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RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 7:04:24 AM   
velvetears


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Rule

Fuck corrupted catholic ideology.



i said theology not ideology, learn the difference.  If you did you might understand just a tad how she interpreted human suffering and not attribute it to her having a SPD.

_____________________________

Religion is for people who are scared of hell, Spirituality is for people who have been there

(in reply to Rule)
Profile   Post #: 161
RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 7:17:02 AM   
DomKen


Posts: 19457
Joined: 7/4/2004
From: Chicago, IL
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Here is a little question for the MT supporters. Where did she and/or her order spend all the money? Show me even $50 million in expenditures directly from the order benefiting the poor. Do not try and show me the local donations bullied out of local businesses but that all those checks sent in by people in the developed world were spent in the way the donors intended.

I'm betting you can't and that you won't understand the horror of what that means.

(in reply to Rule)
Profile   Post #: 162
RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 7:33:59 AM   
Rule


Posts: 10479
Joined: 12/5/2005
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quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
You apparently missed, (or chose deliberately to completely ignore the Critical Thinking thread then?

No, I read all of your ct post. I could not do much with it. It is an unimaginative analysis by philosophizers that are mentally handicapped as critical thinkers. (Anybody who is capable of critical thinking does not require such an analysis.)
I suppose that what I do is mostly Reasonable Judgement. (Yes, that is in your ct post).
What they left out in their philosophy is that truth and untruth are not the same things as respectively fact and opinion.

quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
Where's your possible proof?

Proof is such a limited resource. I have sufficient data, credible in my eyes, to attain a Reasonable Judgment conclusion.

quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
Elaborate, please. How many patients? From where? In how many places?

Elaborate, please. How many of her patients did the Vulture of Calcutta get into heaven? Please supply affidavits signed by God or Jesus himself.

quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
Cite some evidence that is not a mere opinion

We have seen already the testimony. Those are the facts. Reasonable judgment yields the conclusion, which is not an opinion, nor a fact, but a truth.


quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
Then post some - a paragraph - anything - that actually proves (and is not mere opinion) that this:

Just ask for a sign from God. (On paper, signed and in triplicate if you insist.)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
1) Happened and was pervasive and-or also that it happened due to some kind of investigation by law enforcement. 

Still relying on Institutions and Reputations I see. How about doing some investigation yourself?

quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
2) Prove that it negates getting a Nobel Peace Prize.

Prove that the Nobel Peace Prize Committee does not consist of psychopaths - there is ample reason to think that it does.

quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
P.S. Any religious hang-ups of yours, past or present - are not relevant - and not my problem to deal with - I am not going to - like they are some Albatross around my neck - so you can forget about that altogether.

What religious hang-ups? Your religious hang-up seems to be that someone that goes dressed as a nun by definition is a good person and a christian. Well: it ain't so.

quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
How can you honestly expect anyone who takes the topic seriously  -or who values true debate and honest discussion -to seriously consider this POV if you don't even attempt to prove 1) and 2)?

Oh, I honestly think that you take the subject seriously. There is conflict because your way of thinking and mine are antithetical. Your way of thinking is not necessarily always wrong, but it is other. My way of thinking is nearly always correct, but it is not other; thus you do have an intellectual ability that I lack. I suspect that our abilities may be mutually exclusive.

 
quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
This isn't just - tit-for -tat, post whatever opinion you feel like - and then pontificate on what an Objective Thinker you are. It doesn't quite work that way - 

I have no idea what you are talking about. I suspect, though, that it relates to the distinction between opinion and truth as opposed to the distinction between opinion and fact.

quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
I've been fool enough to take this topic, nd this topic's turn of events seriously - from a few people who seemed to claim they wanted  to debate. Wow - won't make that msitake on another thread, that's for sure. They truly plain don't know how to do it - that's why. Sorry to be so blunt.

You have been corrected several times by several people - a majority consensus; that ought to have convinced you - but you ignored them (possibly because you did not comprehend their arguments) and blathered on, tediously repeating your own arguments two or three times and eventually putting them all in bold type. Clearly there is a mutual communication problem.

quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
I cited  3-4 posts from other sources that you are just gonna blow off 

As far as I am aware I have read everything in this thread. (Including a good part of the link provided by Level. What can I say: it was a very long article and boring, so occasionally I just glanced at the words.)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
I am not completely expecting this of you Rule- BUT - if you actually...

