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DePaul Karens: ‘Exclude The Excluders!’

Tiny Christian group at Chicago Catholic university says it agrees with Church teaching on homosexuality. 'Kick them off campus!' demand student protesters
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We have reached the point at which students at a Catholic university insist that a group that supports a particular Catholic teaching be banned on campus. Excerpts:

Students at DePaul University, a private Catholic university in Illinois, are circulating a petition demanding the elimination of a Christian group after it posted a Q&A on its now-deleted Instagram page denouncing LGBTQ lifestyles, student newspaper The DePaulia reported.

Signees called on DePaul University officials to ban the group “from meeting on campus and promoting discrimination against members of the LGBTQIA+ community,” according to the petition titled “Eliminate Vessel.” Vessel is not an official student organization on campus and appears to have deleted their Instagram page soon after sharing that they are a “non-affirming” group and “do not agree that the LGBTQIA+ lifestyle is supported by biblical text. Below are verses which support this,” according to a screenshot obtained by the DePaulia.

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Here's a link to the student newspaper's report. Excerpts:

DePaul sophomore Brigid O’Brien was sitting inside local coffeehouse the Bourgeois Pig Cafe Wednesday evening with her roommates, senior Alexandra Murphy and junior Grace Lewandowski, when her attention turned to an instagram post on Murphy’s phone.  

O’Brien’s eyes widened when she saw the post on screen. It was a post by a group with the username “vessel.oncampus,” which goes by “Vessel,” that included messaging both O’Brien and Murphy categorize as harmful. O’Brien herself identifies as bisexual. 

“We were super pissed,” O’Brien said.

Vessel, a Christian group meeting at DePaul, addressed the group’s view on LGBTQ+ “lifestyles.” The post stated as follows:

“We are non-affirming. This means we do not agree that the LGBTQIA+ lifestyle is supported by biblical text. Below are verses which support this.”

The post then cited 1 Corinthians 6:9-11, an excerpt from the Bible that in many versions says, “Neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor homosexuals, nor sodomites, nor thieves … will inherit the kingdom of God.”

The messaging immediately upset the trio of roommates, who all felt a need to act. Still in the coffee shop, O’Brien and her roommates drafted a Change.org petition with the goal of barring Vessel from meeting on campus. It quickly garnered more support than she anticipated.

These Karens -- who, mind you, chose to attend a private Catholic university -- responded to the existence of a group whose fidelity to Scripture and the magisterial teaching of the Catholic Church by seeking to have the Christian group banned from campus. That's so typical of America today, especially of that Jacobin generation.

Here's what set them off:

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Wait till the Karen Trio reads the Bible! If they read the Bible, I mean...

DePaul says the group hasn't asked for university recognition, so it can't do anything about it. The Karens and their queer allies are MAD:

On Sunday evening, Spectrum DePaul, a community-based queer student organization posted a statement to its Instagram in response to Vessel’s Wednesday night post. In the post, Spectrum said it is “ashamed by the people in the DePaul community who would attempt to form an organization with values based on exclusion and bigotry.” 

While O’Brien and Murphy both hope the petition and its accompanying support garners a change in policy regarding the kind of language Vessel used, they cannot help but be disheartened by the use of it.

“In some way, with the quoting of the Bible verse, I think to an extent, that is still discrimination,” Murphy said. “Regardless of it being outward harassment necessarily, or being like, ‘you cannot come to our group,’ it’s discrimination.” 

Irony is dead with these people. We hate this group's policy of exclusion -- ban them from campus! And even better: The Bible is discriminatory! Keep the people who quote the Bible off of our Catholic campus!

It tells us something, though, about the state of Catholic catechesis in America today that the Three Karens and all those who signed their Change.org petition see nothing particularly wrong with demanding that a student group whose belief in the moral status of homosexuality is consonant with Scripture and explicit, binding Catholic teaching is intolerable. You watch: five years from now, progressive Catholic universities will be citing Pope Francis to justify banning actual believing magisterial Catholics from campus.

DePaul, incidentally, hosts an annual drag show, and a "Queer Halloween" party.

A reader e-mailed about something I posted on my Substack concerning cultural clashes between Europeans and Americans. It applies to this controversy at DePaul:

What struck me 40 years ago as a student living in Europe for four years was that Americans were relatively  intolerant. That is, as a culture we tended either to paper over differences or to get upset that someone disagreed with us--with an inclination to take it personally. In Europe people seemed more resilient to disagreement and so disagreements could be followed by (or accompany) a meal or a drink.

It caused me to think that Americans had come to equate tolerance with agreement or indifference because making truth claims  risked offending the other person. As if saying something was true was taboo because it implied the other person was wrong and therefore (implicit to this system) ignorant or bad (and hence the ensuing personal upset). The working assumption was that  saying "you're wrong" couldn't be a neutral declaration of an error or mistake but had to carry a negative moral judgement.

