — bigotry is OK. Speaker Ryan, your actions speak louder than your words, and your actions endorsing Trump also endorse his bigotry.
I am asking because I am sure many others besides me are wondering: How does what Trump is saying about his Hispanic judge differ from what Minneapolis NAACP President Nekima Levy-Pounds is saying about the white Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board?
In response to a May 27 letter writer's comments about the "stall" stage of Hillary Clinton's career ("Her career arc is one with which many women might be familiar"): To say that Clinton, who is "volcanic, impulsive, enabled by sycophants and disdainful of the rules set for everyone else" (Gary Byrne in "Crisis of Character," as reported in the New York Post on June 5) is "stalled" in her career is to defame and denigrate all those decent, hardworking and honorable women in business — some of whom I am blessed to have had as bosses — who are indeed stalled in their careers. The most benign thing I can say to the letter writer about Clinton is, as always, found in Shakespeare:
Why strew'st thou sugar on that bottled spider,