Donohue defends Mel Gibson’s virtue against ex-Catholics and secular Jews

What Mel Gibson says in the heat of a domestic spat is none of my business. Actually, I could care less. But, when Staks Rosch points to what the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights’ Bill Donohue (and his trusty computer) has to say in defense of Mel, I’m all ears. Says Donohue:

It is painfully obvious, that most of the anti-Catholicism that exists today comes from two major sources: ex-Catholics (and those with one foot out the door) and secular Jews. This doesn’t mean that all of those who fall into these two groups are bigots, but it is to say that the worst offenders tend to belong to one of those two segments of the population.

Gasp.

Catholic Watch: Donohue defends Mel Gibson and calls Leno a bigot
Philadelphia Atheism Examiner

This week in Catholic: Catholic League president Bill Donohue is offended again. This time, he takes the time out of his protests of the Empire State Building, Comedy Central, Lady Gaga, and comedian Louis C.K. to defend Mel Gibson and call late night talk show host Jay Leno a bigot. [ ... ]
Mel Gibson belongs of to splinter sect of the Catholic Church run by his father who denounces the changes made by the Second Vatican Council. Still, Gibson is a Catholic and this has prompted Bill Donohue to come to his defense. In a press release by the Catholic League, Donohue implies that Gibson is the victim of anti-Catholic bigotry. He goes on to blame “Secular Jews” for “fomenting anti-Catholicism” and trying to equate any and all criticism of the actions and beliefs of the Catholic Church with anti-Semitism and racism.

(links: from the original)

Here’s Bill Donohue’s media release in full:

FRANK RICH’S SELECTIVE INDIGNATION

July 19, 2010

In yesterday’s New York Times, columnist Frank Rich called Mel Gibson a “bigoted blowhard,” branding his movie “The Passion of the Christ” anti-Semitic; he also attacked several Catholic and Protestant leaders who befriended Gibson, including Catholic League president Bill Donohue. Donohue responds as follows:

If Frank Rich were as sensitive to anti-Catholicism as he is anti-Semitism, there would be no problem. But the fact is he has an ugly record of attacking those who object to anti-Catholicism, but not the bigotry itself. The following examples suffice: the 1995 movie “Priest”; the 1998 play “Corpus Christi”; the 1999 Brooklyn Museum of Art exhibition, “Sensation”; the 1999 movie “Dogma”; the vitriolic reaction to Catholicism that accompanied “The Passion of the Christ”; his own newspaper’s hypocritical and selective crusade against priestly wrongdoing; the ongoing “war on Christmas,” etc. In every instance, his ire was directed at the protesters, not the object of their protest.

Rich is particularly angry at anyone who dares to mention the role played by secular Jews in fomenting anti-Catholicism. I am one Catholic who will not run from this charge. It is painfully obvious, that most of the anti-Catholicism that exists today comes from two major sources: ex-Catholics (and those with one foot out the door) and secular Jews. This doesn’t mean that all of those who fall into these two groups are bigots, but it is to say that the worst offenders tend to belong to one of those two segments of the population. Indeed, the “raised Catholic” types and secular Jews have long replaced the Protestant community as the primary source of anti-Catholicism in the United States. In Europe, it tends to be ex-Christians and Muslims.

If Rich would like to debate me on this issue, I’m sure some media outlet would be glad to arrange it.

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Comments

2 Comments so far. Comments are closed.
  1. CriticalThinker,

    Here’s a thought from a secular Jew; Donohue should stop defending Catholic bigots like Brian Brown and Maggie Gallagher. That might reduce tensions a tad.

  2. Don’t forget Maggie and Brian’s boss, Robert George, who penned the Manhattan Declaration of Theocracy for America. He’s got the pedophile priest protection mafia lined up to serve NOM’s every whim.

    Don’t get me started on Donohue’s defense of – and bullying on behalf of – that indefensible sadistic old witch with the white and blue towel wrapped around her empty now-dead head.