[published in Muddy River News, June 24, 2026]
When I was growing up, the Catholic press, which was all we used
to read in our Catholic world in Decatur, Illinois, was always attacking an
association called “Protestants and Other Americans United for the Separation
of Church and State.” If the Cato Institute had existed back then,
our press would have had problems with it too.
The Cato Institute says unpopular things. If I had to
summarize its philosophy, I would say that it believes that governments at all
levels should do as little as possible. Catholic Social Teaching (in what it
calls the "principle of subsidiarity") would agree, but would
disagree about where the “as little as possible” line should be drawn.
Recently I began reading daily news comments put out by the Cato
Institute. I do things like that because, as a professional religious, I
believe in mortification. Fasting is out of style, so I replace fasting with trying
to listen to both sides of political debates.
Reading the Cato Institute is my daily penance. But on June
10 I read something I Iiked. In the Institute’s daily online message I read:
“Courts have found DHS [the Department of Homeland Security] has likely
violated at least the 1st, 4th, 5th, 10th, and 14th amendments
to the US Constitution, as well as the spending power, the taxing power, and
the writ of habeas corpus.”
The DHS has been threatening and upending the lives of
millions of our fellow Americans, including some in Quincy. It has taken people
into custody without judicial recourse, separated parents from their children so
quickly that a child can go to school one day and come home without a parent. Then
it has stored the parent in facilities that are little more than concentration camps. Sometimes the parents
get sent back to a country from which they fled because cartel violence had made
life impossible for them there.
This is not America. This is not the home of the free. This
is not “securing our borders.” We need to make our government stop doing it.
Pope Leo says that governments and businesses should always
start by respecting the dignity of individual people. Even if a person is in
our country without papers, the DHS must treat that person, and that person’s
loved ones, with the dignity due to every human being. The rule should always
be: Respect! Respect! Respect!
Brother Joe Zimmerman (Fr. Joe Zimmerman)