The Pope, Conscience, and 9/11 Censorship
"...
Ignorance is said to be voluntary, when it regards that
which one can and ought to know...And ignorance of this kind happens, either
when one does not actually consider what one can and ought to consider; this is
called Òignorance of evil choice,Ó and arises from some passion or habit: or
when one does not take the trouble to acquire the knowledge which one ought to
have.
– St. Thomas
Aquinas
The quote above comes
from a reference called to my attention by my friend, Hugh Turley, and it
appears along with others at the heading of my ÒcolumnsÓ page
on my web site.
Turley is a graduate
of the College (now University) of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota, where he
majored in philosophy. For seven
years he wrote a column for the free monthly newspaper of the town where he has
lived for a long time, the Hyattsville (MD) Life and Times.
The article that
effectively ended that relationship grew out of a philosophical question that
he and I first bruited about in a telephone conversation almost exactly two
years ago. Pope Francis had been
quoted as implying that following oneÕs conscience was a sufficient
guide for doing good as opposed
to doing evil. Following your
conscience means, in so many words, doing what you think is right. But you make such decisions based upon
the facts as you know them, or think you know
them. What if those ÒfactsÓ are
wrong? Worse for you, what if you
choose to believe untruths because it is more comfortable for you to do so than
to believe unsettling truth?
Aquinas would call your situation Òignorance of evil choice.Ó You could end up choosing evil, but
doing so with what you take to be a clear conscience.
Turley noted to me
that he had written several articles for the Hyattsville Life and Times
that demonstrated that much of the official story of what happened on 9/11 was
either internally inconsistent or, for other reasons, could simply not be
true. He also noted that several of
the people in key positions at the newspaper were fellow Catholics. ÒWhy donÕt I tie this all together,
using the PopeÕs remarks about conscience as a sort of catalyst?Ó he suggested
to me.
I thought it was a
splendid idea, but it proved to be his undoing. Not only did the article not get
published, but it also caused the governing board of the newspaper to institute
a new policy that all future articles in the paper had to be directly related
to the town of Hyattsville. That
policy effectively ended TurleyÕs print journalism career.
Now, here, for the
first time in public, with added links, is the forbidden article:
Truth Versus Conscience
Jiminy Cricket advised Pinocchio, "Let your
conscience be your guide." It
is an axiom of the moral life that we are obliged to follow our conscience. In September, Pope Francis seemed to
echo the advice of Disney's character.
According to the Vatican Information Service, in
a written interview with the magazine La Repubblica, Francis wrote, ÒSin, also in those who are
without faith, exists when it goes against our conscience. Listening to and
obeying one's conscience means, indeed, to make decisions in relation to what
is perceived as good and bad. And
on this decision rests the goodness or evil of our actions.Ó
It must be said, though, that although
necessary, following oneÕs conscience alone is not sufficient. In his encyclical Veritas Splendor, Pope John Paul II rightly stated, "Conscience is
not an independent and exclusive capacity to decide what is good and what is
evil."
An official with the Southern Baptist Convention
took the unusual step of criticizing Pope Francis, calling his statements
"a theological wreck,Ó and he might have a point. My fellow Catholics have defended the
Pope's comments by arguing that he did not mean what he said, he was
misunderstood, or that he was only speaking informally and not infallibly.
In June, the Pontiff said, "Conscience is
the interior space in which we can listen to and hear the truth, the good, the
voice of God." The imagery is
poor. The conscience is not a
space. It is an act of the
intellect. It is a moral
judgment. Aquinas called the
conscience an act of reason. The
etymology of the word con + scientia means Òwith knowledge.Ó
Just as apple trees naturally produce apples
rather than pears, humans by nature seek good and
avoid evil. The problem for
man is the error of perceiving evil for good. Philosophy professor D.Q. McInerny has observed, ÒIt is psychologically impossible
for us to choose evil as evil, we must rationalize it as ÔgoodÕ."
Augustine wrote, Ò...truth is loved in such a
way that those who love some other thing want it to be the truth, and,
precisely because they do not wish to be deceived, are unwilling to be
convinced that they are deceived.Ó
In order for the conscience to determine what is
truly good from what is truly evil, knowledge is necessary, not just any
information, but information that is true.
People using their free will as intended by
nature want the truth. Truth is
defined as the conforming of our intellect to reality. Only by conforming the mind, what we
know, to reality, can we conform our actions to what is true.
If a child falls into a group of pickpockets, as
Oliver Twist did in the novel by Charles Dickens, he may develop an evil
conscience. A person with a corrupt
conscience can make bad judgments, sometimes with serious consequences. The same is true for a society where
knowledge is not rooted in truth. Knowledge
that is not conformed to reality forms a society unable to distinguish what is good
from what is evil.
In the past four years I have written four
columns with evidence that the official 9-11 Commission Report is a gigantic
lie. If even one of my reports is true then the public has not been told
the truth.
Marcel Barnard, head instructor at the Bowie airport
who flew with Hani Hanjour, said the alleged hijacker
who flew a passenger jet into the Pentagon, Òwith extraordinary skill,Ó was
incapable of flying a Cessna single engine plane. USAF pilot Lt. Anthony Kuczynski and the official Air
Force history of 9-11 state they were tracking United Flight 93 before it
crashed. Kuczynski said he was ordered to shoot
it down. The 9-11 Commission Report did not mention Kuczynski
and flatly states the military did not know about the plane until after it
crashed.
Over 2,000 Architects and Engineers for 9-11 Truth maintain the
destruction of Building 7 and the two trade towers was by controlled demolition
and that the official story is scientifically impossible. And Washington Post writer Steve Hendrix admitted to me he made up part of his story
about the events of 9-11 published on the 10th anniversary. The official 19-hijacker
conspiracy theory rests on the voice of the authorities alone.
