"In a statement issued late on Wednesday, the (New York) Times said its reports were "based on meticulous reporting and documents."
"Some of the particulars were confirmed by the Church, and so far no one has cast doubt on the facts we reported," said the Times in the statement issued by spokeswoman Diane McNulty.
"The allegations of abuse within the Catholic Church are a serious subject, as the Vatican has acknowledged on many occasions. Any role the current pope may have played in responding to those allegations over the years is a significant aspect of this story," the newspaper said."
New York Times
The New York Times has now resorted to lying about their lies. Why does anyone even bother with this trash any more?
I have posted below four examples of very serious doubt being cast upon the reporting and the facts at the Times. There are quite a few more. Maybe the Times should have said in their statement that "no one that agrees with us has cast doubt on the facts we reported". At least that would have been one "fact" we could ALL agree on.
I think that I'll stick with Pravda.
"My intent in writing this column is to accomplish the following:
To tell the back-story of what actually happened in the Father Murphy case on the local level;
To outline the sloppy and inaccurate reporting on the Father Murphy case by the New York Times and other media outlets;
...With regard to the inaccurate reporting on behalf of the New York Times, the Associated Press, and those that utilized these resources, first of all, I was never contacted by any of these news agencies but they felt free to quote me. Almost all of my quotes are from a document that can be found online with the correspondence between the Holy See and the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. In an October 31, 1997 handwritten document, I am quoted as saying ‘odds are that this situation may very well be the most horrendous, number wise, and especially because these are physically challenged , vulnerable people. “ Also quoted is this: “Children were approached within the confessional where the question of circumcision began the solicitation.”
The problem with these statements attributed to me is that they were handwritten. The documents were not written by me and do not resemble my handwriting. The syntax is similar to what I might have said but I have no idea who wrote these statements, yet I am credited as stating them. As a college freshman at the Marquette University School of Journalism, we were told to check, recheck, and triple check our quotes if necessary. I was never contacted by anyone on this document, written by an unknown source to me. Discerning truth takes time and it is apparent that the New York Times, the Associated Press and others did not take the time to get the facts correct."
Father Thomas Brundage
"...today’s Times presents both a lengthy article by Laurie Goodstein, a senior columnist, headlined “Warned About Abuse, Vatican Failed to Defrock Priest,” and an accompanying editorial entitled “The Pope and the Pedophilia Scandal,” in which the editors call the Goodstein article a disturbing report (emphasis in original) as a basis for their own charges against the Pope. Both the article and the editorial are deficient by any reasonable standards of fairness that Americans have every right and expectation to find in their major media reporting.
In her lead paragraph, Goodstein relies on what she describes as “newly unearthed files” to point out what the Vatican (i.e. then Cardinal Ratzinger and his Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith) did not do – “defrock Fr. Murphy.” Breaking news, apparently. Only after eight paragraphs of purple prose does Goodstein reveal that Fr. Murphy, who criminally abused as many as 200 deaf children while working at a school in the Milwaukee Archdiocese from 1950 to 1974, “not only was never tried or disciplined by the church’s own justice system, but also got a pass from the police and prosecutors who ignored reports from his victims, according to the documents and interviews with victims.”
But in paragraph 13, commenting on a statement of Fr. Lombardi (the Vatican spokesman) that Church law does not prohibit anyone from reporting cases of abuse to civil authorities, Goodstein writes, “He did not address why that had never happened in this case.” Did she forget, or did her editors not read, what she wrote in paragraph nine about Murphy getting “a pass from the police and prosecutors”? By her own account it seems clear that criminal authorities had been notified, most probably by the victims and their families."
Cardinal William J. Levada
"Before addressing the false substance of the story, the following circumstances are worthy of note:
• The New York Times story had two sources. First, lawyers who currently have a civil suit pending against the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. One of the lawyers, Jeffrey Anderson, also has cases in the United States Supreme Court pending against the Holy See. He has a direct financial interest in the matter being reported.
• The second source was Archbishop Rembert Weakland, retired archbishop of Milwaukee. He is the most discredited and disgraced bishop in the United States, widely known for mishandling sexual-abuse cases during his tenure, and guilty of using $450,000 of archdiocesan funds to pay hush money to a former homosexual lover who was blackmailing him. Archbishop Weakland had responsibility for the Father Murphy case between 1977 and 1998, when Father Murphy died. He has long been embittered that his maladministration of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee earned him the disfavor of Pope John Paul II and Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, long before it was revealed that he had used parishioners’ money to pay off his clandestine lover. He is prima facie not a reliable source.
