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Pope’s stance on climate change angers conservatives

Associated Press

NEW YORK – Conservative distrust of Pope Francis, which has been building in the U.S. throughout his pontificate, is reaching a boiling point over his plan to urge action on climate change – and to do so through a document traditionally used for the most important papal teachings.

For months, Francis has been drafting an encyclical on the environment and global warming that he hopes to release by June or July. Encyclicals are written with the help of a small group of advisers working under strict secrecy. But in a news conference as he traveled last week to the Philippines, Francis gave his strongest signal yet of the direction he’ll take.

He said global warming was “mostly” man-made. And he said he wanted his encyclical out in plenty of time to be absorbed before the next round of U.N. climate change talks in Paris in November after the last round in Lima, Peru, failed to reach an agreement.

“I don’t know if it (human activity) is the only cause, but mostly, in great part, it is man who has slapped nature in the face,” Francis said. “We have in a sense taken over nature.”

Even before the remarks, several conservative U.S. commentators had been attacking the encyclical. At Investor’s Business Daily, Forbes and TownHall.com, writers had accused the pope of adopting a radical environmental agenda.

“Pope Francis – and I say this as a Catholic – is a complete disaster when it comes to his public policy pronouncements,” wrote Steve Moore, chief economist of the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank. “On the economy, and even more so on the environment, the pope has allied himself with the far left and has embraced an ideology that would make people poorer and less free.”

At the website of the Catholic journal First Things, a blogger accused the pope of promoting “theologized propaganda” on conservation – a post the journal’s editor later disavowed.

While Popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI took strong stands in favor of environmental protection, Francis will be the first to address climate change in such a significant way.

Francis is due to speak at the United Nations in New York in September, where he may press the assembly on global warming before climate change talks begin. He has already urged negotiators to be “courageous.”