I have been very quiet recently, but I have to jump in and be a bomb thrower. Many "super" Latins (and if it has been said in this thread, it needs to be said again) express great horror at the concept of a married priesthood in the Latin Church and leave the impression that you cannot change something which has always been in place. I would remind them that the blanket celibacy in the Latin west as a matter of policy is a matter of discipline and could be changed in the blink of an eye. It probably won't be for economic reasons (you have to pay the priest a living wage because he would have to support a family if he married), although a the pool of men available for ordination would certainly be increased. Yes, I am saying that celibacy is an economic issue!
These "super" Latins (yes there are "super" Orthodox also who are equally hard to live with) seem to have developed amnesia about blanket celibacy in the Latin rite and forgotten that it is an INNOVATION of --if I remember correctly-- the 11th or 12th century. It was only introduced to protect the real property of the church by keeping the clergy from willing church property to their heirs. It was all economics!!! A true conservative Latin would want a return to a married priesthood because it would be returning the church to its original stance on the issue not some medieval INNOVATION!
Ok now I retreat to my bunker!
Celibacy is not merely an economic issue. I can't say that it is not a factor, but the model of ministry adopted, parish sizes and formation programs being what they are, it isn't just dollars and cents.
Honestly this matter is - in a real way - about 20 years behind the times and very Ameri-centric in its presentation. Necessity simply does not drive a need for married clergy in the Latin Church - nations like Mexico now has 14,000 men in priestly formation as compared to 16,000 ordained priests! There is a boon in Africa, Asia and other parts of South America. (Tales of all of America having become Protestant Evangelicals are somewhat exagerrated - we are still alive and kicking!)
The idea that a "real conservative" is an antiquarianist - always looking to restore that which is oldest is odd and unconvincing to me. I know a lot of conservatives, I don't know a lot of folks looking to return to public penance in sackcloth and ashes!
A lot of folks like to claim that it is a "mere" 8ish centuries old in the Latin Church... leaving the imagination to run wild that for centuries 0 - XII the Western Church had what the Eastern Churches have
now. I just don't believe that to be accurate, but a days long debate in a new thread could I suppose be started about all that.
I don't see married preisthood in the Latin Church any time soon. If for no better reason than they simply are not going to have a need for that model.