But?

quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
Just Don't care? Fine. Debate with yourself then. I have a long memory for that kind of thing, though (which I suppose can be good or bad depending on your POV).  

Oh, I do care. It is also obvious that you have a bone to gnaw. There is only your point of view and your only arguments are Institutions and Reputations.

< Message edited by Rule -- 8/26/2007 7:46:48 AM >

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RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 7:34:35 AM   
caitlyn


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I'm not a Mother Theresa supporter, but do have a horse in this race.
 
That isn't how it works Ken. How it works is, you provide evidence that fifty million went to some evil, self-serving venture ... and then we will be properly impressed.

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Profile   Post #: 164
RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 7:45:11 AM   
UR2Badored


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 Point taken:  I have been doing a little research on this even prior to you asking this question.  I am still looking.  It seems to be a great mystery.  However, though she acquired a vast fortune (understatement), there is no evidence of mispending. Also, I have read that she never invested the charitable money (donations) or spent it at all.  My guess is that the Vatican has the power to hide and control this money.  If you want to demonized a person or an institution--well, there you go.  I have no great sources to cite either as proof. In the same lines, no proof of innappropriate spending.  Do you think she was the secret co-invester with Johnny Depp in The VIPER Room, had a collection of designer shoes, or took lavish vacations?  I certainly do not believe she spent anything frivolously on herself.  I agree, for now, the money is a mystery and there is no evidence to substantiate either view point.

I thought this thread was about the exposure concerning documents that showed her questioning of her faith.

I wonder if LA has links to where the money went to help us out on this?  She has links for everything else

< Message edited by UR2Badored -- 8/26/2007 8:30:30 AM >


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RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 7:57:03 AM   
DomKen


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quote:

ORIGINAL: caitlyn

I'm not a Mother Theresa supporter, but do have a horse in this race.
 
That isn't how it works Ken. How it works is, you provide evidence that fifty million went to some evil, self-serving venture ... and then we will be properly impressed.

Wrong. I already said I have no evidence for what she did with all that money. I have suspicions but no evidence.

However some on this thread are claiming she was a truly good person. So it is incumbent on them to show that all the millions(billions?) of dollars that have gone into her order have gone to benefit the poor. Or they need to explain to me how a good person, with or without the outward trappings of poverty, can control hundreds of millions of dollars but have squalid orphanages and hospices without pain medication.

(in reply to caitlyn)
Profile   Post #: 166
RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 8:09:58 AM   
SugarMyChurro


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
"You have a right to your own opinion - but not your own facts" - Alan Greenspan. Think about this - and *try to really let it sink in (not being mean - I really mean this). Opinions are opinions  - they are not facts.


You do realize that rhetorically that the quote is crap, right? Your condescending tone would seem to indicate just the contrary, however - you would appear to take this quote as some kind of deeply insightful statement. News flash: it isn't.

Alan Greenspan has to be someone that we all accept as an authority for the quote to carry unquestioned weight and I don't believe that Greenspan has that kind of authority. The minute the quote has to be scrutinized on the merits of it's content and meaning we have problems.

For one thing, I already covered the issue of facts basically being opinions. Sometimes "facts" are just lies given weight because they are spoken by a "supposed" authority.

-----

Something I tried to do earlier, which may have flown over your head is to show that almost ALL SOURCES (online, real world, etc.) can be called into question. There is no such thing as a final, acceptable source of information for all persons.

The news now has a series of other names it goes by, it can variously be called propaganda, a public relations release, product placement, disinformation, infotainment, and yellow journalism. In sum, a lot of it is crap most of the time because the powers that be are "manufacturing consent".
http://www.collarchat.com/fb.asp?m=1232091

Yup, I am citing myself as my own source. That's as good as anything that GE, Halliburton, BofA, ADM, Koch Industries, Blackwater, the Vatican, Time-Warner, Encyclopaedia Britannica, etc can come up with. In the end, every source is just someone at a typing machine giving their opinions about something. Didn't you know that already?

-----

I guess the main difference between sources of "facts" is simply where they are published and the credence people give to the speakers. That's to hang by a thread, BTW.

You might say: "Teresa was a good person." We would then have to investigate under what terms the idea of "good" is being discussed. It's not a fact of any kind. Good is a deeply subjective idea.

