M
madisona
Guest
Perhaps Dr Martin could deliver the following sermon next Sunday based on the following media investigations
http://news.scotsman.com/uk.cfm?id=1498672006
Archbishop unleashes rage at those who shop at *****
Archbishop Diarmuid Martin today unleashed a scathing attack on those that buy clothes from (a certain supermarket), accusing of them of being inherently connected to child slavery.
The most senior Catholic churchman in the country insisted anyone shopping there couldn't sanatise their role in the immoral expolitation of young children in the third world.
“Child slavery and cheap clothes belong intrinsically together,” he said
In what will be viewed as a thinly-veiled reference to the growing culture of buying cheap clothes by Irish working -classes, Dr Martin was adamant there could be no moral ambiguity about involvement with the buying of clothes.
He added: “Double standard about the clothing trade can never be made politically correct. It is certainly not socially correct. It is not correct for society.”
Dr Martin said society as a whole needed to take a stand against cheap clothes.
“That is what citizenship is about. There is no room to be complacent in the face of wanton disregard for human life,” he told the congregation.
“Too many lives have been lost. Violence is a blind alley that in the long term achieves only grief. Vengeance only rebounds on those who practice it.
“The clothing trade is in its own right violence, a trafficking in exploitation and the ruination of lives, many of them young and vulnerable.”
http://news.scotsman.com/uk.cfm?id=1498672006
Archbishop unleashes rage at those who shop at *****
Archbishop Diarmuid Martin today unleashed a scathing attack on those that buy clothes from (a certain supermarket), accusing of them of being inherently connected to child slavery.
The most senior Catholic churchman in the country insisted anyone shopping there couldn't sanatise their role in the immoral expolitation of young children in the third world.
“Child slavery and cheap clothes belong intrinsically together,” he said
In what will be viewed as a thinly-veiled reference to the growing culture of buying cheap clothes by Irish working -classes, Dr Martin was adamant there could be no moral ambiguity about involvement with the buying of clothes.
He added: “Double standard about the clothing trade can never be made politically correct. It is certainly not socially correct. It is not correct for society.”
Dr Martin said society as a whole needed to take a stand against cheap clothes.
“That is what citizenship is about. There is no room to be complacent in the face of wanton disregard for human life,” he told the congregation.
“Too many lives have been lost. Violence is a blind alley that in the long term achieves only grief. Vengeance only rebounds on those who practice it.
“The clothing trade is in its own right violence, a trafficking in exploitation and the ruination of lives, many of them young and vulnerable.”