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Go Home You Say Subsidiarity, I Say Bullshit—Why Paul Ryan and his...

PLANK SEPTEMBER 27, 2012

You Say Subsidiarity, I Say Bullshit—Why Paul Ryan and his Bishop Defenders are Wrong

You may remember that when Paul Ryan proposed a budget that would have slashed programs to help poor Americans, such as food stamps and housing assistance, the nation’s Catholic bishops were not pleased. They wrote letters to Congress charging that the Ryan budget failed to meet essential moral criteria, among them that “The needs of those who are hungry and homeless, without work or in poverty should come first.” Period.

Faced with such criticism from his own church, Ryan first tried to minimize the complaints. “These are not all the Catholic bishops,” he told reporters. That came as news to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, which had released the letters under the headline: “Federal Budget Choices Must Protect Poor, Vulnerable People, Says U.S. Bishops’ Conference.” Not, “… Say a Few Individual Bishops.”

More recently, a handful of bishops have broken ranks to defend Ryan’s budget and his claims that it need not concern itself with the poor.  Ryan’s own bishop, Robert Morlino of Madison, was the first to step up with a column in the diocesan newspaper. On the question of “how to best care for the poor,” Morlino wrote, “Catholics and others of good will can arrive at different conclusions.” 

Archbishop Charles Chaput of Philadelphia concurred, in a September interview with the National Catholic Reporter. “Jesus tells us very clearly that if we don’t help the poor, we’re going to go to hell. Period. There’s just no doubt about it. That has to be a foundational concern of Catholics and of all Christians,” said Chaput. “But Jesus didn’t say the government has to take care of them, or that we have to pay taxes to take care of them. Those are prudential judgments.” 

That phrase “prudential judgment,” which was also used by Rick Santorum during the GOP primaries to explain his dissent from Church teachings on issues from immigration reform to the war in Iraq, has been seized upon by other Ryan defenders. Conservative Catholic writer George Weigel wrote this week in the National Review that the earlier bishops’ letters criticizing the Ryan budget were merely “exercises in prudential judgment that were binding on exactly no one.”

But Bishop Thomas John Paprocki of Springfield, Illinois went the furthest in providing cover for Ryan when he spoke in the congressman’s home state recently. After telling parishioners that he wasn’t going to tell them who to vote for but that voting for a Democrat would “place the eternal salvation of your own soul in serious jeopardy,” Paprocki proclaimed Ryan’s budget “consistent” with Catholic principles. He also agreed with Ryan by arguing that government “programs aimed at combating poverty [may] actually help perpetuate it by stifling individual responsibility and fostering intergenerational dependence on government.” Furthermore, Paprocki said, when his brother bishops criticized sharp cuts to the federal food stamps program, they were “simply making a prudential judgment that this program is a necessary practical means to feed the hungry. However, reasonable minds can come to different conclusions about more effective ways to alleviate hunger.”

Agreed. At least on that last point. But what might those more effective ways be? We have heard none, other than Mitt Romney’s assertion that he would create jobs that would move people out of poverty. Perhaps he would. But what of those Americans who are hungry and homeless in the meantime?

If someone like Ryan uses his prudential judgment to decide that there are better ways to help the poor than to use the federal budget to fund programs that feed and house and provide other support to the poor, doesn’t he then have a responsibility to lay out what those other ways are? By not doing so, Ryan effectively shrugs his shoulders and says it’s not his job.

Ryan and his defenders rely heavily on the Catholic principle of subsidiarity, which Morlino defines as: “the problem at hand should be addressed at the lowest level possible—that is, the level closest to the people in need.” The federal government is so far removed from people on the ground, they argue, that it cannot possibly be responsible for addressing problems associated with poverty. That’s only true, however, if institutions at lower levels actually have the capacity to meet those needs. And that’s far from the case. As we discussed earlier this summer, each and every religious congregation in America would have to spend an additional $50,000 annually just to cover the proposed cuts in one federal nutrition program. 

It’s surprising that the bishops aren’t more interested in this problem, given that Catholic Charities is the largest single charity in the country. According to the Economist, Catholic Charities and its associated programs distributed $4.7 billion to the poor in 2010. More than half of that—62%--came from local, state, and federal government agencies. Only 2.7% of the American Catholic Church’s annual spending is on charities. In other words, the cuts proposed in the Ryan budget wouldn’t just shift responsibility for the poor to private charities. They would slash the funds those charities have to help the poor.

