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One Difference Between Muslims and CatholicsBy Andrew Cochran
The terrible insults of the Catholic Church and Pope Benedict XVI by HBO talk show host Bill Maher reminded me of the recent mini-debate here by Farhana Ali and Jeffrey Breinholt over the reaction in the Muslim world over the re-publication of cartoons depicting Mohammed is a way that Muslims deem offensive. As a Catholic loyal to my Church and to the Pope as the Vicar of Christ on Earth, I am personally insulted by Maher's slander, and I support calls by other Catholics for HBO to fire him. His comments and my insta-reaction induce empathy for Farhana's view that the newspaper editors who re-published the cartoons could and should have shown restraint and not re-published the cartoons. But let's note the difference between the way in which the "Catholic street" treats this episode and the reaction in the "Muslim street" to the cartoons:
And to those Muslims in the audience who protest that their faith gets a bad rap from that tiny percentage of violent protesters, I say that no institution knows better than the Catholic Church how a small, small percentage of bad apples can harm the reputation of the entire institution, in spite of the many great accomplishments by that institution through the centures. One of the lessons of this decade, in both the terrorism and religious contexts, is that a 2% error rate is still unacceptable.
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