There wasn't any value judgment or malice in my comment.
I recognize that people have different points of view and I accept that. I would, of course, appreciate it if that acceptance was returned.
Your voluminous posts seem to indicate that it is extremely and vitally important that this issue be buried once and for all so that people know that America Magazine and Father Martin did the world and the Church a disservice by publicizing it.
And you have partially succeeded. You have succeeded in convincing the people who already agree with you that Fr. Martin and the magazine did the world and the Church a disservice by publicizing it.
I did look up the theologian Bernhard Karig, CSsR. He died in 1988. He was never sanctioned or censured in any way. He wrote 80 books and 1000 articles and taught at many prestigious universities.
There is a reason why Father Karig and Father Martin and America Magazine haven't been censured, and forgive me for wondering if it isn't the same reason why you chose to bury their ideas in a pile of arcane references in books most of us don't have access to.
My voluminous posts indicate what is called research and not taking a quote at face value and looking at the source material.
Arcane references? Books? You mean books? And correct citations?
I am sorry but if you have a problem with sourcing a quote and direct and accurate citations then that is not my problem.
Burying and obfuscating something does not involve finding the correct source material and the quote as it exists. That is what is called transparency. Pointing the finger at the person getting the actual source material and providing the correct quote and saying that they are burying things...that is obfuscation.
So to sum up...books are arcane and get in the way of facts? Ok. We are going to disagree on that. I think books provide facts and actual quotes and provide accuracy that prevent people from manipulating facts.
So you can believe I am burying the issue by providing the actual correct quotation in context. That I am somehow anti-truth by reading and demanding that the things I read correctly and validly quote their sources. I think it is because people do not all have access to the volumes that people felt they could improperly source the quote out of context. That is obfuscation. As far as arcane. There are 3510 copies of this work available in the United States in Libraries alone. Another few thousand through sellers. Arcane works...generally are at or below book extinction level at less than 7 copies. So something numbering in the thousands for free use if you want to take the time to find it. Not arcane.
But I will continue to exercise my right to read and quote a source correctly. Even if providing the correct and accurate quote in context is....somehow covering up the....correct....and...accurate....quote...and...meaning. No really sure how that works.
And I am not saying the publishers did a disservice. The readers...maybe. Maybe. Since it took me 20 minutes to source this with an 18 month teething and playing a card came with a five year old while we all cleaned the kitchen....I will let people draw their own conclusions about the diligence of those who provide the quote without the full context or even a source notation for the location.
And I never maintained the article did not make valid points. What I am saying is that using that one Ratzinger quote as a crutch, which is what you did and not the writers, is not going to work to prove a point. And the quote is not sourced in the article. And when you find it properly...it does not back up what you are taking from the article. It backs up the view the Church has always had. So it is not about the article writers or magazine publishers, it is about how the quote is being interpreted.
But do I have a problem with un-sourced and out of context quotes in articles? I admit I do. I am funny that way. I prefer things that challenge my beliefs so they grow stronger and not inaccurate things that play to my prejudices and preconceptions.