You might say: "The Vatican said Teresa was good." I would assume that the Vatican would be making a statement like that from a religious viewpoint. It's not a fact. It's an opinion.

You might say: "The Nobel Prize Committee said Teresa was good." Well, what precisely was their criteria in making the statement? What kinds of experts on goodness did they consult? Yup, it's just another opinion ultimately.

A funny thing about taking rhetoric courses at university is that you learn that finally there is no final irrefutable source for anything. It's all mainly opinions using different types of appeals to logic, emotions, and ethics. In that case you must:

Question authority!

So where does that leave us with the Alan Greenspan quote? The poor devil apparently doesn't realize that facts not only don't really exist for the most part, they are often irrelevant to a discussion. I suspect it might be more accurate to claim that Greenspan used the quote against someone and was able to therefore stylistically bluff a win with a losing hand.

[N.B. I source the quote as being from Daniel Patrick Moynihan: "Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts." This isn't a mistake like my own about the meaning of "Beatification" (which I think I can be forgiven as I am not a religious nutter- this is a sourcing problem. Your own in this case.]

In the case of Teresa I am wholly uninterested in her religious work - it counts literally as if she did absolutely nothing to me. My only interest in her is what she did to help the poor out of their misery with the funds she received so readily from an international donation pool that reached into the millions of dollars. I don't care how many religious orders she built - did she feed and medicate the poor? The answer seems to be: no, she did not.

quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
****Why you intially bother posting on a thread that was obviously made by Level to allow folks to consider Mother Theresa's massive accomplishments - when all you intended, from post one, was to tear down the OP's thread - not participate in it, really?


You do realize that my first post is on page two of this thread, right? By that time there was a sub-topic, or subtext if you prefer. It looks like it was begun by farglebargle. That is the subject that is mainly under discussion now - the subtext. Should this have been broken out of the original thread as its own thread? Maybe. That's a moderator's job. Perhaps the OP author should have monitored the thread more closely and asked people to confine themselves to the original subject (I have done so elsewhere myself). Anyway, I am just part of the conversation - I didn't start it, I didn't start the discussion of the controversial subtext either.

I don't personally give a shit if Teresa was devout or sincere or whatever. I care whether she did or did not do the humanitarian things that are claimed about her. What she meant to do, what she intended, means nothing to me. What did she, in fact, accomplish?

The sources I give weight to say Teresa basically handheld the sick and dying until they expired. Traditional treatment consists of assuaging the symptoms of pain, even if not effecting a cure. Pouring salt on the wound, Teresa was taken to talking about the religious nature and meaning of physical torment - which to me seems quite perverse.

quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
2) How does anything you've mentioned as a source, even begin to compare to the extensive vetting of the members of a Nobel Peace Prize Comittee in any way shape or form, for someone to even be nominated for that prize?


I have already trashed the Nobel Prize. If you disagree with my conclusions and the many questions that others ask in relation to this "prestigious award" then that's fine with me. I consider this asked and answered.

You mount all of this supposed information about how the Nobel committee works as if I am going to just fold up and say: "Gosh...golly, really?! I had no idea..." No, actually I did know and didn't care. I still think there selection process is capricious and I think there is ample evidence to support that opinion.

I consider the award largely meaningless and pay no regular attention to it whatever.

quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
3) ...of a  woman who worked for 62 years from 4:30am until sun-down, and beyond -doing the best she knew how, to care for the poor and dying?


Yeah, of what exactly did her "care" consist? That's the problem right there. Holding some poor, starving, and sick motherfuckers hand and whispering to them about the nobility of physical anguish and how god loves them etc. isn't really much help. Where's the palliative treatment one might expect? Observers cite a noteworthy absence of such traditional hospice care.

quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
Everything you have managed to quote as a source is what is called Hearsay evidence.


Nope. Lancet is a direct source that was cited and quoted by myself and KittinSol in this thread. Dr Robin Fox noted that Teresa's "care" techniques were contrary to those of what is normally understood as a hospice. There are direct quotes, but no we don't have direct access to a paper version of The Lancet issue in question. Again, we are in an electronic medium here and you are acting as if we were all face to face in a courtroom.

It's silly.

You have called into question sources which I personally find sufficient to the purposes of making a cogent argument online. That's cool, I understand that people have their prejudices. I also understand that people misunderstand how technology can be used to tighten down the security of many things.

