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COLLEEN CARROLL CAMPBELL
The University of Notre Dame administrators who invited Pres. Barack
Obama to deliver this spring’s commencement address surely consider his
acceptance a historic coup for their school and yet more proof of Notre Dame’s
self-declared role as the place “where the Church does its thinking.” In
reality, their decision only cements the school’s reputation as the place where
anti-life politicians do their rationalizing.
That reputation first took hold 25 years ago, when former New York governor
Mario Cuomo, a Catholic, took the podium at Notre Dame to make the case for
Catholic politicians who support legalized — and, in Cuomo’s case,
taxpayer-funded — abortion. Cuomo’s speech was riddled with logical fallacies;
but for Catholic politicians who wanted to please the powerful pro-abortion
lobby without forfeiting the Catholic vote, it was a home run. Cuomo’s abortion
alibi soon was parroted by pro-choice politicians across America, its appeal
bolstered by the fact that his words bore the apparent imprimatur of the
nation’s leading Catholic university.
Now President Obama, struggling with sagging approval ratings and the growing
dissatisfaction of Catholic voters who finally have awakened to his deep-seated
disregard for unborn human life, needs to butter up his flagging Catholic base.
Substantive policy changes are out of the question for such a strident supporter
of abortion rights and embryo-destructive research. That leaves only one
solution: a visit to that reliable ally of pro-choice Democrats, the University
of Notre Dame. There Obama can bask in the reflected glow of Notre Dame’s
storied Catholic heritage while continuing to advance policies that contradict
the Catholic faith and natural law.
How sad that Notre Dame’s administrators imagine themselves as free-thinkers
when they are, in fact, mere political pawns on the wrong side of today’s
leading civil-rights struggle. Alumni embarrassed to see their alma mater used
in this way should express their outrage in the language that Notre Dame’s
image-conscious, endowment-hungry administrators understand: money. By
withholding their donations, alumni can send the message that a Catholic school
that sells its soul for secular prestige cannot depend on the faithful to foot
its bills.
— Colleen Carroll Campbell,
an NRO contributor, is a fellow at the
Ethics and Public Policy Center,
a former speechwriter to Pres. George W. Bush, a columnist for the St. Louis
Post-Dispatch, and the author of
The New
Faithful: Why Young Adults Are Embracing Christian Orthodoxy. Her
television and radio show,
Faith &
Culture, airs weekly on EWTN, Sirius Satellite Radio, and Relevant
Radio.![]()