Paul Ryan can believe that subsidiarity precludes the involvement of the federal government in poverty alleviation, but surely he doesn’t just get to kick the problem to the financially struggling charitable sector and say, “Good luck with that.”

And as long as this Baptist is going to tangle with some bishops over their interpretations of Catholic social teaching, let’s challenge this idea that subsidiarity means addressing a problem at the lowest level possible. Does that mean that in addition to providing assistance at the lowest level, the funding for that assistance must also originate at the lowest level? Or that decision-making about how best to help the poor must also take place at the lowest level? That reading of subsidiarity is politically convenient but inaccurate.

The bishops are on even shakier ground when they seek to affirm Ryan’s claim that social programs simply create a culture of dependency. Let’s just look at food stamps. In 2010, nearly one-third of those on food stamps were working Americans. Another third were elderly or disabled, and another 22% were families with children. What’s the argument for taking food stamps away from these moochers? “Let them go hungry and then they’ll get another job”? “Let them go hungry and those kids will finally force their parents to get a job”? “Let them go hungry and maybe those grandmas will get back into the workforce”?

As for those poor Americans who do not have jobs and rely upon food stamps to feed their families, it is especially cruel and heartless to tell people that they need to end their dependency and just get a job when there simply are not enough jobs to go around. Is this all just a national game of musical chairs? The music stops, you don’t have a chair—sorry, no food, no roof for you.

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20 comments

Also, many food stamp recipients are working. Anybody check wages lately? It's possible to work full time and go hungry in America The Exceptional. If you have kids on top of that - or an illness - Yet, Republicans want get rid of the ACA, think we can get health care in the ER, end the minimum wage and wage equality for women, etc, and of course they attack unions which try to ensure decent wage/benefit packages for workers. Catholics and other "Christians" who get in on this act should be ashamed, the end, and also since they're using political clout, openly trying to impact individual Americans and impose their dogma on all of us, they should pay taxes.

- Sophia

September 27, 2012 at 4:43pm

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Ahh, subsidiarity. Translated here as: "Pay for your own damn food, hungry people!"

- chaitless

September 27, 2012 at 4:50pm

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Further indications of the "Evangelicalization" of the Catholic Church in the U.S.

- ironyroad

September 27, 2012 at 5:03pm

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“Jesus tells us very clearly that if we don’t help the poor, we’re going to go to hell. Period. There’s just no doubt about it. That has to be a foundational concern of Catholics and of all Christians, Except when we don't want to. Nice. Perhaps these guys don't realize that this sort of blatant politicking is what has caused the collapse in religious support in Europe? Once religion and politics become too closely intertwined, religion cannot but help but be tarred by the political process.

- Nari224

September 27, 2012 at 5:15pm

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"Thomas John Paprocki of Springfield, Illinois [told] parishioners that he wasn’t going to tell them who to vote for but that voting for a Democrat would 'place the eternal salvation of your own soul in serious jeopardy' ". I was raised Catholic, but became apostasized early on, in my teens ("Bless me father for I have sinned. It has been, uh, about a half century since my last confession....", would have to be the words I'd utter in the confessional, were I to suddenly return to Mother Church. But I digress.) Bishop Paprocki's comment quoted above reinforces my long-held suspicion that the Catholic Church is fundamentally ill at ease with democracy. Sorry if that offends, but I don't see how such a rigidly hierarchical organization, which reserves the exercise or power within to a few old men, living at some remove from the cares & concerns of ordinary people, can harmonize with the spirit of American democracy, which tends toward the tumultuous, the non-hierarchical. The Bishops comment outrages by a presumption that he has some special insight into what political tendencies are preferred by the Almighty. Ms. Sullivan's right - bullshit is the word.

- Haole45

September 27, 2012 at 6:51pm

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This is the ecclesiastical equivalent of Romney's 47%. For example, given that Obama has a lot of support -- perhaps 70% -- among the almost completely Catholic Hispanic voting bloc in the U.S., it's difficult to see the rationale for instructing millions of devout Catholics that they will endanger their immortal souls by exercising political choices that the bishops don't like. Clearly, being a bishop doesn't require too much thinking.

- ironyroad

September 27, 2012 at 7:24pm

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No surprise here. These bishops were opposed to Obama from the get-go, so much so that they couldn't hide their displeasure when the then newly elected president was invited to speak at the university of Notre Dame. If they had their wish, the new president would be disinvited. They had no such displeasure when Bush2 spoke there. A reflection of their politics, I guess. But what they are doing now is blatant electioneering.