Knowledge absent of truth is not a problem
specific to Catholics but injures all men. Our nation's fate was sealed
to endless war, loss of privacy, indefinite detention, torture, drone murders,
domestic spying, and police state searches by the 9-11 lie. A conscience
based upon ignorance of reality will choose evil.
Now let us fast forward to August of 2015. The newspaperÕs editor had written a
column lamenting the demise of another local free newspaper, the Prince GeorgeÕs County Gazette. Turley
shared with me a letter he was planning to send
to the Life and Times that said we
should celebrate, not cry, over the folding up of another print propaganda
organ. Here is the letterÕs strong
conclusion:
What Americans know and donÕt know is carefully
controlled. Americans may be the most uninformed and misinformed people in the
world, thanks to newspapers like the [Washington] Post and Gazette.
I wrote a column for the Hyattsville Life &
Times for seven years and tried to bring forward news that had been
suppressed. I occasionally wrestled with the editors over my column.
Sometimes they would censor things, like the identity of a certain
Associated Press reporter that I named.
My final column concerned the importance of
knowledge that is true. That column was rejected and it prompted the board of
directors to adopt a self-censorship policy. Nothing would be published that
was not about Hyattsville or a neighboring community.
A newspaper should serve as the eyes and ears of
the people and not as the mouthpiece of the authorities. Censorship, including
self-censorship is not in the public interest. Fortunately we live in the
Internet age where information is free, including some information the old news
media model would prefer to suppress.
I liked it,
but told Turley that I thought there was no chance that it would be
published. I was wrong, or at least
partially so. They didnÕt publish
it in their print edition, but now with a web site and its unlimited space they
put it up there. But right under it they put this up:
Response from Chris
Currie, Hyattsville Community Newspaper Inc. (HCN) board member: HCN, publisher
of the Hyattsville Life & Times, has as its explicit policy to cover the
news in our community and reflect the spectrum of its membersÕ
viewpoints. The column cited by Hugh Turley above accused the U.S.
government of propounding [sic] the events of Sept. 11, 2001, as a hoax on the
American people, and was withheld as non-germane to the mission of our
newspaper. Subsequently, the HCN board formulated a policy that all
columns published in the Life & Times should have a local angle. That
was simply an extension of the boardÕs original mission to publish a community
newspaper. The editorial decisions made in light of the newspaperÕs mission
are not censorship or self-censorship, but merely exercises in sound editorial judgement.
Turley was
pleased to see his letter printed, if only online, but he was not pleased at
the rebuttal by Currie and what he considered to be a mischaracterization of his
article that they did not and apparently would never print. He responded with the following email to
the editor:
Thank
you for printing my alternative opinion in the online edition. You are
very fair to allow a different point of view.
At the same
time, Chris Currie is very unfair to mischaracterize my unpublished article.
What he says the article he blocked Òwas aboutÓ is not at all what it was
about.
The
forbidden column titled Truth Versus Conscience was about how
important it is that what we think we know actually be true. The column
was not about accusing Òthe U.S. government of propounding the events of Sept.
11, 2001, as a hoax on the American peopleÉÓ as Mr. Currie stated, whatever
that might mean (I think he means fomenting or causing the events.).
When I first
submitted the column in 2013, Currie was critical, saying, ÒThe biggest
problem: Without having made a prima facie case, it's not legitimate to impugn
your readers' consciences if they have not acted as you wish in response to the
events of 9/11.Ó I did not impugn the readerÕs consciences (again,
whatever that might mean) and Currie apparently did not know about my writings
in previous columns about the official contradictions and misstatements
concerning 9/11, columns that had been vetted and published by the editors of
the Hyattsville Life and Times.
After
CurrieÕs criticism I added a summary of four previous articles concerning
9/11. One article told the story of Air Force Lt. Anthony Kuczynski who was ordered to shoot down United Flight
93. His story was supported by the official Air Force history of 9/11,
yet he was not mentioned in the Official Report or in the press. I wrote,
ÒÉwithout KuczynskiÕs story
AmericaÕs true history is suppressed.Ó Another column reported that
Washington Post reporter Steve Hendrix admitted to me that he made up parts of
his 10th anniversary story about 9/11.
It is more
accurate to say that I was accusing the American press of suppressing the truth
about 9/11 than to say I was accusing the government. When community
newspapers voluntarily censor news that is being suppressed they keep the
public ignorant of the truth.
Over a
period of seven years I wrote about a variety of topics including the Vietnam
War, Hepatitis C, President Truman, the first Americans to enter Japan after
World War II, human experiments by the CIA, the Wilmington race riots, Dr.
Seuss, the origin of Easter, Martin Luther King, composer Leroy Shield, Vincent
Foster, Ernest Hemingway, animal cruelty, war poetry, and James Forrestal.
Many of these articles contained significant news that had never been published
before.
I also wrote
columns about Hyattsville. I don't believe I ever wrote anything that was
not true. Under the new policy--which I regard as censorship--most of my
previous columns could not have been published.
If readers
are permitted to read my banned column online, with links to my previous
columns about 9/11, they can decide for themselves if they agree with Mr.
Currie that the new policy banning everything not directly related to
Hyattsville is Ònot censorship."
[I
understand space limitations prevented my editorial comment from being
published in the print edition. There are no space limitations online and
space was given for Mr. Currie to criticize me. In the interest of truth
and fairness would you add my response under his, along with the article in
question?]
The HCN
board met just last night and was supposed to consider TurleyÕs request that
his article be published along with his rebuttal, but as of today he has heard
nothing. Should anything change, we
shall alert readers with an addendum to this article.
David
Martin
September
18, 2015
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