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Pope goes the weasel- by Neil Day

On Friday it was reported on the BBC that a significant change of tone was emnating from the Vatican- one which suggested that priests accused of sex scandals should surrender themselves to the authorities.

This change of tone, and if it is matched in practice, could be monumental. 

No longer is the Church attempting to portray those that ask for priests to appear before the courts as trying to smear their reputation. No longer is there the suggestion that Church law is flawless or even that only God can judge a man of cloth.

If this can be mirrored in a public and open case for the Pope then the Catholic Church might have a chance for survival.


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The pointless battle against binge drinking
5 may  |  By Stephen Myles

Since the days of Alexander the Great, binge drinking has been a very popular past time - leading to him apparently killing a friend and burning down Persepolis while drunk.

Those are some Great shoes to fill.

Yet, governments, schools and the media have repeatedly tried to teach us of binge drinking's dangers. 

Dartmouth University has taken the lead, instigating a new nationwide policy to curb heavy drinking by their students.

Pour me another glass.

Binge drinking is defined as "the consumption of five or more drinks in a row by men — or four or more drinks in a row by women — at least once in the previous 2 weeks. Heavy binge drinking includes three or more such episodes in 2 weeks."

Seems I don't know anyone who isn't a heavy binge drinker.

Do you think this definition should be changed or should we change people's attitudes? Or should you follow HPD's no fools guide to drinking a lot but not dying?  . . read more

The Pope in Prison- by Eric Lang
13 apr  |  In recent weeks it has been fashionable to ask that the Pope- like the rest of the paedophile priesthood accused of breaking the law- appear before the civil courts in a transparent and public trial.

So far the Vatican has remained fairly tight-lipped and less than likely to agree to a situation which derides the traditions of canon law and shows the Church to be answerable to anyone but God.

Things might be about to change.

It has been reported that Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins- both stabbing thorns in the side's of the spiritual- are seeing whether the Pope can be arrested under the international law of crimes against humanity when he travels to Britain later this year.

I until yesterday thought this was an impossibility for the simple reason that Heads of State have a long-standing immunity from international law and it would be a siginficant coup if this tradition was overturned.

Then I read that ex-pat Australian Geoffrey Robertson had given Hitchens and Dawkins advice that basically said that due to the special legal existence of the Vatican and that the state has never been a full member of the UN- maybe the Pope isn't considered a Head of State in the normal understanding of the term.

It is unlikely, but wouldn't it be amazing to see a frail old man pretending to be God's representative on earth having to stand before the secular world's new master and commander- the rule of law.    . . read more

The circus of the Pope's beatification
1 may  |  By Stephen Myles

"Bread and circuses" was Rome's famous solution for dealing with popular insurrection; the idea was that if you kept the people fed and entertained they probably wouldn't complain that much.

Fast forward 2000 years and the Catholic church has learnt well from their pagan predecessors.

Just today, the former Pope was beatified in the Circus Maximus - the site of Ben Hur styled chariot racing - causing thousands to come out and celebrate. 

Seems like the circus will never end in Rome.

What do you think of the beatification of the Pope? Is this a convenient way for the Catholic church to distract us from its controversies? Is this also a great way to hide the former Pope's failings? Tell us and remember...Disqus!  . . read more

Dear Terrorists
3 dec  |  I write to you today around the anniversary of the shameful attacks that your doped up teenage lackeys carried out in Mumbai to say- that I understand. It's hard living 1000 years in the past; what with no running water, no electricity, and no connection to the beauty of the outside world. I understand that you're angry, and sometimes when you get angry (or is it jealous?) you have to destroy what you can't have.

Nevertheless I say this; you may feel a touch hard done by when you look around at the putrid conditions that your own ignorant way of life has created. You may just want to, instead of looking at your own stupidity, just blame the rest of the world, which has chosen to embrace all that is good and just. But it won't change the fact that you're still living in the world's sewer, the perfect little filthy rats you are, holding desperately onto the hope that your futile struggle against the free world will one day be successful.

