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Wednesday, May 24, 2017

Action Needed Now : Call Senate Republican Moderates so that Access to Health Care Insurance for Millions of Poor and Middle Class Will Not Be on Chopping Block for Tax Cuts to Rich



According to New York Times article today, May 24th, "Stop Senate's health bill," by David Lannhardt, Senate Republicans are planning to dismantle health insurance that covers millions of poor and middle class to provide tax cuts for the rich. There is a small group of Senate Republicans, who may be open to stop a bill that will take care health care insurance from millions of their fellow citizens.
Now is the time for action.

Cite Pope Francis: "Health is not a consumer good, but a universal right, so access to health services cannot be a privilege." Pope Francis

Email HealthReform@finance.senate.gov
and  

Call the Republican Moderate Senators below who can stop this bill in Washington DC 202-224-3121

Lamar Alexander
Shelley Moore Capito
Bill Cassidy
Susan Collins
Dean Heller
Lisa Murkowski
Rob Portman

and Call Your Senators from your State.
I plan to call them all!

Marco Rubio 202 224 3041
Bill Nelson 202- 224-5274

"Francis asks Trump to work for peace in closely watched Vatican meeting" by Joshua J. McElwee | May. 24, 2017, National Catholic Reporter

Francis asks Trump to work for peace in closely watched Vatican meeting



  • Pope Francis meets U.S. President Donald Trump during a private audience at the Vatican May 24. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

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    VATICAN CITY

    Pope Francis met Wednesday morning with U.S. President Donald Trump, speaking privately in the apostolic palace with him for about 30 minutes and asking later that he work for peace in the world.

    The atmosphere for the first encounter between the two world leaders, known to disagree on a range of issues, appeared at the beginning to be stiff and formal. As the pope greeted the president in the antechamber of the papal library, where they held their private meeting, he kept a straight face and did not smile.

    Following their discussions, however, Francis took more of a jovial tone. As the door to the library opened and he was introduced to First Lady Melania Trump, he shook her hand gently, looked at the president, and joked: “What do you give him to eat?”

    During the traditional exchange of gifts, Francis gave Trump a large medallion he has given to many world leaders that depicts an olive tree holding together two pieces of a fractured rock, telling the president: “I am giving you this because I hope you may be this olive tree to make peace.”

    Trump responded: “We can use peace.”


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    The pope also gave the president four of his writings: The two apostolic exhortations Evangelii Gaudium and Amoris Laetitia, the environmental encyclical Laudato Si’, and his message for 2017’s World Day of Peace.

    Francis told Trump he had personally signed for him the gifted copy of the peace message, which focuses on nonviolence as a political strategy. Referring to the documents, Trump responded, “Well, I’ll be reading them.”

    At the end of the meeting, the president told the pope: "Thank you, I won't forget what you said." Francis responded in Spanish: "Buena suerte," or, "Good luck."

    The May 24 encounter has been one of the most anticipated between a pope and a head of state in recent history. Trump and Francis are known to disagree on a number of issues, such as on protection of the environment and how immigrants should be treated.

    Their disagreement on the latter issue famously caused a few days of high tension in 2016, when Francis questioned Trump's Christianity over his support for a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border and Trump called the pope's remark about him "disgraceful."

    In a statement following Francis and Trump’s meeting May 24, the Vatican described their conversation as “cordial” and said “satisfaction was expressed for the good existing bilateral relations between the Holy See and the United States of America.”

    “It is hoped that there may be serene collaboration between the State and the Catholic Church in the United States, engaged in service to the people in the fields of healthcare, education and assistance to immigrants,” the statement continued.

    It is unknown exactly what Francis and Trump said to one another during the private portion of their meeting. Besides a Vatican translator, the two leaders were the only people present in the room.

    Thirty minutes is a normal length of time for a meeting between the pope and a head of state.

    While Francis spent about 52 minutes in a meeting with former President Barack Obama in March 2014, the pope’s time was also constrained as he went directly from meeting with Trump to his weekly general audience in St. Peter’s Square.

    Francis first greeted Trump in the apostolic palace’s Sala del Tronetto, the antechamber of the papal library.

    As the two shook hands, the president thanked the pope for having the meeting. They then walked into the library together, pausing for photos before sitting down. Trump smiled broadly as the camera shutters clicked but Francis kept a straight face and looked to the floor at points.