You abominate Wiki despite the fact that it is peer reviewed and has security measures in place to lock down a topic during times of heated editing and controversy. And yet on what basis is an alternative source, like say the Encyclopaedia Britannica, more authoritative? You might suggest that Britannica is locked down by default and resistant to surreptitious editing. At the same time, Britannica suffers from a lack of eyes - a decidedly finite number of reviewers of its content. By contrast, Wiki has the same advantage as open source code - millions of eyes looking at it and ideally maintaining a high level of quality. Both systems have advantages and disadvantages - neither is definitively more authoritative than the other. Anyone that has a different viewpoint most likely has a financial interest in their opinion.

quote:

ORIGINAL: SusanofO
And you have not answered any of these above points, really.


Uh yeah, I don't have to answer anything at all. I may find your positions weak and unworthy of further comment. I may find them uninteresting to me personally. There are dozens of reason I may not answer to your precise comments.

You are basically haunting this thread for some reason. You want to answer to everyone with an opinion contrary to your own. I am not going to be persuaded that Teresa was a very nice person. I tend to be deeply suspicious of religious figures and I haven't heard anything here that changes my mind about Teresa in particular.

One of the only reasons I find this discussion interesting at this point is because it has actually devolved down to a discussion of the terms of such a thread - the how and why and what counts as a valid source or argument. I don't think you've scored any truly compelling points, but I find your unrealistic expectations about how this discussion should take place of interest. I mean, you're sort of like a blind woman that hasn't realized that there is such a thing as eyes.



< Message edited by SugarMyChurro -- 8/26/2007 8:16:54 AM >

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RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 8:48:30 AM   
caitlyn


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So, the people that claim she was a good person, have to prove that she is ... but you and other, that claim she was doing something wrong, don't have to have any proof at all?
 
This entire thread amazes me. The thing I find funniest, is that some of the same players that are participating in the unfounded attacks here, were on the exact other side, when we were discussing accusation by the Swift Boat Liars against Senator Kerry.

< Message edited by caitlyn -- 8/26/2007 8:49:05 AM >


_____________________________

I wish I could buy back ...
the woman you stole.

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Profile   Post #: 168
RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 9:10:10 AM   
MHOO314


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HELLOOOOOOO am I the only one here who si too busy glady dragging her to the guillotine to address the fact that she was betrayed by a SPIRITUAL CONFIDANTE????
 
 
Did everyone miss that fact, did all the Catholics out there think about confession??? Do you really believe she was some mass murderer in the name of faith???? Did you ever think that using diryt needles on someone who was destined to die anyway saves the good ones for those with hope when one is dirt poor???
 
 
Did we all miss the  fact that her private spiritual challenges have been exposed???? What kind of people are we?? Is she the fresh meat and we the bottom feeders??
 
We need to focus on the living, on changing the world as it is---

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RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 9:31:00 AM   
velvetears


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quote:

ORIGINAL: MHOO314

HELLOOOOOOO am I the only one here who si too busy glady dragging her to the guillotine to address the fact that she was betrayed by a SPIRITUAL CONFIDANTE????
 
 
Did everyone miss that fact, did all the Catholics out there think about confession??? Do you really believe she was some mass murderer in the name of faith???? Did you ever think that using diryt needles on someone who was destined to die anyway saves the good ones for those with hope when one is dirt poor???
 
 
Did we all miss the  fact that her private spiritual challenges have been exposed???? What kind of people are we?? Is she the fresh meat and we the bottom feeders??
 
We need to focus on the living, on changing the world as it is---


Excellent points - confession is suppossed to be sacred and not news fodder for the public.  The fact she questioned her faith at intervals tells me she was human and felt feelings and had moments of despair just like the rest of us - but she kept going, that's showed tremendous character and devotion on her part.

For those who believe she accumulated such wealth by torturing poor dying souls, denying them meds and treatment, so her bank account could grow - do you actually believe she was that involved in the finances, or pehaps she was too involved actually DOING her missionary work.  Did you all forget the fact that her missions spread - i forget the exact number i remember 600 all over the world - this costs MONEY to set up and get going.  But no, villify her as some evil sadist who sat at bedsides because she delighted in people's misery - she'd have to be one hell of a devoted sadist to have done it to that extent.  Whoever believes that garbage needs a serious reality check.

