http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/20020122/wr/pope_internet_dc_1.html

[The primo quote comes at the end: "In his first message sent to the
world directly over the Internet last November, Pope John Paul
apologized to victims of sexual abuse by priests and other clergy. "
Folks raped by digital communications: zero.  Folks raped by papal
employees: thousands and counting.]


Pope Says Internet 'Wonderful' but Needs Regulating

  By Crispian Balmer

  VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - The Internet caters to the best and worst of
human nature and needs
  regulation to stop depravity flooding cyberspace, Pope John Paul (news
- web sites) said Tuesday.

  The 81-year old Pontiff, who last year sent his first message over the
Internet, praised it as a
  ``wonderful instrument'' that should be used to spread the word of God
and encourage global peace.

  However, he warned that while it offered access to immense knowledge,
the Internet did not
  necessarily provide wisdom and could easily be perverted to demean
human dignity.

  ``Despite its enormous potential for good, some of the degrading and
damaging ways the Internet can
  be used are already obvious to all,'' the Pope said in a message
prepared for World Communications
  Day.

  ``Public authorities surely have a responsibility to guarantee that
this marvelous instrument serves the
  common good and does not become a source of harm,'' he added.

  Although the Pope does not have an e-mail address, the Vatican (news -
web sites) has an active
  Web site (www.vatican.va) and the Church is reportedly searching for a
patron saint of Internet users.

  The question of regulation has inflamed passions since the Internet
sprang to prominence in the 1990s,
  with enthusiasts arguing that cyberspace should not be pegged back
behind national boundaries or
  rules.

  The Pope warned that not only did the Internet allow the spread of
depraved material, it could also
  lead people to believe that facts mattered more than values.

  ``The Internet offers extensive knowledge, but it does not teach
values and when values are
  disregarded, our very humanity is demeaned,'' he said, adding that the
system focused people's
  attention on an ``almost unending flood of information.''

  ``Yet human beings have a vital need for time and inner quiet to
ponder and examine life and its
  mysteries,'' he said. ''Understanding and wisdom are the fruit of a
contemplative eye upon the world,
  and do not come from a mere accumulation of facts, no matter how
interesting.''

  He said the Catholic Church had adapted to every discovery through the
ages, from the Renaissance
  to the invention of printing and the Industrial Revolution, and must
now learn to reach the masses via
  cyberspace.

  ``Like the new frontiers of other times, this one too is full of the
interplay of danger and promise,'' he
  said.

  ``For the Church the new world of cyberspace is a summons to the great
adventure of using its
  potential to proclaim the Gospel message.''

  In his first message sent to the world directly over the Internet last
November, Pope John Paul
  apologized to victims of sexual abuse by priests and other clergy.

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