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TORC BLOG .....perspectives of a progressive cleric...: 09/19/2004 - 09/26/2004

Thursday, September 23, 2004

TURN THOSE JAMMED THINGS OFF!!!



Parish Priests Jam Cell Phones in Churches

Three Cheers and a round of beers (make them Caronas) to the gutsy, high-tech clergy of four Catholic churches (Sacred Heart, The Rosario, San Juan Bosco and Our Lady Queen of the Angels) in Monterrey, Mexico!

They became so disgusted with cell phones interrupting their Holy Masses and sacerdotal rites that they installed cell phone jammers there to silence them. With one at the church entrance and another hidden near the altar, sacred silence was finally restored.

The Padres are jamming cell phone signals with Israeli-made transmitters (an Israeli company, Netline, first introduced them in 1998), the kind used to protect embassies and presidential motorcades from bugs and bombs detonated by phone. Such jammers are legal to purchase in Mexico and the US, but illegal to use.* Mexico's Federal Telecommunications Commission has declined official comment on the issue, and it has taken no action against the parishes, although officials privately note that the churches are breaking the law.

* Except for Israel, Japan and India, cell phone jammers remain illegal in most developed countries, including the United States, Great Britain, Canada, Switzerland, and Australia. In the U.S., the use of cell phone jammers is illegal without a license and carries a penalty of $11,000 per day.

However, despite such laws, new technology recently introduced by scientists in Japan could possibly be implemented legally in the United States under Section 302 of the Federal Communications Act: Hideo Oka and other electronic engineers at Iwate University in Morioka, Japan, built wood-based panels that absorb radio frequencies. The panels contain nickel-zinc ferrite, which blocks cell phones' electromagnetic waves. Oka says hardware stores will soon sell these wood panels.

Cell Phone Use is ALWAYS PROHIBITED in Medical Areas and where ever CARDIAC PACE MAKERS would be disrupted.

The RC priests explained that the devices work only inside their sanctuaries: The $1,500 jammers are boxes about the size of walkie-talkies. The physics of jamming a cell phone are actually quite simple. Cell phones operate by sending signals along a range of the electromagnetic spectrum reserved for their use. (In the U.S. that part typically is measured as either 800 or 1,900 megahertz; in Europe it's usually 900 or 1,800 megahertz.) All a cell-phone jamming device needs to do is broadcast a signal on those same frequencies, and it will interfere with any devices trying to transmit in that range.

....As churchgoers walk into the church the devices overwhelm the phones with electronic noise. Within a few minutes, the phones show "no signal." Incoming calls don't ring and calls are bounced to the phones' voice mail. Odds are most parishioners won't even notice that their phones are being jammed. They'll just assume that they're in a dead spot — and pray instead.

The plague of wild cell phones is worse in Mexico because most churches there are old, stone sanctuaries with booming acoustics. Almost two-thirds of telephone subscribers in Mexico use cell phones, according to the International Telecommunications Union.

In the United States, cell phone jammers are supposed to be used only by security honchos, embassies, the military, the Secret Service, bomb squads and police, who use the devices to isolate hostage-takers. Mexico also uses them in prisons to block smuggled cell phones. But manufacturers of the devices say many jammers are being sold under the table. One company, Global Gadget, even sells one disguised as a cell phone.

Our U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is presently working on "WolfPack", a small device that can be parachuted on enemy lands in order to both monitor and jam their conversations. The device is only four inches wide and weighs about six pounds.

("Jamming" is already a viable reality in Japan. "The Wave Wall", by a company called Medic Inc., is a cigarette-sized transceiver with a 20-foot jamming radius. It's a pricey $480, but cafes, theaters, and high-end restaurants are already using such devices to keep the peace.)

Great going, Padres. You're my kind of hombres and brother priests. (As also is the "Pistol Packing Padre" below.) There's nothing sinful or anti-social about your passive jamming (shielding) counter measures. I think that you have every right to enforce proper reverence and etiquette within your closed worship space**. It's a shame that the obvious need for such devices has become wider than good manners. But why didn't we think of this up North?

** The cell phone industry objects to the use of jammers, claiming that the airwaves are public property and jammers violate the rights of cell phone users. However, the issue for us is less about legality and more about social responsibility. Doctors, firemen and police officers, etc. all rely on wireless radios to send and receive emergency signals. If we knowingly and willingly block these types of signals -- especially after 9-11 -- we may be interfering with their ability to save lives. So consider notifying your parishioners, patrons, clients, customers, etc. to switch over to vibration mode instead.

Now can some geek out there please invent a "jammer" to silence the amplified sub-woofers of mobile "boom boxes" -- the ones you feel thumping inside your chest and head 8-10 blocks before you even hear them? They bombard us here in NYC every few minutes all hours of the day & nite. Those sound waves are even more obtrusive then cell phones and more harmful then the radiation emitted by such jammers. (I often fantasize about being a stealth "sniper" using a high radio frequency ray guy to explode the massive speakers of those car stereos.)