In comparison, Europeans weren't shocked to find truth claims expressed and contested.

Since then we've taken the false assumption "you're wrong = you're bad" and forged it into a hammer for smashing opponents and demolishing any aspect of society that gets in our way. We won't now even allow the thought that "you're wrong" could mean "you're sincere but mistaken." The latter assertion would be denounced as a microaggression and, likely, a sign of some sort of privilege.

The reason for this development (actually decay) is that we're no longer assuming that the truth is out there to be discussed and discovered, with space for compromise as we journey together. Rather there is only power, the ability to craft and impose a narrative on others. Such a culture by definition tends toward win-lose situations since there is in theory no appeal beyond the contestants; there's only taking the hill and "owning" the opposition.

I believe this is an important part of the reason Europeans see Americans (even very liberal ones) as puritanical (i.e., thinking we know what's best and are right to impose it) and falsely optimistic (deep down every good person will want what we want once we show them). It makes us in our own way a culture as prone to Messianism as the Russians. By comparison, the British Empire seems modest. It only claimed to be bringing civilization, we're inclined to think we're saving the world (as did the Russians in their communist phase).

It's the one way many Democrats and Republican still think alike, though their paths are increasingly incompatible.

So, that's DePaul.

And then there's the University of Notre Dame's latest obscene stunt. This is from today's issue of Rod Dreher's Diary, which is where you will find me after this blog says farewell to TAC after the end of the day on Friday. (Subscriptions are $5/month, $50/year, for daily posts and a full comments section.):

What on earth?!:

The series at the university, titled “Reproductive Justice: Scholarship for Solidarity and Social Change,” is sponsored by the University of Notre Dame’s gender studies program and the university’s Reilly Center for Science, Technology, and Values. Several other bodies within the university and several external groups also provide support.

The latest event, “Trans Care + Abortion Care: Intersections and Questions,” is scheduled to be held on Zoom on March 20. It aims to address “the intersections between trans care and abortion care” followed by questions and answers with the audience, according to the website of the university’s Gender Studies Program.

One speaker is Ash Williams, described as “a Black trans abortion doula, public intellectual, and abolitionist community organizer.” Williams is based in North Carolina but is a decriminalizing abortion resident at Project Nia, a Chicago-based advocacy group that favors “restorative and transformative justice” instead of criminal incarceration.

National Public Radio profiled Williams in an October 2022 report. As an abortion doula, the report said, Williams “provides physical, emotional, or financial help to people seeking to end a pregnancy.”

Williams, who identifies as a transgender man, has had two surgical abortions and has a forearm tattoo of a tool used in the abortion procedure known as a manual vacuum aspiration, National Public Radio reported. Williams praised the abortion procedure, saying “it’s one and done. It’s quick.”

This, at the University of Notre Dame. Things sure have changed there. I’ve been hearing more and more about how the Great Awokening is displacing Catholicism there. When I first went to the university about a decade ago, I was shocked by the huge rainbow Pride flag hanging in front of the student center near the chapel. Seems quaint now. Anyway, I doubt Brandeis or Yeshiva would invite Dr. Mengele’s lab assistants to give presentations on campus. But those colleges know who they are supposed to be.

But hey, maybe the kids and their teachers are vanguards. Pope Francis just named Cardinal Jean-Claude Hollerich, who recently described the Church's longstanding teaching on homosexuality as "false", to be in his inner circle of advisors. They sure don't make heretics like they used to.

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Fran Macadam
Fran Macadam
All we can hope is that the Wars of the Woke don't consume the whole world, even if it ruins the West.
schedule 1 year ago
    MPC
    MPC
    Barring nuclear war started by some Western fanatic (certainly not out of the range of possibility at some point), that is pretty much a given. The rest of the world is increasingly the lion's share of economic activity, and politically it's integrating among itself, often explicitly as a counterbalance against the West. Even states that are nominally friendly with the West, like India are hedging their bets thoroughly

    It's hard for the West to keep up its pressure on states on its fringes (Turkey, Latin America, Russia) when so much economic activity is oriented around Asia now, which does not share its moral imperatives and agendas.
    schedule 1 year ago
MPC
MPC
Reading this, the first thing that comes to mind is the "national divorce" idea that MTG brought to the forefront lately. It doesn't seem likely at all, to me, that we will go down that path, but it seems very plausible that at one point we will look back and say "yeah, we should have done it".