Your strength only resides in those who have been so unfortunate to be born into the hopeless squalor that you have created for them.

Your war against the free world will do nothing more then bring light to your cesspool of a home, it will shine light on the injustice of your societal chains and it will inevitably bring all that is good, just and beautiful about our free world, raining down on you in the form of 500 pound bombs. Once the dust settles we will build a great big shopping mall for young teens to flaunt their new found sexuality in an innocent, yet quirky way.

And in the end the free will prevail; to one day create a world of peace, love and unity between all cultures, traditions and religions.

You won't break us, you can't break us and I will never live in fear

Peace and love to the free,

Khedra Cloud

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Homer Simpson conforms to Catholic values
21 oct  |  By Kara Jensen-Mackinnon

The Vatican publication, L'Osservatore Romano declared in an article this week that Homer J. Simpson is a character that conforms to Catholic values, and praised "The Simpsons" for covering issues of faith, family and religion.

The article stated, and I translate, "few people know it, and he does everything to hide it, but it is true, Homer J. Simpson is a Catholic".

Like the vast majority of my generation, I've grown up watching the Simpsons and laughing at the satirical representation of the middle American male that is Homer. I just wonder that in approving Mr. Simpson does the Catholic church also condone the abuse of children, alcoholism, bigamy, extramarital affairs, blasphemy and the failure to love thy neighbour?

Or are these negative traits overlooked?

Perhaps this is the Catholic church's underhanded way to demonstrate that they are not a pack of cultural philistines. I just feel they should think a little more carefully about the pop icons they select as representatives - I always knew those at the helm of the church were largely aloof and dim-witted, but I thought it would be decades before they admitted to turning a blind eye to child abuse.  . . read more

The Spirituality of Destruction - By Starla Immak
4 mar  |  Finding spiritual meaning in these tough times, the author contemplates destruction, which in Hinduism is associated with Lord Shiva.

Shivaratri came on Monday, and I spent the day fasting and praying to the god of destruction, Shiva. Many have asked me what the point is of praying of all things to a god of destruction. What's wrong with you? Don't you like creation?

Yes. I like creation very much, maybe too much. Gods and goddesses of destruction have been worshiped for the longest time, and one may pause to wonder why in the world one would be. It is a given that in the natural universe there is a cycle of creation, and then a cycle of destruction. In the spring, the flowers come back. The fields bloom, and butterflies fill the air. The trees become green, and birds lay their eggs. Creation is building to a crescendo only to begin dying away in the fall. Nature is full of such lessons. Forests become too dense, and then fires engulf them in flames. Bunny rabbits produce too many bunnies, and foxes have lots of nice bunny dinners. Through the eons ice ages have come and gone bringing destruction of whole species with it. After the retreat of the ice age, new species come into existence. Scientists tell us that suns build up and then they too eventually die away. Some become black holes. Our universe started with a big blast, and will someday fall back in on itself.

As the Lord Buddha said, "The only thing that stays the same is that fact that all things change."

He also realized that as in Nature our lives have an ebb and flow. In life there will be a springtime and a fall. It is better to accept the changes that will occur than fight against them. Do not become too attached to the springtime, and do not become too aggrieved in the fall time. The cycles have their purpose, and they don't care too much for our petty desires. Sometimes the weeds need to be burned to clear the farm, and sometimes, tired old ideas need to be dropped.

While participating in this cycle of clearing, we need to look within to find what attachments we have that needs clearing as well. Sometimes we hold on to things, ideas, ways of doing things that are really not beneficial. We hold onto these things even though the hanging on is destroying us. It is like clinging to a boiling pot of water even though our hands are being burned. The cycle of destruction (Shiva) reminds us to let go of such things. The old crops have been harvested and let's make way for the new one.