Beam us up, Scottie.

St. Gabriel Possenti - Patron Saint of Handgunners


Saint Gabriel Possenti Society

"PADRE PISTOLAS" (Pistol Packing Padre)

Priest in Mexico packs pistol and builds a following
By Mary Jordan, Washington Post (June 6, 2004)

CHUCANDIRO, Mexico -- Alfredo Gallegos Lara is 6 feet 4, sings country music, and keeps a 9 m.m. pistol tucked into his belt. No ordinary gunslinger, he may be Mexico's most unusual parish priest.

One recent afternoon, (Fr.) Gallegos, 52, pulled off his religious vestments behind the altar of the Catholic Church in this town in central Mexico, revealing jeans, crocodile boots, and a shiny black pistol. Mexico has strict laws forbidding private citizens to carry guns, but Fr. Gallegos said he has always informed police about them and the police haven't complained. After all, his pistols are why the unorthodox priest, with a growing following in Mexico and the United States, is called "Padre Pistolas."

"Four of my friends have been killed, and three of my trucks have been stolen," he said, explaining that his ministry to drug addicts and the sick takes him through the back roads of central Mexico, where it is wise, he said, to be armed. The youngest of 10 children in a wealthy family with a long history of military service and fine marksmanship, Gallegos boasts that he can pick off a soft-drink can at 80 feet.

Ever since he entered the seminary at age 14, his handling of guns has been drawing popular attention as well as criticism from his Church superiors. "I have been fighting with the Bishop. He is so angry with me. He doesn't like my gun," Father Gallegos said.

He said Archbishop Alberto Suarez Inda is also uncomfortable with his high-profile fund-raising and construction projects. Gallegos has built 40 miles of roads, as well as basketball courts, schools, churches, and bridges in and around Jaral del Refugio in the neighboring state of Guanajuato, where he was the parish priest for 24 years. He said he raised millions of dollars for the projects. He makes frequent fund-raising trips to Illinois, North Carolina, and California, and migrants there have encouraged him to create a Padre Pistolas website, key chains, compact discs, and posters.

Fr. Gallegos said he has gone hunting with law enforcement officers in the United States and sung to standing-room-only crowds in Chicago's popular Concordia Restaurant. Town President Ramiro Gonzalez of Cicero, Ill., just outside Chicago, has helped him arrange fund-raisers and traveled to his parish in Mexico to see his public works projects.

Gonzalez said migrants return to their Mexican hometowns from well-paved American cities and "see that the roads are the same way they were a billion years ago, and they say, 'How much can this cost? $10,000? Then let's get together and do it.' " But they need someone trustworthy to handle the money, he said, someone "with the magnitude of leadership of Padre Pistolas."

Still, Rev. Gallegos's guns and his super-sized persona have gotten him into hot water with the local Bishop, who wants him to leave building roads and hospitals to the government and televised musical performances to entertainers. "He wants me to stick to baptizing children and saying Mass," Fr. Gallegos said.

"Is that possible?" he is asked.

"Oh, no!" he responded with a wink.

+Suarez, the Bishop, declined to be interviewed. "Oh, God," moaned the person answering the phone in his office in Morelia, when asked for a comment about Padre Pistolas. "Don't pay too much attention to him."

But it is hard not to. He has a powerful singing voice that draws applause wherever he starts singing -- at Mass, in restaurants, on the street corner. He is unabashedly comfortable with his attention-grabbing role.

In May, +Suarez removed Gallegos from Jaral. Tearful followers sent him off with a parade.

When asked about him, Valentina Guzman started crying. "He built our roads and bridges. When I hurt my foot, he took care of me," she said. "And he is such a good singer."

Recently, Fr. Gallegos had started raising money for a hospital and museum in Jaral. "The hospital had not been approved by the government," said Jose Angel Parrales Espinoza, an official in that municipality. "We agree that there should be a regional hospital. But things should be done in a correct way." Still, he said, Padre Pistolas is "an original," loved by many people.

Father Gallegos was reassigned to this town of 3,000 in Michoacan State, 25 miles east of the capital city of Morelia, where most of the men have gone to the United States to work. An official, Francisco Garibay Arroyo, said his impoverished town wanted somebody who could raise money and make improvements, and didn't mind Fr. Gallegos's "custom of collecting guns."

Rev. Fr. Gallegos said he loves The Church but its leaders need to worry less about his guns and more about The Church's bigger problems, such as pedophilia scandals in the United States

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PS: Read the new book "GUN SAINT" by John Michael Snyder -- the story of St. Gabriel Possenti (photo above) and of efforts to promote his official Vatican designation as Patron Saint of Handgunners. -- Fr. Steve +