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Feature, Not Bug

Mundabor's blog - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 12:30
Father Donald Kloster, of the US Diocese of Bridgeport, has published a very courageous letter in favour of the Traditional Latin Mass, demanding that the Bishops take action to promote it as the only cure to the present illness of the Church. His arguments are many and all extremely powerful. The link is here. However, […]
Categories: All, Lay, Traditional

Everest's garbage problem

AsiaNews.it - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 11:57
In the Sagarmata area alone, the Nepali name for the world's highest mountain, the accumulation of waste amounts to about five tonnes per day. Environmental conditions complicate regular collection efforts and the increasing number of hikers does not help, but mountaineering alone earns Nepal 10 per cent of its GDP.
Categories: All, Asia, News

Gaza, Abbot Schnabel: the 'scandal' of Christian forgiveness and the war that 'de-humanises'

AsiaNews.it - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 11:37
The German-born Benedictine who leads the Dormition Monastery stigmatises the 'fanatical' attitude while 'people are suffering, dying'. The opposing front seen as 'monster' or 'animal' to justify the violence. The rise to power of the ultra-right Ben-Gvir government has led to an escalation in anti-Christian attacks in the Old City. Like Jesus prayer and forgiveness in response to hatred, the way to reconciliation.
Categories: All, Asia, News

The Faith of the RFKs

Crisis Magazine - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 11:10

On April 25, EWTN’s Raymond Arroyo did an exclusive, hour-long interview with Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. Kudos to both Arroyo and Kennedy for sitting down to dialogue in a civil, thoughtful manner that’s too rare nowadays for people on separate sides of the political aisle. For Kennedy, that side of the aisle has been the Democratic side, given his family’s roots as an iconic Democrat family…

Source

Categories: All, News

Rogations; and the Last Gospel

Fr Hunwicke's Mutual Enrichment - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 11:05
 Readers may recall that, during the Rogation processions, 'stations' were made at crosses. My own suspicion is that the stone crosses which stand along the paths leading to churches, especially in the Penwith peninsular at the very end ... the loveliest part ... of Cornwall, were where such stations were made. And (even before the endowed drinking started) passages from the Holy Gospels Fr John Hunwickehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17766211573399409633noreply@blogger.com8
Categories: All, Clergy, Traditional

The Second Commandment by St. Alphonsus Liguori

Padre Peregrino - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 11:00
Many good Catholics today have now become acutely aware of sexual sins (the Sixth and Ninth Commandment) as well as the First Commandment (partly due to public violations of this like the worship of the Pachamama statue near the Vatican a few years ago.)  In light of this, I believe that the most underrated of [...]
Categories: All, Clergy

Journalism's Latest Draft Recasts Ukraine Narrative

Zero Hedge - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 11:00
Journalism's Latest Draft Recasts Ukraine Narrative

Authored by J. Peder Zane via RealClearPolitics,

Journalism may indeed be the first draft of history but that old chestnut can be misleading. Where it suggests a set-in-stone version of events, that first draft is really an unfolding detective story, revised and rewritten as we dig out better answers to the eternal questions of who, what, when, where, and how.

Two of my colleagues at RealClearInvestigations – Aaron Maté and Paul Sperry – recently recast one of the biggest stories of our time: America’s long, strange, and destructive entanglement with Ukraine.

As with all great investigative journalism, Maté and Sperry draw on a wide range of documents and insider accounts to reveal facts the powers-that-be have tried to conceal. While President Biden and many other leaders from both parties cast Ukraine as a bastion of democracy and a beacon of freedom, Maté and Sperry reveal how a decade of anti-democratic interference by Biden and other U.S. officials has led that country to the brink of destruction while corrupting America’s domestic politics.

Their reporting shows that Ukraine is not an independent democracy but a client state of America which has pushed Ukraine into ever-deepening conflict with Russia. It does not excuse Vladimir Putin’s illegal and murderous invasion of Ukraine in 2022, but it shows the massive escalation in a decade-long proxy war the two powers have been conducting on another nation’s soil.

Although this conflict stretches back decades and even centuries, Maté’s April 30 article starts in 2013. That’s when an uprising known as the Maidan movement was percolating in opposition to Ukraine’s notoriously corrupt president, Viktor Yanukovych, who had delayed signing a trade pact with the European Union because he did not want to alienate Russia.

The Maidan movement was soon co-opted by ultra-nationalist groups, some of whose members “openly sported Nazi insignia.” But many American officials, including then-Vice President Biden, saw it as an opportunity to pull Ukraine from the influence of Russia and to undermine Putin.

High-ranking U.S. officials – including senior State Department official Victoria Nuland and U.S. Ambassador Geoffrey Pyatt – actively advised the movement, which staged a coup in 2014 by storming the Ukrainian parliament. Those same American officials were also involved in naming the new government.

