Urgent Action Item!
Funny Papers Are Not Always Funny
The funny papers are not always funny.
This is apparent from a horribly offensive anti-Catholic
comic strip appearing in The Chicago Reader. In response,
the American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family
and Property (TFP) is launching, through its America Needs
Fatima (ANF) network, a massive campaign of peaceful protest.
The Chicago Reader is an "alternative"
weekly newspaper with a circulation of over 133,000, available
at over 1200 locations in the Chicago area. Its content
is written primarily by freelance writers that cover the
local arts and theatre scene. Their website claims that
the paper steers away from "commentary and opinion"
pieces.
However, readers saw plenty of biased
commentary on June 22, when Garret Gaston's comic titled
"La Petite Camera, Papal Makeover," expressed
radically anti-Catholic opinions. Among other things unprintable,
it portrayed the Pope dispensing "red hot birth control
pills," saying, "we were just kidding about Original
Sin" and suggesting immoral actions in the confessional,
proposed a "new recipe for communion" using chocolate
chips and showed a "buff" figure of Our Lord displayed
in a suggestive way.
Before mobilizing ANF's network
of over 200,000 activists nationwide, American TFP President
Raymond Drake sent a protest letter, asking The Chicago
Reader for an unqualified apology and a written commitment
that it will never again publish such blasphemies. "This
blatant, filthy mockery of the Papacy and the Church is
a grave insult to God and to all Catholics" wrote Mr.
Drake. "Facing these blasphemies we have no other option
than to stand up and defend the honor of God and our Catholic
Faith."
Since these requests were ignored,
the TFP's America Needs Fatima campaign will be sending
protest packages to its friends and supporters across the
country. They are urged to send a protest postcard to The
Chicago Reader and circulate protest flyers to as many
people as possible.
Putting things in perspective, C.
Preston Noell, head of the TFP's Chicago Bureau asks, "If
this cartoon does not awaken our holy outrage, can we still
consider ourselves Catholic?"
The TFP website is simultaneously
coordinating a massive e-campaign. "I hope that we
can motivate all our subscribers to participate by sending
a protest email to The Chicago Reader, and forwarding
the message to everyone they know," said TFP Webmaster
John Horvat. "These emails, together with the protest
postcards, will send a big message to The Chicago Reader,
that American Catholics have a voice, and will not tolerate
this offense."
Be a part of this campaign
today!
Here is what you can do!
1. Pray for the success of this
campaign.
2. Forward this email to everyone you know.
3. Send an instant protest email to The Chicago Reader
by clicking here.
4. Copy and distrbute
the protest rally invitation by clicking
here. (You
will need Adobe Acrobat Reader. Please
click here to download it.)
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