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RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 9:50:35 AM   
SugarMyChurro


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quote:

ORIGINAL: velvetears
Did you all forget the fact that her missions spread - i forget the exact number i remember 600 all over the world - this costs MONEY to set up and get going.


Why should any non-catholic praise this woman's missionary work?

If anything I find that a reason to dislike her. I think most organized religions are very dangerous political entities.

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Profile   Post #: 171
RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 9:51:19 AM   
farglebargle


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quote:

ORIGINAL: caitlyn

So, the people that claim she was a good person, have to prove that she is ... but you and other, that claim she was doing something wrong, don't have to have any proof at all?

This entire thread amazes me. The thing I find funniest, is that some of the same players that are participating in the unfounded attacks here, were on the exact other side, when we were discussing accusation by the Swift Boat Liars against Senator Kerry.



If she's so honest, where are the Certified Audits?

I've heard some estimates that the New York racket is bringing in 50 Million a year. Nice to be able to collect that much scratch, and not have to worry about auditors.

Tony Soprano would be impressed.



< Message edited by farglebargle -- 8/26/2007 9:56:34 AM >


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RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 9:56:40 AM   
DomKen


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Once again, show me that she spent so much as a dollar donated by people in the states on the poor in India. We know the money went in but where did it go? At one point her fundraising letters mentioned a 5000 student school in India built by her order, the street address if you please.

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RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 10:06:17 AM   
BlueEyedSubinDE


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Previous posters have continuously brought up two items, one needles were washed with luke warm water and that people were in pain and not given medication that would ease their pain.  Let's presume for a moment both situations occured.  Ok why?  The evil Mother Teresa forbade it or gasp, could it be that no hot water was available, was there even running water?  It's hard to fathom living here in this country, but there are still sadly places in the world with no running water.  Second, was pain medication available?  How many times have you heard about someone or known someone with cancer that is in pain because what is available isn't strong enough.  It's not always that someone is withholding medication, sometimes it's what exists doesn't work. 

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Profile   Post #: 174
RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 10:07:11 AM   
MHOO314


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SugarMyChurro

quote:

ORIGINAL: velvetears
Did you all forget the fact that her missions spread - i forget the exact number i remember 600 all over the world - this costs MONEY to set up and get going.


Why should any non-catholic praise this woman's missionary work?

If anything I find that a reason to dislike her. I think most organized religions are very dangerous political entities.




First of all you assume that we ( I )m am non Catholic and what does that have to do with praising someone for humanitarian efforts??? Or are humanitarian efforts only acknowledged by religion?? Idiot. I am Catholic, Wiccan and Christian Spiritualist with a tad of Jewish, I praise anyone who tries.
 
 
As for charity contributions, here is how it works Ladies and Gentleman:
 
$50000 donated
 
$10,000 take for administrative costs to process the donations
 
$40,000 remains
 
$1,000 for bank fees to get the money ready for the country it is destined for
 
$1,000 wire transfer fees
 
$38,000 remaining
 
 
$3,000 US taken by the country desitned for to process the funds, pay the back and people
 
$35,000 remaining
 
$10,000 US PER transaction to pay off govt officials of receiving county to accept and not take the money
 
$25,000 remains
 
$10,000 US for the locals to administer the funds
 
$15,000 US remains
 
uh oh, we need guns, ammo, clothes for us, insurgent buy offs--
 
$ 1,000 remains
 
 
Face the facts people, money transfer out of the US just like material transfer out of the US doesnt get there in the shape it is sent unless you carry it
 
try getting on a plane with  $50,000 US.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

< Message edited by MHOO314 -- 8/26/2007 10:09:38 AM >


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Profile   Post #: 175
RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 10:20:28 AM   
DomKen


Posts: 19457
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quote:

ORIGINAL: BlueEyedSubinDE

Previous posters have continuously brought up two items, one needles were washed with luke warm water and that people were in pain and not given medication that would ease their pain.  Let's presume for a moment both situations occured.  Ok why?  The evil Mother Teresa forbade it or gasp, could it be that no hot water was available, was there even running water?  It's hard to fathom living here in this country, but there are still sadly places in the world with no running water.  Second, was pain medication available?  How many times have you heard about someone or known someone with cancer that is in pain because what is available isn't strong enough.  It's not always that someone is withholding medication, sometimes it's what exists doesn't work. 

