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Activism See other Activism Articles Title: EUROPE'S CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATS EUROPE'S CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATS Monday, May. 25, 1953 Looking out over devastated Europe at war's end in 1945 the journalists of the worldplain reporters and exalted punditsconsidered the future and, to a man, came to the same conclusion: Europe would go left and socialist. The right, dishonored by the Petains and Papens, and by its devotion to 19 century capitalism, was doomed. The center, caught between the stridencies of right & left, and forced to choose, would have to go left. Communists and Socialists had made a name in the undergrounds and concentration camps. And in the end, Socialism, the wave of the future, would triumph, as it had in Scandinavia long before, and in Britain only recently. The experts were wrong. Instead, postwar Europe's dominant force turned out to be Christian Democracy. Today, Christian Democrats govern or share heavily in the governing of every war-torn country of Western Europe; most of their Premiers and all of their foreign ministers (except The Netherlands') are Christian Democrats. All are disciples of European unity, all share an overall philosophy, allperhaps by political accidentare Roman Catholics. When Italy's De Gasperi, West Germany's Adenauer and France's Bidault sit down to negotiate a treaty or discuss the future, they draw from a common religious inspiration that sees Europe reunited as it was before Europe burst asunder in post-Reformation strife. They share, too, the paradox of having come to power frankly religious men, in a Europe heavily influenced since the Age of Enlightenment by secularistic and often anti-religious political doctrine. In such a scene, the Christian Democrats have learned not to accent their sectarian differences, but to stress what they have in common. What is their credo? Fundamentally, it is the common heritage of Western civilization, a Judeo-Christian heritage with which men of all faiths may agree. Their basic philosophical faith may be generally stated as a belief in 1) the fatherhood of God, 2) the brotherhood of man, 3) the essential dignity of man, and 4) the right of the individual to hold and administer private property, subject to his responsibilities to his fellowmen. Christian Democracy began as a Christian Socialism and gradually moved towards center and right. Originally, its intention was to escape the bleak godlessness of both left and right, while avoiding the charge of church domination, particularly domination by the Vatican. Trying to oppose materialism, while meeting it on its own good ground of material welfare for all, involves difficulties. "The Christian is a citizen of two worlds," says Catholic Philosopher Heinrich Rommen, "the City of God and the City of Man. He is destined for the former, but he must live and work for his salvation in the latter." From a deep and common tap root, the Christian Democrats of Europe branch out in a variety of directions. Poster Comment: Because of the last 8 years of Bush I have questioned and found wanting the American right wing ideology and the 8 years of Clinton made me question American militarism overseas. So I have abandoned the American conservative ideology as a failure having long concluded the Democratic left wing ideology is a failure. As a fall back I have tried to adopt the European Christian Democratic party ideology but it is not a good fit in America for some reason though I have attended some Christian Democratic discussions starting in America. I would join the Constitutional party but find it another boorish collection of conservatives of the FreeRepublic mindset. I think I am not alone in re-evaluating the conservative ideology since Bush. The Republicans lost because I feel those such as I left the Republican party leaving the Republicans to be dominated mostly by neocons, tea baggers and birther kooks.
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#1. To: destro (#0)
LOL
I laugh at your Samual Adams quote. You are not from the same country as he was from nor are you of the same mindset nor of the same economic class. America has become a failed experiment. How long will it take you to arrive at that conclusion as well?
"We have oil. We have Putin - all that Russians think they need." - Vladimir Dubin, senior researcher at the Moscow-based Levada Centre.
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