In these dark times, it is easy to become so transfixed by the headlights that we forget to move out of the way before being run over. This too is a time of destruction. It is a time when old ways of doing things become outmoded. We need to look within as we go through these dark times to see what it is that we too need to let go of. What have we been clinging to needs to be released. It is a time of great change, and people mostly do not like change. It can be painful, but it is an opportunity to cut deeply into the rot to clean it out. It is a time to fully purge the stench. Yes. We cling to the old, the worn-out, and it is painful to let go.

The Chandi Path and the Book of Job tell us that it is during these dark times that we look within so deeply that the attachments are completely cleared. If we finished the book of Job, he would have sat down and prayed or meditated. He would have seen that god did not hate him, but it was simply a cycle of destruction. He would have realized that he is, as much a part of nature as flowers are, and he would have realized that god did not mean any personal harm to him, just like the winter has nothing against the daisies that bloom in summer. He is hurting, because he can't let go. Shiva clears these attachments that we have and helps us let go for a higher purpose. We stop holding onto the boiling pot. We let go of things we had no control over. Instead of hating god and hating other people, we just let go, and see the cycle for what it is. We can keep rotating on that big wheel being hurt every time the destructive cycle comes into play or we can step off the wheel and calmly see it for what it is.

Shiva is also seen as the god who leads us to enlightenment; the old ascetic who must lead us up the most difficult piece of the mountain. Jai Shiva!

You can read more from Starla at her blog, Shankari Kali

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No kiddie fiddlers, or women
16 jul  |  By Sumer Dayal

The Catholic Church has finally presented some action on its most debilitating problems. Under the updated Motu Proprio, priests can now be more easily defrocked if evidence of child abuse is clear while the distribution of child pornography is treated with the same “severity”.

This also appeared to be a good time to cut out the other problem tarnishing the Church’s image – female priests. The “attempted ordination of women” has now been codified as a grave crime against Church law.

The timing is startling.

Instead of acknowledging that the Church is taking some constructive action to rectify its child abuse issues we’re left contemplating another instance where it functions completely at odds with contemporary values i.e. equality of the sexes.

What’s even more startling is that female priesthood is treated in the same light.

Word of advice – discriminating against sex offenders and women on the same day is not the best way to save face.  . . read more

Ushering in the Decade of Understanding
15 jan  |  A few months ago I went to a Church service. There I expected to find God’s comfort, to pray for good results in my exams, to try and understand the reason for bombings and wars and to make sense of my life.

Instead I was confronted with a missionary service. The speaker recited a verse from Matthew with very little relevance to the modern issues that I knew my peers and I faced. The service was less about me, and more about my role in spreading the word of God. Those around me were brothers and sisters and people to pray for – those outside the hall seemed to not exist

Sumer Dayal- HPD's International Politics Editor consides the nature of religion, understanding and interpretation  . . read more

Predictions for Champions League 2011
28 may  |  By Sean Maguire

Alright here we go, something to put a few bob on - based on a football ball fan that fell a bit off the wagon until Messi showed up. Javier Hernandez, or Chicharito as he's known in his native Mexico, will link up with Rooney and score late in the first half. 

It will turn dirty and someone will get sent off around the 60th minute.

Messi will be unstoppable but won't score, Iniesta will put a goal in at the 83rd minute setting the game up to extra time.

Messi will then break the hearts of the Man U faithful at the 113th minute. 

Come on prove me wrong.

What do you reckon? Any better predictions? Let's see who's got the oracle sense, tell us and remember...Disqus!

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Taking on the Church of Scientology
30 apr  |  The controversial church of Scientology has attracted a lot of controversy over the years and seems almost impervious to objective analysis. Lawrence Wright a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist from ForaTv, "gives an insider look on his groundbreaking expose of the Church of Scientology. He discusses the precautions he took while writing about the notoriously litigious organization, explaining that at one point there were five fact checkers working on the piece."

What do you think of Wright's investigation of Scientology? Does it make you want to read his expose? Tell us and remember....Disqus!  . . read more

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"Government's view of the economy could be summed up in a few short phrases: If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it." -- Ronald Reagan (1986)