Putin immediately moved to counter growing American influence on his border. Just days after the coup, Russia invaded and soon annexed Crimea. Russophile Ukrainians in the eastern Donbas region followed suit. While Putin publicly told the Donbas forces to seek a diplomatic solution to their claims, American officials, including then-CIA Director John Brennan pushed Ukraine’s new government to armed conflict. As Maté wrote, Ukraine then “descended into a full-scale civil war. Thousands were killed and millions displaced in the ensuing conflict.”

As Putin issued threats that eventually turned into war, the U.S. tightened its grip on Ukraine. U.S. officials, including Biden, vetted appointments and dismissals in Kyiv, shaping, Maté reports, “the personnel and policies of subsequent Ukrainian governments, all while expanding its military and intelligence presence in Ukraine via the CIA and NATO.”

Sperry’s April 17 article changes our understanding of one of the most famous and consequential examples of U.S. meddling – Biden’s December 2015 threat to withhold $1 billion in aid if Ukraine did not fire its top prosecutor, Viktor Shokin. It has long been known that Shokin had launched multiple investigations into Burisma Holdings, the corruption-riddled energy giant that was paying Biden’s son Hunter millions of dollars. After Shokin was fired, those probes went away.

After this quid pro quo came to light, the Obama administration said that Biden was just carrying out the policy wishes of our government and its European allies. Sperry’s reporting, however, indicates that the U.S. had no such concerns about Shokin in the months before Biden’s threat: “An Oct. 1, 2015, memo summarizing the recommendation of the Interagency Policy Committee on Ukraine stated, ‘Ukraine has made sufficient progress on its [anti-corruption] reform agenda to justify a third [loan] guarantee.’”

Sperry also reports that one Biden advisor at the time was especially surprised by his boss’s action – Eric Ciaramella. On Jan. 21, 2016, Ambassador Pyatt emailed Ciaramella and other White House aides an article from the Ukrainian press – “U.S. loan guarantee conditional on Shokin’s dismissal.”

“Yikes,” Ciaramella responded. “I don’t recall this [the firing] coming up in our meeting with them,” he said, referring to an earlier White House meeting he hosted with top Ukrainian prosecutors.

The backstory Sperry brought to light would take on new significance three years later, when Ciaramella sparked Donald Trump’s first impeachment by complaining that the president had allegedly tried to condition Ukraine aid on an announcement that it was looking into Biden family corruption in that country – as well as Ukraine’s well documented efforts to interfere in the 2016 election in support of Hillary Clinton.

Sperry’s reporting suggests that the Trump impeachment was part of an effort to cover up Biden’s attempt to shield his family from the law. The strategy might have worked but for a strange stroke of fate, with the surfacing of a laptop Hunter Biden abandoned at a Delaware repair shop that detailed his family’s high-level influence peddling.

As Ukraine – a mid-sized country halfway around the world – played a key role in our 2016 and 2020 elections, so it promises to do the same in 2024. At first glance, its prominence seems amazing. Maté and Sperry, in far greater detail than I have summarized here, help us understand why.

Their dispatches are far from the last word. Future reporting will find still undiscovered facts, providing, one hopes, a clear sense of the past as it becomes history. Their work is also achingly relevant to the president as we witness the carnage in Ukraine. As Maté writes, “In claiming to defend Ukraine from Russian influence, Ukraine was subsumed by American influence” at incalculable cost.

Their reporting also reveals the tangled complexity of human affairs requires a healthy amount of cognitive dissonance. America’s support for Ukraine may be a necessary defense against Putin’s aggression. But it is also a recurrence of our long and now largely disavowed history of promoting regime change for seemingly noble reasons in far-flung corners of the world such as Guatemala, Iran, South Vietnam, Chile, and other places. It is not the role of journalists to resolve this tension, but, as Maté and Sperry have, to detail it without fear or favor, so that others might.

Tyler Durden Tue, 05/07/2024 - 05:00
Categories: All, Non-Catholic, Political

How to Truly “Be Different”

Crisis Magazine - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 11:00

It’s funny to be writing this on a typewriter; but truly, I think there is a great deal to be said for the slogan “be different.” Pope Francis infamously told a World Youth Day audience to “make a mess,” and that is exactly what I’ve been doing with this typewriter for the past thirty minutes. Spurred on by an editorial in the latest issue of The European Conservative, I have been marveling…

Source

Categories: All, News

WHEN A CATHOLIC HOSPITAL IS SOLD TO A FOR PROFIT CORPORATION OR ANY CORPORATION, THE CATHOLIC NAME SHOULD BE CHANGED

southern orders - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 10:26


I just saw a news story about Steward Hospital Corporation, a for profit corporation, which is declaring bankruptcy in conjunction with some scandals associated with their practices. 

One hospital in Massachusetts is named Saint Elizabeth’s. It also has a St. Margaret clinic. 

I presume this hospital was once a Catholic hospital, but the name was maintained when it was sold to a for-profit corporation.

The same thing happened in Augusta, Georgia. Saint Joseph Hospital once owned and run by the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Corondelet was sold to a for profit corporation. There was much controversy when the Sisters asked that the name of the hospital be changed with the sale.