• Laurie Goodstein, the author of the New York Times story, has a recent history with Archbishop Weakland. Last year, upon the release of the disgraced archbishop’s autobiography, she wrote an unusually sympathetic story that buried all the most serious allegations against him (New York Times, May 14, 2009).
• A demonstration took place in Rome on Friday, coinciding with the publication of the New York Times story. One might ask how American activists would happen to be in Rome distributing the very documents referred to that day in the New York Times. The appearance here is one of a coordinated campaign, rather than disinterested reporting."
Father Raymond J. DeSouza
"Rembert Weakland is the emeritus archbishop of Milwaukee, notorious for having paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to satisfy the demands of his former male lover. Jeff Anderson is a Minnesota-based attorney who has made a substantial amount of money out of sex abuse “settlements,” and who is party to ongoing litigation intended to bring the resources of the Vatican within the reach of contingency-fee lawyers in the United States. Yet these two utterly implausible—and, in any serious journalistic sense, disqualified—sources were those the Times cited in a story claiming that, as cardinal prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith [CDF], Joseph Ratzinger, later Benedict XVI, had prevented sanctions against Father Lawrence Murphy, a diabolical Milwaukee priest who, decades before, had abused some 200 deaf children in his pastoral care. This was simply not true, as the legal papers from the Murphy case the Times provided on its Web site demonstrated (see here for a demolition of the Times’ case based on the documentary evidence it made available). The facts, alas, seem to be of little interest to those whose primary concern is to nail down the narrative of global Catholic criminality, centered in the Vatican.
...So, of course, would elementary fairness from the global media. That seems unlikely to come from those reporters and editors at the New York Times who have abandoned any pretence of maintaining journalistic standards. But it ought not be beyond the capacity of other media outlets to understand that much of the Times’ recent reporting on the Church has been gravely distorted, and to treat it accordingly."
George Weigel
Liberal Obamaniac Democrats.
ReplyDeleteNeed we say more?
I have written by e-mail letter after letter to the NY Times. At first I was getting thank yous from one of their staff. That has since stopped. The NY Times has no intentions of publicizing the truth. They are mad because the Church opposes their moral relativism, their support of gay marriage and abortion, and the Obama's health care plan. So the best way to weaken the Church and make Her look ridiculous is with the sex abuse scandals. It's no coincidence that this came out now with Obama's health care victory. Their lying message is clear: the Church opposes health care and molests little boys. I have no doubt that the NY Times is doing exactly what Obama wants.
ReplyDeleteJust another example of Lenin's "useful idiots". Somehow they've deluded themselves into believing that the very political systems they support won't, in the end, crush them. Somehow they believe Marxism will be different this time. It'll be different this time because the motives of those trying to put it in place are so much purer than the Bolsheviks.
ReplyDeleteRemember, Communism is a great system, it just has never been implemented properly. How many times have you heard that?
And that's the other inconvenient truth they seem to have forgotten; Marxists don't have much love in their heart for intellectuals, either. They have forgotten about Mao and the "Cultural Revolution".
Useful idiots all.
There is a reason Mark Levin calls them the New York Slimes.
ReplyDeleteHey Opus. The thing that amazes me is the brazenness of it all. They don't even try to lie in ways that are at least a little bit hidden. They've just gone with the full "in your face" lie and most of the rest of the medias goes with it.
ReplyDelete治男治男: I'm sure something got lost in translation; some subtle use of language that made all the difference, but I can only work with what I've got.
I'm Catholic and I believe in good and evil. To keep it simple, good is of God while evil is of Satan. Kindness is a good, a virtue of sorts. However, false kindness, used in the service of evil, is bad. Lying is wrong and evil. Satan is the father of lies and a liar. If I were to be falsely kind because I wanted to obscure the complete truth by leaving something out so as not to offend then I would be lying; thus serving the devil. True kindness, at least in our culture, comes from serving God and to do so in this instance I need to speak the truth, whether it offends or not.
If two people disagree they will never find common ground if they are not completely honest with each other. Maybe, because they are honest, they will realize that no common ground exists and so will not waste their time trying to accomplish the impossible.
This is the American way and it is rooted in Christian belief. Further, it is the Missouri way, rooted in Christian principle and built out of plain cussedness and hardheadedness. We are not the sharpest pencils in the box in my beloved state so we try to keep it as simple as possible. We believe what the Bible says; make your yes your yes and your no your no. Stepping outside that simple formula, as the New York Times does with great regularity, makes our heads hurt.