Skip to main content

More Mail

Forwarded by my friend Nina to me, a letter from U.S. Bishops:

From the Bishops:


ACTION ALERT: Congress Must Act this Week to Protect our Poor and Vulnerable Brothers and Sisters


Take ACTION!
 
Protect our Poor and Vulnerable Brothers and Sisters

 
This week Congress must act on the current FY 2011 spending bill to avert a government shutdown.  Some current proposals include deep cuts to programs that serve the poorest, most vulnerable people at home and abroad.  Likewise a shutdown of government services will fall most heavily on those who have the fewest resources. Fiscal responsibility is important, but it demands shared sacrifice and a special concern for poor persons at home and abroad.
 
Unfortunately, the voices of poor and vulnerable people have not been heard in the debate, and as a result they are being forced to bear the brunt of the proposed cuts. The vast majority of the cuts come from the non-defense, discretionary portion of the budget (only about 12% of the total budget)--which includes the majority of social welfare, education, and other anti-poverty funding. Some of the largest proposed funding cuts include:
 





ü $2.3 billion from job training programs
ü $1.08 billion from Head Start
ü $100 million from Emergency Food and Shelter
ü $875 million from International Disaster Assistance

ü $800 million from International Food Aid
ü $2.5 billion from affordable housing
ü $1 billion from Community Health Centers
ü $904 million from migrants and refugees
 
Unfortunately, very few advocate the priority claim of poor and vulnerable people, which makes our voices so much more important and prophetic.
 
Recently Bishop Stephen E. Blaire, as well as Bishop Howard J. Hubbard and Ken Hackett, President of CRS, sent letters to the U.S. Senate expressing their concern with some of the cuts and calling for more attention to the needs of poor and vulnerable people.
 
What You Can Do
 
1.      Call your Senators and Representative and tell them:
·   Many proposals under discussion fail the moral criteria of Catholic social teaching to advance the common good and the Constitutional requirement to promote the general welfare.
·   Poor and vulnerable people didn’t cause our budget deficit. Don’t make them pay for it.
·   As the final bill is negotiated, shared sacrifice should guide spending cuts, not disproportionate cuts in programs that serve poor persons at home or abroad. 
·   Responsible leadership for the common good is needed to avert a government shutdown that would most negatively impact those with the least resources. 
2.      Email your Senators and Representative with the above message, possibly adding specifically how these cuts will prohibit your diocese/parish/community from adequately serving the poor and vulnerable. You can use the bishops’ letters as a template.
3.      Help your diocese, parish, community organizations, and families understand the consequences of these deficit-reduction proposals on poor and vulnerable people. See these documents for details.
 
Take Action NOW.
 
For more information visit the Department of Justice, Peace, and Human Development.
 
In the Catholic tradition, government has a positive role because of its responsibility to serve the common good, provide a safety net for the vulnerable, and help overcome discrimination and ensure equal opportunity for all. Government has inescapable responsibilities toward those who are poor and vulnerable, to ensure their rights and defend their dignity. Government action is necessary to help overcome structures of injustice and misuse of power and to address problems beyond the reach of individual and community efforts. Government must act when these other institutions fall short in defending the weak and protecting human life and human rights.                                                                                                                        -U.S. Catholic Bishops, A Place at the Table
 
Was this Action Alert forwarded to you? Sign up to receive ALL our Action Alerts and more HERE.
 
Dept. of Justice, Peace and Human Development | US Conference of Catholic Bishops
3211 4th St. NE, Washington, DC 20017-1194
(202) 541-3191 | JPHDmail@usccb.org | www.usccb.org/jphd 
_____________
Take Action Online! Join our Action Network ( http://capwiz.com/catholicbishops/mlm/ )and we'll send you important updates regarding our issues and how you can speak out on important issues that impact human life and dignity.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Wither Goes the Corn?

One of the most under played news stories in the national media right now is the potential impact of the mid-western drought on food security in the United States.  According to Forbes 75% of food on supermarket shelves has corn in it.  Having already destroyed, stunted or delayed much of the corn crop, the heat is now working it's way on the soybean crop.  The Agriculture Dept conservative estimate is that food prices will rise by 3-4% this year as a result.  However this is based on the current, incomplete assessment of the drought's impact on corn and other crops.This drought is a new phenomenon-- a global warming drought based on fundamental alteration of weather patterns.  Already about one quarter of the country is in severe drought. Other estimates of potential price impacts range as high as 15% and the latent fear that eventually, for a time, the U.S. may become a net importer of food may play havoc with the crop futures market.  Food inflation ...

Just War and Just a War

One of the thorniest problems man face is when, if every is war justified.  The bible says there is a time for war and a time for peace, but that could be just a bow to the inevitability of war in the fallen world.  If also says that they will beat there swords into plough shares and study war no more.  Dorothy Day, Peter Maurin, William Miller and other Catholic Workers often ascribed to pacifism or near total pacifism face with the near impossibility of every untangling the moral consequences of violence from the ends desired in undertaking it. But St. Augustine, faced with a world where Christians were starting to replace pagans as political leaders and Christians we soldiers in obedience to the leaders tried to come up with criteria by which war could be measured.   Augustine knew that the Gospel question on it was complex.  One the one hand Jesus told people to turn the other  cheek and also told Peter to put away his sword and not defe...