FAQyMe Logo

The FAQyMe Gene Archive: A Depository of Molested Catholics Historic Data


Revealing hidden truths: data from child abuse survivors to secure justice and recognition.

<< First   < Previous   Current Page "600"   Next >   Last >>

Article originally prepared on : 18 April 2010

Article Category: Latest in the News

Abuse Bill Isn't Persecution Of Catholics

Description: Puritans ruled early Connecticut. At best, Roman Catholics were viewed with suspicion. Religious freedom was written into our m

Abuse Bill Isn't Persecution Of Catholics

 
Puritans ruled early Connecticut. At best, Roman Catholics were viewed with suspicion. Religious freedom was written into our most important document, but the notion was given only reluctant fealty.

But Catholics have always been here. They fought in the Revolution and today a statue of one of their own, Casimir Pulaski, guards Pulaski Mall on Hartford's Main Street.

By sheer numbers, an influx of Catholics fleeing the Irish famine in the mid-1800s changed the state's landscape. In 1958, a paper delivered by a University of Connecticut history professor in Washington proposed that a Catholic president was a possibility "within a few years."

Just two, in fact. Anti-Catholic sentiment bubbled up during the presidential campaign of John F. Kennedy, though according to a 1959 column from The Courant, the discussion wasn't nearly as hateful as that accompanying the 1928 candidacy of Al Smith, also a Catholic. Still, the way some Irish remember those long ago (and rare) "No Irish Need Apply" signs in business windows, some Catholics remain poised for defense.

That vigilance is not necessarily a bad thing. Last year, in response to a 2006 case of fraud, Connecticut legislators discussed a bill that would have changed the way churches handle their own financial oversight. Clergy and parishioners cried foul, and the bill was tabled.

With that history, one can see how some Catholics would be on guard for assaults on their religious freedom.

But House Bill 5473 regardless of what the church says from pulpits and in bulletin inserts and big newspaper ads is no such assault.

5473 extends the civil statute of limitations on seeking redress after the sexual abuse, assault or exploitation of a minor. Though the bill also sets strict rules for people who want to file a lawsuit, it is opposed by the Insurance Association of Connecticut, St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center employer of George Reardon, an endocrinologist accused of abusing and assaulting hundreds of children and the Archdiocese of Hartford.

Last month, testimony from the Connecticut Catholic Public Affairs Conference before the legislative judiciary committee said the bill seeks to alter law that is already "extraordinarily generous to people with sexual abuse claims."

That's just sad. It can take years to come to grips with childhood sexual abuse, and then years more to be able to speak out publicly.
 
 

List Molested Catholics Categories

Divider - dont forget to donate so we can keep on with education to protect children - hope you benefitted from reading this

The FAQyMe Gene Archive: Molested Catholics Historic Data

If you wish to keep this article alive in the Internet Archive simply click the link below.
Click here to add this page to the Internet Archive

Select from these TFYQA archives
Contact us if you have data you want to preserve.

Contact us if you have data you want to preserve

Tell others, share this page on : X |  BlueSky |  Mastodon.Social |  Strangeminds.Social |  Facebook

Find us on X.com || New ID on Facebook || BlueSky || Mastodon.Social || Strangeminds.Social


Contact us if you have data you want to preserve

  trauma informed    human rights    justice    failed institutions    UN Convention on Human Rights    Rights of the Child and a Bill of Rights for Australia    future    evidence    resilience    not providing or representing a secular Australia    autodidact  

Hegemony: The authority, dominance, and influence of one group, nation, or society over another group, nation, or society; typically through cultural, economic, or political means.

.

Contact us if you have data you want to preserve

If you found this information to be of assistance please don't forget to donate so that we can extend these resources to more survivors. These pages are focused on preserving survivor relevant information. Information is not provided as legal or professional advice; it is provided as general information only and requires that you validate any information via your own legal or other professional service providers.

You can directly support my work at here

Contact us if you have data you want to preserve

Were you like so many others born into a constitutionally protected God based death and rape culture?

Copyright The FAQyMe Gene © 2022.
TFYQA happily uses IP2Location.io IP geolocation web service. XML Site Map