James Carville is a lifelong Roman Catholic, a faith deeply rooted in his upbringing in a French-dominated Catholic community in Louisiana. He attended Ascension Catholic High School, served as an altar boy, and has a cousin who is a priest, which he says makes Catholicism part of his "DNA."
Despite his strong Democratic political affiliation, Carville maintains a close connection to his faith, describing it as a moral framework that influences his views on social justice, family, and compassion. He attends Mass daily and finds spiritual grounding in rituals like the creed and the Confiteor, which he sometimes recites in Latin.
Carville identifies tensions between his faith and politics, particularly on sexual issues like abortion and gay marriage, where he disagrees with official Church teachings. However, he appreciates Pope Francis and admires past popes like John XXIII and Leo XIII, seeing the Church as a complex, evolving institution.
He believes Catholic social teaching aligns with progressive values on issues like Medicaid expansion, immigration, and economic justice, emphasizing the moral imperative to care for the vulnerable. In contrast, he strongly opposes Christian nationalism, calling it a greater threat to the U.S. than Al Qaeda, particularly criticizing figures like Mike Johnson for blending religion with political power.
-Brave AI
...
That high school was started by these people:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daughters_of_Charity_of_Saint_Vincent_de_Paul
If you scroll down to the 'Child Abuse' tab , big surprise, we find yet another Roman Order systematically abusing children.
I wonder if they got poor James back in the day
James Carville is a lifelong Roman Catholic, a faith deeply rooted in his upbringing in a French-dominated Catholic community in Louisiana. He attended Ascension Catholic High School, served as an altar boy, and has a cousin who is a priest, which he says makes Catholicism part of his "DNA."
Despite his strong Democratic political affiliation, Carville maintains a close connection to his faith, describing it as a moral framework that influences his views on social justice, family, and compassion. He attends Mass daily and finds spiritual grounding in rituals like the creed and the Confiteor, which he sometimes recites in Latin.
Carville identifies tensions between his faith and politics, particularly on sexual issues like abortion and gay marriage, where he disagrees with official Church teachings. However, he appreciates Pope Francis and admires past popes like John XXIII and Leo XIII, seeing the Church as a complex, evolving institution.
He believes Catholic social teaching aligns with progressive values on issues like Medicaid expansion, immigration, and economic justice, emphasizing the moral imperative to care for the vulnerable. In contrast, he strongly opposes Christian nationalism, calling it a greater threat to the U.S. than Al Qaeda, particularly criticizing figures like Mike Johnson for blending religion with political power.
-Brave AI