- scrubby

September 27, 2012 at 8:15pm

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Support from Hispanics apparently don't count with the church, irony. Remember how the Vatican frowned upon Central American priests in the seventies and eighties. Those priests committed the crime of helping poor peasants who were the target of rightwing death squads.

- scrubby

September 27, 2012 at 8:22pm

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One of those articles that I started reading, and about halfway through, the feeling of disgust at the hypocrisy was so high, I gave up.

- austinous

September 28, 2012 at 12:04am

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Yes, one can help the poor without the government requiring it. One can also urge that people not have abortions without the government outlawing them. It seems that they're fine with using the government to enforce their moral doctrine when it comes to abortion, but when it comes to helping the poor, they're pro-choice.

- JakeH

September 28, 2012 at 12:15am

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So the American Catholic Church gets at least $3 billion annually from different government agencies. And then it tries to tell the government what it can do about social issues. As recent polls show, Americans are starting to demand that the church and the state be separated. The church is a thousand times more arrogant than the Right wingnuts claim the government is, and people are starting to realize this. The government agencies who give money to the Catholic Church should just keep their money and distribute it to the poor themselves. Then they can be seen as the good guys, instead of the devils that the Church portrays them as--after they take billions from these agencies! The hubris of organized religion is breathtaking. And God's gonna remember that.

- magboy47.

September 28, 2012 at 2:26am

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One might note that the Catholic Church itself is not run on the principle of subsidiarity. Quite the contrary. It's pretty much top down. Dan

- dbuck1

September 28, 2012 at 5:16am

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Magboy, God has known that from the beginning...why else did he create hell as well, if not for the bishops and other hypocrits of all stripes?

- kras

September 28, 2012 at 6:00am

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Modernity is a challenge for many institutions, the Church included. The Church is an international institution, reaching from the developed western countries to the less developed African, South American, and Asian countries. And it's in those less developed countries where the Church is experiencing growth (even as it suffers losses in the developed countries) and continues to have the most influence. My point is that the Church's response to modernity, that is to resist modernity, is a product of the shift in the Church to less developed countries. You might say that the Church is applying a basic rule of business: know thy customer.

- rayward

September 28, 2012 at 7:07am

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The irony is with the rightward shift I have been going to church far less and contributing to it far less than ever before. Ergo they will be in an even lesser position to help the newly needy, not that I think these Bishops in their well appointed homes really care.

- blackton

September 28, 2012 at 9:04am

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Subsidiarity's right up there with Manifest Destiny and Racial Hygiene.

- Mikelawyr22

September 28, 2012 at 9:06am

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Well done, Ms. Sullivan. It's nice to see the bishops get slapped around every so often. Reminds me of why I stopped going to church in the first place.

- GSpinks

September 28, 2012 at 9:08am

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"Magboy, God has known that from the beginning...why else did he create hell as well, if not for the bishops and other hypocrites of all stripes?" Right, krasmussen. Jesus made it clear that He and His Father rate hypocrisy as one of the worst sins. It really should be one of the Ten Commandments, although I guess it could be subsumed under Thou Shalt Not Bear False Witness.

- magboy47.

September 28, 2012 at 3:27pm

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I am glad the posters read the Bible. Jesus never said that if you do not help the poor you are going to hell. That is ridiculous. Jesus said that those who honor Him as the Messiah, the Son of God, and submit their will to Him, will have eternal life with Him and His Father. Notwithstanding, those who have given their life to Christ will have compassion for the poor. However, the Apostle Paul wrote that if you do not work, you do not eat. Figure that out.

- john336

September 28, 2012 at 8:32pm

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Subsidiarity means doing things at the lowest level, ergo, the Nuns on the Bus, who actually do things for the poor instead of talking about it; but then, the bishops disapprove of them as well because they might help gay people too. So that makes the bishops BS artistas! No one tell the bishops that their big badass campaign to corale Catholic votes has backfired badly, with President Obama now leading among Catholics by a much larger majority than before said campaign, and by a far larger amount than with non-Catholic voters. So their campaign to save souls from Democratic voting practices, didn't exactly exorcise that problem, but caused it to metastasize. Not only are they are very mean group of people, but they are also quite bad at their jobs.

- smabry03

September 29, 2012 at 7:38am

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