Her resources were not limited, she had tens of millions of dollars in donations pouring in from all over the world. With so much of it wasted entirely on opening new convents, spending it on the Red Cross or some other such organization would have been much better, not only a better utilization of resources but also it would have guinely benefitted more people.
Because of course you have any conception of how far tens of millions of dollars will go in this situation. And the answer is not very far. Let us be honest: after transportation, maintaince, upkeep, etc. how much is left? I assume your answer will remain "tens of millions". Let us compare the operating budgets of modern hospitals; 100 million plus. King in LA had trouble keeping its doors open because it can't meet its operating costs; it was in the red by several hundred million and had to close its burn unit and other services totalling over 100 million in costs a year because it couldn't find the money to run them through charitable donations, payment for services rendered, and government grants.
Even ignoring your "wastage" comment, which refuses to acknowledge the nature of the beast or for that matter that such convents might just a little have any sort positive effect (religious orders typically do in poor areas because the rank and file of a religion typically buys into the basic propganda about tolerance and helping the needy), it's clear you have no conception of what it takes to run a hospital. That Mother Teresa accomplished
anything at all in those terms with only tens of millions of dollars is impressive.
So causing the deaths of thousands and thousands and thousands of people is somehow not a crime against humanity anymore?
That's not what I said and you know it. Cease the strawmanning.
Kim Jong Il was certainly able to do more not because he was any less of a humanist than she, but because he has total political power.
Then why did you make such an inflammatory comparison when you knew it was fundementally invalid? Are you delibrately trying to drag the level of the argument down or what?
Given that she has stated, on record, that she thinks suffering is good and poor people should just accept being poor, can we really be so sure she wouldn't cause the mass humanitarian disaster if she had the same level of political power kim jong il has, or any other dictator for that matter?
You actually
did Godwin. (Unless Hitler is not a dictator, now?) Jesus Christ on a pogo stick.
Your quotemining ignores the context, but then, that's what quotemining does. Christian and indeed Western philosophical thought has often lighted on the nature of suffering. I don't doubt your parents told you that it "builds character". If you
truly wish to argue that overcoming suffering does not at all strengthen a person, then I fear we are actually speaking different langauges here and a dialogue between us, and perhaps between you and the majority of people who visit this board, is impossible.
As for poor people accepting being poor, in the environment Mother Teresa worked in, what other choices were there? We all want to lift them up but the truth is charitable works cannot do that. She was reacting to an objective reality; that those she helped have no other recourse but to be destitute and downtrodden. That is why she helped them, because no one else would, but at the same time she was deeply aware that her help alone would never accomplish the ultimate goal, nor could the ultimate goal be accomplished within her or their lifetimes. To accept the unpleasant is to gain strength. Turn it not to altering your reality but that of your children, or your children's children. It took 40 years for the US civil rights movement to bring Obama to office. Most people Mother Teresa worked with won't live that long.
So, we should instead live the lie?
Why not? Is not what the lie has accomplished preferable to destroying the legacy of a woman long-dead that stands for something
completely different from what you're complaining about, by your own admission?
Or are you so desperate to see Mother Teresa wrongly vilified that you would damage the good works done by those who followed in her wake to get at her?
I will admit it is frustrating to see people close their eyes to reality when the truth leads to their sacred cows. But really I don't have a personal stake in the issue.
So what do you think my intentions are?
I already stated that. You already answered it. But given your continued pursuit of this matter, your willingness to compare Mother Teresa to Stalin/Hitler et. al., I don't believe your answer is convincing. It is impossible not to have a personal stake in such an argument, unless you are devoid of empathy.