An unusual arrangement was worked out where the hospital would be called Trinity Hospital but that the Catholic Church would maintain the chapel and some aspects of chaplaincy in the hospital. All the religious symbols in the hospital, such as statues and crucifixes remained in this hospital.

That corporation has since sold Trinity hospital to another corporation and is renamed Piedmont. I think all the religious symbols are gone as is the Catholic chapel.

It is sad that the post-Vatican II Church can’t maintain its pre-Vatican II institutions as there are no Sisters or Brothers to do so. 

But yes, change the name, as painful as that is, when it is no longer a Catholic hospital. 

Categories: All, Clergy

Who's Building The Most Solar Energy?

Zero Hedge - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 10:15
Who's Building The Most Solar Energy?

In 2023, solar energy accounted for three-quarters of renewable capacity additions worldwide. Most of this growth occurred in Asia, the EU, and the U.S., continuing a trend observed over the past decade.

In this graphic, Visual Capitalist's Bruno Venditti illustrates the rise in installed solar photovoltaic (PV) capacity in China, the EU, and the U.S. between 2010 and 2022, measured in gigawatts (GW). Bruegel compiled the data..

Chinese Dominance

As of 2022, China’s total installed capacity stands at 393 GW, nearly double that of the EU’s 205 GW and surpassing the USA’s total of 113 GW by more than threefold in absolute terms.

Since 2017, China has shown a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of approximately 25% in installed PV capacity, while the USA has seen a CAGR of 21%, and the EU of 16%.

Additionally, China dominates the production of solar power components, currently controlling around 80% of the world’s solar panel supply chain.

In 2022, China’s solar industry employed 2.76 million individuals, with manufacturing roles representing approximately 1.8 million and the remaining 918,000 jobs in construction, installation, and operations and maintenance.

The EU industry employed 648,000 individuals, while the U.S. reached 264,000 jobs.

According to the IEA, China accounts for almost 60% of new renewable capacity expected to become operational globally by 2028.

Despite the phasing out of national subsidies in 2020 and 2021, deployment of solar PV in China is accelerating. The country is expected to reach its national 2030 target for wind and solar PV installations in 2024, six years ahead of schedule.

Tyler Durden Tue, 05/07/2024 - 04:15
Categories: All, Non-Catholic, Political

Opposing Military Intervention: Loving Dictators or Hating War?

Mises Institute - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 10:00
Why have some Americans opposed this nation’s involvement in foreign wars? According to Jacob Heilbrunn of The National Interest, it is because those Americans love bloody dictators like Adolph Hitler.

How EU Law Has Made the Internet Less Free for Everyone Else

Mises Institute - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 10:00
Like the Biden administration, the European Union elites are seeking to crush free speech on the Internet in the name of preventing “hate speech” and “disinformation.” Of course, the EU ruling classes won’t have to worry about being censored.

What Is the Purpose of Economic Theory?

Mises Institute - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 10:00
Mainstream economists believe that economic theory is valid when it “predicts” economic actions or trends. Austrian economists, however, say that the purpose of economic theory is to explain economic events.

What the Campus Protesters and Their Critics Get Right and Wrong

Mises Institute - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 10:00
While these students are right to oppose the horrific Israeli attacks on Gaza, many of the protests reflect leftist groupthink and typical higher education collectivism.

Mises in Argentina: Lessons of the Past for Today

Mises Institute - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 10:00
In 1959, Ludwig von Mises gave lectures on economics in Argentina, where the economy was in steep decline. In the 1920s, Argentina was one of the world's wealthiest countries, but decades of Peronism and inflation started the country on the long road to poverty.

Creating Wealth: The Cantillon or the Smith Way

Mises Institute - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 10:00
Although mainstream economists hold that Adam Smith is the father of modern economics, it was Richard Cantillon that recognized the centrality of entrepreneurship in economic development.

Thanks to Government Animal Control, Stray Animals Rule My Neighborhood

Mises Institute - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 10:00
Animal control officers are supposed to, well, control animals in a municipal area. But thanks to animal control policies, it's the stray animals that are in control of our author’s town.

Economic Education Has Become Economic Disinformation

Mises Institute - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 10:00
The attempt by the mainstream economics profession to create economic literacy has turned into a movement to promote economic illiteracy.

Kyrgyzstan's textile industry faces crisis

AsiaNews.it - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 09:56
With its 200,000 workers it is an important component of the local industry, but it can no longer compete on international markets. The collapse of the rouble is weighing on it, but also the higher labour costs compared to Bangladesh or Vietnam, which requires a qualitative leap in the promotion of its products.
Categories: All, Asia, News

Gaza: Hamas accepts the deal but Israel enters Rafah anyway

AsiaNews.it - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 09:33
Today's news:Beijing into British MoD data;Some Chinese provinces open up to flexible working to encourage motherhood;In the Philippines inflation is higher among poor families and in the suburbs;Putin will meet Armenian President Pašinyan to 'frankly' address differences.
Categories: All, Asia, News

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