    They then sat across a wooden desk from each other, the pope leaning forward in his chair. The president told the pope it was “a very great honor” to meet him. The Vatican cut the live video feed of the meeting at 8:32 am to let the leaders speak in private.

    The video feed came back on at 9:02 a.m. as Francis greeted the first lady, Ivanka Trump, and Jared Kushner. The pope then greeted the other members of the U.S. delegation, which included Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and National Security Advisor General H.R. McMaster.

    During the gift exchange, Trump presented Francis with a large black box that contained a set of the writings of the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., who the pope had cited in his address to Congress during his visit to the U.S. in 2015. “This is a gift for you,” said the president as he presented the box. “I think you’ll enjoy them. I hope you do.”




    http://www.cnn.com/2017/05/24/politics/trump-pope-francis-vatican-city/index.html

    "Good Boundaries Free You" by Sarri Gilman

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rtsHUeKnkC8&feature=youtu.be

    Vatican Envoy to UN: War Main Reason for Emigration

    http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=31655

    Tuesday, May 23, 2017

    "Joy is like the rain", the story and the song with Miriam Therese Winter

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PzyymORMxfU

    On this day when the world mourns the loss of life in Manchester, England,
    let us remember that God is weeping with all who weep today. 

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZCIXVPYJuSg

    ICE Makes Criminals: What Should Priests Do? /Media Release from RCWP and ARCWP

    ICE makes Criminals:    What Should Priests Do?
    For Immediate Release: May 23, 2017


    From Roman Catholic Women Priests  
    Contact: Victoria Rue, M.Div., Ph.D., 831-566-1839, victoria@victoriarue.com
    From the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests
    Contact: Janice Sevre-Duszynska, 859-684-4247, rhythmsofthedance1@gmail.com


    When ICE arrests an undocumented mother, what should priests do? Priests must find ways to say NO.  


    When ICE waits outside a sanctuary church for an undocumented family or person to step over the threshold, what should priests do? Priests must find ways to say NO.


    When ICE arrests the undocumented, they call the person a criminal. ICE then says they are deporting criminals. But they are not criminals. What should priests do? Priests must find ways to say NO.


    Two private prison corporations — CCA and GEO Group — dominate the immigration detention industry.  The CCA-operated South Texas Family Residential Center in Dilley holds about 500 women and children. It is under expansion to grow to an expected capacity of 2,400.  The GEO-run Karnes County Texas Residential Center houses mothers and children and now holds around 600 women and children, but will expand to a capacity of 1,200.  Women and children of the Americas are the new locked up slaves of the USA.
    Priests must find ways to say NO.


    CCA’s profits for their private detention industry is over $200,000,000.  GEO’s profits are over $150,000,000.  Javier Flores Garcia, an undocumented father of two children, has lived for the past six months out of fear of deportation in a sanctuary church in Philadelphia, Arch United Methodist Church.  Javier used to make $2,800 a month as a gardener.  Compare CCA and GEO’s profits to Javier’s salary. Priests must find ways to say NO.


    Roman Catholic Womenpriests [RCWP-USA] and the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests (ARCWP) join with those Catholic male priests who have stepped forward to say NO.  We join with countless Protestant Churches and their pastors who are Sanctuary Churches and say NO.  We join with all people of faith to decry the unjust tactics of ICE deportation officers who since January have arrested 41, 318 people.  ICE has said that nearly 75% of those arrested are convicted criminals---but they neglect to add that most have no criminal record until arrested by ICE and called “criminals” by ICE itself. 

    Our brother Jesus would proudly wear the title “criminal.”  Priests can do no less.

    Bridget Mary's Response: When ICE arrests an undocumented person, what should priests do? Priests must find ways to do what Jesus would did- reach out with compassion to our undocumented sisters and brothers, and work for justice, laws that offer the undocumented a path to legal status. 

