Saturday, April 12, 2003

Chopin + Schumann + Horowitz = Incomparable Playing

Click here to read my review

Friday, April 4, 2003

There He Goes Again...

Another news item with my comments in parentheses...

Vatican says homosexuality is "without any social value" (does this include homosexual priests?).

A new Vatican dictionary describing homosexuality as a condition "without any social value" was denounced by an Italian gay rights leader Monday as insulting and cruel. The Vatican published the 1,000-page Lexicon of words and phrases like reproductive rights, gender, and other terms dealing with sexuality in an effort to clarify what it says are neutral-sounding terms that can mask meanings contradictory to Roman Catholic teachings (i.e. religious propaganda).

Lexicon reflects Vatican teaching that homosexual acts are "intrinsically disordered," and Pope John Paul II has said such acts are "contrary to natural law." (One wonders what the Pope's definition of Natural Law is. Animals have homosexual sex, so homosexuality is clearly part of the natural world. What is truly UNNATURAL, however, is the practice of requiring priests to squelch their natural sexual drives, leading ultimately to the pedohilia scandal currently rocking the Catholic church.) The church, however, says homosexuals should be treated with compassion and dignity. The dictionary counsels against "stigmatizing" as homophobic those who raise questions about homosexuality. (So, in other words, the Pope doesn't want gays bashed physically, just verbally.)

But leading gay rights activist Franco Grillini said the dictionary makes plain "the pathological homophobic obsession of the Catholic Church.... In my opinion, it's almost racist, and it is at the limit of cruelty." Grillini wrote on his Web site Sunday that Lexicon moves "from homophobic invective to insult against homosexuals and homosexuality."

Earlier this year Cardinal Alfonso Lopez Trujillo said the Vatican decided to compile the work after hearing complaints from nongovernmental organizations about "ambiguous" terms used at the United Nations and other international organizations (those damned Liberals are at it again). The Vatican long has been at odds with the United Nations over policies it believes contradict church teaching. For example, the Vatican often opposes U.N. documents concerning sex education and the use of condoms as a way to prevent HIV infection (don't want to prevent people from making more babies who can grow up to fill the church's coffers].