Read this very good take on the Jan 6th prosecutions by Chris Hedges, who in my view gets at the real heart of it:
https://chrishedges.substack.com/p/lynching-the-deplorables

Regardless your view on Trump (he's not a fan), he says, you should be wary that one day, the powers used against his supporters (that were likewise used to hunt Muslims 20 years ago) will one day be wielded by them, and they will probably not be wielded kindly. "Once rights become privileges, none of us are safe."

We are furthering a cycle of tribalized violence and retributions, with an powerful and centralized set of institutions increasingly raising the stakes as action becomes more impactful and legal restraints diminish. There are simply more rewards, and less impediment, to state-sanctioned bloodletting of your opponents. The stakes - mastery of the most powerful nation on the planet - couldn't be higher. Everyone wants to be Augustus now, and end the spiral by completely crushing all opposition forever. We all fantasize about it.

We need to seriously think about offramps, of which "national divorce" is just one. You have interesting and intelligent readers with a variety of views Rod. Here, on the Discord, and even on the brokehugs reddit (hi, people over there). I would ask everyone regardless of persuasion to think carefully about where this all goes. Whether our bloodlust now will end up being bitter regret down the road, as even if everything we hope for comes true, the victory doesn't come without a great deal of unintended consequences, and loss. And if we conclude that is a serious prospect, how can we actually defuse it? If not a "national divorce", which is painful in a number of ways, what are our options? It seems to me like it would have to be one or another form of radical decentralization, but sharing still the same national house that too has issues. You could dedicate pages to a discussion of all the factors involved in any approach. They all deserve more attention. Usually "crush my enemies under heel" gets most of the attention nowadays.

Maybe that would be an interesting avenue to explore. Assuming we didn't go "American Orban" (or Bukele, more likely), then what are our options, the problems and advantages of each?

I was kicked off of a nonpolitical reddit for saying that masks don't stop Covid very well, which was "dangerous" they said. Is there a vengeful side of me that would love to see progressives that demanded obedience and censorship during Covid cooked very thoroughly in their own broth? Hell yes. That side would gleefully take up an inquisitor job in some future right wing regime and constantly copy-paste progressive Covid language and policy, turned viciously against progressives, constantly finding new and creative ways to torment them - and probably never get tired of it. Karma is its own high. I bet a lot of progressives have a very deep ammo box of their own grievances. But that's a sign of the times. It's not good. The vengeful side of us is furthering the destructive spiral.
schedule 1 year ago
    ncube7
    ncube7
    Thank you MPC, great comment. I love good vengeful attitude... because the truth is cathartic and anger leads to humor. I'm glad that America is finally getting its humor back, from the tyrants that demand oppressive "safe spaces" from all (Gutfeld!, Babylon Bee, etc.).
    schedule 1 year ago
    Paul Emmons
    Paul Emmons
    Thank you, especially for the link to Mr. Hedges' words. Morris Berman, who declared the trajectory of the U.S. hopeless and emigrated to Mexico years ago, says that Hedges is overoptimistic in his belief that things can be turned around. I have contemplated emigrating myself, but now in my mid-70s am merely betting that the good-old U.S. of A. will at least hang together until my demise. Apres-moi la deluge.

    My analysis would be that the vanishing of traditional religious belief and observance has left the way open for religious fervor to be transferred to various ideologies. With that in mind, we can suspect that political schism will prove as habit-forming as ecclesiastical schism has been. No one will be as happy about it as our enemies, for whom divide-and-conquer is always an effective strategy.
    schedule 4 months ago
Michael Cole
Michael Cole
I have always found it odd that there came into being an academic field called "gender studies". How exactly does a person who is not brain dead go through life without studying gender?

I observe and study the world around me and try to understand it. In my world there is a fascinating array of fellow human beings, some of whom have interesting quirky personalities. The overwhelming majority of people I meet are distinctly gendered. Since I try to understand people, I naturally think about gender as well as many other things.
schedule 1 year ago
Paul Emmons
Paul Emmons
It depends on what form the "discrimination" advocated by Vessel takes. It is one thing to state that certain fellow students are sinners, quite another to harass them or make their life on campus difficult. If the latter is their intention, they are no better than the campus anti-Semites making current news. I'd applaud a university administration which takes action against both even-handedly.
schedule 4 months ago
Paul Emmons
Paul Emmons
There is no LGBTQ+ lifestyle. This grab bag is the imaginary creature of activists looking for as many sources as possible to pay their salaries. There are plenty of gay people who have reservations about the explosion of trans. There are
also people, including at least one who formerly worked in a clinic for trans youth and has recanted, who warn that the trans explosion and its advocates are actually driven in part by homophobia. Better to be trans than gay is the feeling, just as in Teheran, the world capital of sex change operations.
schedule 4 months ago
Steven Rodgers
Steven Rodgers
Such a great point!
schedule 3 months ago