    When I was eight years old, my family immigrated from Ireland for economic opportunity. I will never forget the awe I felt when we sailed past the majestic Statue of Liberty in beautiful New York Harbor. The inscription on the Statue applies to all refugees including our undocumented sisters and brothers.. As a nation of immigrants, Lady Liberty reminds us of our rich history as a safe haven for all who are tired and poor and seek a home in our land. 
    "Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door! "The Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation, Inc.
    When Pope Francis traveled to the border between the United States and Mexico, he denounced "systems of oppression that force people to flee to other countries," and blessed undocumented immigrants in the United States. His words,"no more death, no more oppression" and his actions of blessing and challenging injustice reflect the heart of God where all are one.  
    As ICE makes criminals, priests should walk in the steps of Jesus' love for the marginalized and follow the example of Pope Francis  by blessing the undocumented and challenging injustice and oppression everywhere. 
    Bridget Mary Meehan ARCWP, www.arcwp.org, 703-505-0004

    What Would Jesus Cut? A Closer Look at Trump's Budget Proposal Jim Wallis

    "Several years ago, Sojourners asked that question, leading a campaign to remind our leaders in Washington that: “A budget is a moral document. Our faith tells us that the moral test of a society is how it treats the poor. As a country, we face difficult choices, but whether or not we defend vulnerable people should not be one of them.”
    As we look at the priorities outlined in the Trump administration’s 2018 budget released today, it’s worth asking again: What would Jesus cut?
    We know what Donald Trump would cut. His budget calls for more than $800 billion in cuts to Medicaid, which takes away health care from about 10 million people. His budget would slash the Children’s Health Insurance Program, the Social Security Disability Insurance program, Meals on Wheels, and federal funding for Habitat for Humanity. It would worsen hunger in America by cutting SNAP (formerly food stamps) by more than 25 percent and eliminating federal funding for subsidized school lunches.
    Before he began his public ministry, Jesus fasted for 40 days. When he returned to Galilee, he proclaimed in his first sermon that “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor.” The word in the original language for “good news” is “evangel” from which we get the word “evangelical.” So as an evangelical, I know that good news to the poor is at the core of Jesus’ message" —

    Letter of Solidarity: from Pax Christi, ARCWP, Coalition Organizations for Justice in Colombia, Solidarity with RC Bishops, All Advocate for Human Rights and Justice for Afro-Colombian People in Pacific Region

    Medellin, May 23, 2017


    Most honored bishops of the Colombian Pacific
    Archbishop of Cali, Bishop of Buenaventura, Bishop of Tumaco, Bishop of Quibdó, Bishop of Istmina-Tadó, Bishop of Guapi,

    (Translated into English by Silvia Brandon Perez)


    From Pax Christi Medellin, the National Ecumenical Council for Peace – (Spanish acronym MEP), the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests and the Coalition of Social Movements and Organizations of Colombia - (Spanish acronym COMOSOC), we join our voices to the many that have been raised throughout the country to support you and our Afro-Colombian people. These people have accumulated centuries of denial and more than a century of struggles for life, territory, dignity and peace. They have done it in a peaceful way; their organizations and leaders have demanded a real and permanent presence by the Colombian government which systematically continues to condemn them to oblivion and abandonment. It is clear to us and clear to the world's acknowledged perceptions that the centers of power and their beneficiaries reserve the rich geographies of the Pacific, its coasts, its seas, its soil and its subsoil, its forests, its rivers and its fauna for subsequent looting and appropriation for their private coffers. But their populations do not matter to them; we see people's lives and living conditions in a state of utter deterioration and poverty, their fundamental rights such as health, housing, food security and sovereignty, education, work at a living wage, public services, social welfare, political and cultural rights are violated with impunity.  Life deteriorates; there are no objective conditions for peace. The ambitions of national minorities linked to political, economic, and military power and to the power of the mass media have made our Pacific Coast a broad geography for the humiliation and death of its inhabitants. And have made of the land, its richness and its immense biodiversity, a scene of devastation and usurpation. The voracious appetite of the multinationals justified by national policies is one of the greatest causes of the impoverishment of the land and its people

    As Christian men and women and members of the church who join their efforts for peace to those of social and popular organizations, we thank you for your prophetic bravery and pastoral courage. Because you have raised your voice to accompany your people and their struggles, to protect the life, territory and dignity of your oppressed sisters and brothers. That attitude evangelizes us and fills us with joy and hope. And it invites us to make the cause of our Afro-Colombian peoples and particularly of the Colombian Pacific, the cause of us all. "We are all Pacific" and we understand that the peace in all of Colombia is played out today in that immense region secularly forgotten by the central powers. Your commitment, brother bishops, moves us to commit ourselves more firmly in the national and international dissemination of the facts of violation of human rights, violation of the rights of peoples and violation of the rights of the Earth with the consent of the national government.    

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    We accompany you, brother bishops, and we are fraternally with you.