Strangely Doctors without Borders finds ways to sterilize medical equipment in far more chaotic and primitive situations than Calcutta or Haiti. As to pain meds the references aren't to unmanageable pain as is sometimes encountered in hospice but completely unmanaged pain. Read the Lancet article about her hospice in Calcutta.

If her order really was destitute then this would be acceptable but it is well and truly established that her order was not destitute.

(in reply to BlueEyedSubinDE)
Profile   Post #: 176
RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 10:23:16 AM   
velvetears


Posts: 2933
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quote:

ORIGINAL: SugarMyChurro

quote:

ORIGINAL: velvetears
Did you all forget the fact that her missions spread - i forget the exact number i remember 600 all over the world - this costs MONEY to set up and get going.


Why should any non-catholic praise this woman's missionary work?

If anything I find that a reason to dislike her. I think most organized religions are very dangerous political entities.



i was born catholic so i am familiar with its doctrines, i converted 20 some odd years ago to Buddhism.  What the hell does being a catholic or non catholic have to do with anything?  i can still admire and respect the humanitarian efforts she made and having a catholic upbringing, understand somewhat her line of thinking about suffering. 

i am no fan of organized religion, but i don't see her as part of some organized religions conspiracy to swindle money.  Hey you want to hate organized religion so be it, don't use a woman who devoted her life to help the most destitute dye with some dignity as a villian so you can spread your hatred. 

i would say being in a hammock, dying with no meds (assuming they did - where's the proof?), being tended to by compassionate nuns who gave them some food and prayed for them beats dying in a garbage dump being nibbled away by rats - yes, that's how she found one of her poor. 

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(in reply to SugarMyChurro)
Profile   Post #: 177
RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 11:12:22 AM   
kittinSol


Posts: 16926
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quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen

quote:

ORIGINAL: BlueEyedSubinDE

Previous posters have continuously brought up two items, one needles were washed with luke warm water and that people were in pain and not given medication that would ease their pain.  Let's presume for a moment both situations occured.  Ok why?  The evil Mother Teresa forbade it or gasp, could it be that no hot water was available, was there even running water?  It's hard to fathom living here in this country, but there are still sadly places in the world with no running water.  Second, was pain medication available?  How many times have you heard about someone or known someone with cancer that is in pain because what is available isn't strong enough.  It's not always that someone is withholding medication, sometimes it's what exists doesn't work. 

Strangely Doctors without Borders finds ways to sterilize medical equipment in far more chaotic and primitive situations than Calcutta or Haiti. As to pain meds the references aren't to unmanageable pain as is sometimes encountered in hospice but completely unmanaged pain. Read the Lancet article about her hospice in Calcutta.

If her order really was destitute then this would be acceptable but it is well and truly established that her order was not destitute.


Medecins sans Frontieres-Doctors without Borders is a non-religious organisation. It isn't run by an iconographic wizened old lady in a white kitchen cloth. It's not nearly as appealing to the catholic do-gooders. The editor in chief of the Lancet criticized Theresa's "nursing care" (let's not remember: she had very little education. The though of her handling an aspirin tablet alone is enough to make me squirm). The British Medical Journal reviewed the standard of care in her dyingotrons in a negative light.

Who was this person that her legacy isn't to be questioned in the eyes of so many?

The Vatican... the Mafia... Theresa. Yes, they're all on the same side.

< Message edited by kittinSol -- 8/26/2007 11:13:05 AM >


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(in reply to DomKen)
Profile   Post #: 178
RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 11:14:38 AM   
kittinSol


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If you converted to Buddhism, you will tolerate any religion, including Islam. Your little line to me about the presumed religious appartenance of the contributor who helped publish Shield's testimony didn't sound very buddhist to me...

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(in reply to velvetears)
Profile   Post #: 179
RE: Mother Teresa's dark night of the soul - 8/26/2007 11:48:52 AM   
velvetears


Posts: 2933
Joined: 6/19/2006
Status: offline
And you asuume to tell me what my beliefs will and will  not allow me to tolerate.... you really do outdo yourself my dear.  Maybe you should study up a bit before making assinine assumptions you know nothing about eh?  And what faith or doctrine do you claim connection to - the whine and put down of all other faiths, faith?

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Religion is for people who are scared of hell, Spirituality is for people who have been there

(in reply to kittinSol)
Profile   Post #: 180
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