It's not about where I am in current times. It's about things that happened in the 60s-early 80s. Society's perspective has changed greatly since then in the places we live. You can't write the song "hot for teacher" in 2022, but you certainly could up to 1984. The age of consent here is still 16, and laws about positions of authority or corruption of minors didn't exist 50 years ago....I don't know about where you are, but where I am, if an adult is in a position of authority and responsibility over a 16-year-old and has sex with them, that's still considered grooming and abuse.
People who are under your supervision and authority are not appropriate lovers.
Go ahead and read the Grand Jury report yourself. Page 319 is where the individual stories start.Even if you're moaning about how the overall number has been presented, and that some don't qualify, that still leaves a large number of rapes and sexual abuse of minors-- which the Pennsylvania Catholic Church engaged in covering up, and which Shapiro assisted in exposing. Which is a worthy use of his office, and to which you're only objecting because you identify with the organisation that perpetrated the crimes.
First one, had relations with teen of unspecified age, but was caught by police and let off, so pretty safe to say above the age of consent. Later on assaulted a child, church covered nothing up, guy was convicted, the Church paid for therapy.
Second one, a child involved, Church reported the allegations to the DA, nothing was covered up.
Third one, all above the age of consent.
Fourth one, removed from jobs, and charges were pressed.
Fifth one was put on leave of absence for relationships with adult women.
Sixth one, victims over age of consent referred to law enforcement, a victim came forward who was a teenager below the age of consent at the time (who said he liked the priest and the priest made him feel special), so they dismissed him from the priesthood.
You could go through them all. In a lot of these cases, no actual crime was committed. In the cases where crimes were committed, it was more often not the church itself reporting the crime to the police. But if you pretend that they're all part of a single event, you get a horrific picture of hundreds of pre-pubescent victims thrown to the wolves and covered up. That's just not the truth, and I blame the people involved for pushing that narrative.
The Catholic Clergy are less likely to abuse someone than basically any other set of people on the planet, and it is the self-flagellating, hyper-penitent nature of Catholics who refuse to defend themselves that allows you to imagine otherwise.It's just that standing up for paedophiles is such a strange thing to do. I've never understood how Catholics have been able to square that circle of an omnipotent god and child abuse carried out in his name. But we can leave them to their fucked up hypocritical fake morality I suppose.
Literally none of that is true in any meaningful sense. You think the Church is covering up sex offenders because you know about its sex offenders... do you not see the contradiction? Churches don't pay income taxes... non-profits also don't pay income taxes... Churches aren't exempt from pretty much all the other taxes (depending on location). What more taxes are you expecting Catholic Churches (which are nearly all individually in the negative being supported by the Church at large) to pay? Money laundering and political corruption? What are you even on about?I'd certainly look twice at a candidate who sues an organization which regularly hides sex offenders, basically launders money, declares itself exempt from taxes and tries to corrupt politicians.