Here's a letter to the editor that appeared in yesterday's Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:
Not moral messages
As a teacher for the Diocese of Pittsburgh for 14 years, one important lesson I learned was that no matter what I said to the child, whatever the parents said superseded my message. What parents say and how they live sends a message stronger than any teacher's voice no matter what the issue.
Sen. Rick Santorum and his wife have taught their children a powerful lesson on civic responsibility by refusing to pay any tuition money to the Penn Hills School District for their children who attended the Pennsylvania Cyber Charter School ("Penn Hills Loses Bid to Charge Santorum," July 12). Released from that payment on a technicality shows that even an upstanding, moral gentleman like Sen. Santorum teaches his children the following lessons:
1) Take advantage of the system whenever you can.
2) The little guy pays while the rich and powerful guy gets away with it.
3) As a Catholic, you have no obligation to pay your share to the common good in spite of Catholic social doctrine.
Finally, I am shocked that our religious leaders who see Sen. Santorum as some sort of faith-and-morals hero have not spoken up on this issue at all.
SISTER LIGUORI ROSSNER
Sisters for Christian Community
Bloomfield
Very well put.
"Why do I owe them money for a bill they approved that was lawful? I don't owe them anything." Pittsburgh Tribune Review, November 24, 2004
Of course, now we know it was neither right nor lawful, but the gentleman (sic) from Pennsylvania doesn't know the difference.
So as long as he can skate by on a technicality, he must think he's justified in God's eyes, and that's just fine with Mr. self righteous Opus Dei.