So what is your excuse for the muted response to Rowan Williams comments about the Invasion of Iraq?
I don't need excuses, I was giving explanations - personally I was against the invasion of Iraq, as were many of the sources I was reading at the time, so in the main I saw agreement with him in the media. As to why it may have been muted - they probably (justifiably) wondered what relevance a Christian religious spokesman might have to a debate about an oil-inspired invasion of Muslim regions by a Western military-industrial complex.
Regarding 'questionable investments' isn't British society possibly even more guilty of this, relying heavily on such investments for the well-being of pension funds? Investments that, over the last 20-odd years, perhaps longer, CoE Commissioners have worked hard to remove from their portfolio.
Arguably, yes, but those financial institutions haven't been making pronouncements on morality for the populace at the same time.
But the problem is that the 75-80% who are in favour in principle is cut in half when actual methodology and practice is discussed.
Assuming that figure's correct (I've not seen anything to support it, but it's entirely plausible) why isn't Parliament asking a body to review the methodology rather than having a blanket vote on kicking it into touch? Why isn't Welby asking people to tighten the controls or rethink the qualification criteria? He's doing so because he's not a public representative, he's not there to represent the populace, he's there to represent the orthodoxy, just as he was when he prevaricated over gay priests and underwhelmed on support for female bishops.
O.