Distinction Matter - Subscribed Feeds

  1. Site: Ron Paul Institute for Peace And Prosperity
    4 days 17 hours ago
    Author: Adam Dick

    In an editorial last week, United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio was touting his effort to ensure the US government respects free speech. But, Rubio is also a leader in the ongoing US government program that deports people from America because they have exercised free speech in criticizing actions of the Israel government or support by the US government for those actions.

    Jacob Sullum deftly called out the hypocrisy in his Friday Reason article that you can read here.

  2. Site: ChurchPOP
    4 days 17 hours ago
    Author: Caroline Perkins

    Pray for Pope Francis!

    According to Catholic News Agency,

    “Pope Francis passed away at 7:35 a.m. local time on Easter Monday, April 21, at his residence in the Vatican’s Casa Santa Marta, as confirmed by the Holy See Press Office. The 88-year-old pontiff led the Catholic Church for a little more than 12 years.”

    Here are 15 quotes from Pope Francis to meditate on as the Church mourns his passing:

    pope francis quotes loveCaroline Perkins, ChurchPOP“Jesus’ love goes before us, his look anticipates our needs. He can see beyond appearances, beyond sin, beyond failures and unworthiness. He sees beyond our rank in society. He sees beyond this, to our dignity as sons and daughters, a dignity at times sullied by sin, but one which endures in the depth of our soul. He came precisely to seek out all those who feel unworthy of God, unworthy of others.” (Cuba/U.S. Visit, 2015)pope francis quotes on mercyCaroline Perkins, ChurchPOP"A touch of mercy transforms everything. It is the most profound feeling we can have: It alters the world." (First Angelus prayer, March 17, 2013)pope francis eucharist quotesCaroline Perkins, ChurchPOP"The Eucharist 'is not a prize for the perfect, but a powerful medicine and nourishment for the weak.'" (Amoris Laetitia, April 8, 2016)pope francis youth quotesCaroline Perkins, ChurchPOP"Dear young people, do not be afraid of making decisive choices in life. Have faith; the Lord will not abandon you!"pope francis quotes on happinessCaroline Perkins, ChurchPOP“Every step, every effort, every test, every fall and every recovery has a sense within God’s design for salvation, as He wants life – not death – and joy – not pain – for His people.” (Ash Wednesday General Audience, 2017)Caroline Perkins, ChurchPOP"A vocation flows from the heart of God and blossoms in the good soil of faithful people." (World Day of Prayer for Vocations 2014)pope francis quotes on mercyCaroline Perkins, ChurchPOP"The Lord never tires of forgiving. It is we who tire of asking for forgiveness."pope francis quotes to youthCaroline Perkins, ChurchPOP"Please do not water down your faith in Jesus Christ. ... Faith is whole and entire, not something that you water down. It is faith in Jesus. It is faith in the son of God made man, who loved me and who died for me." (World Youth Day, July 25, 2013)pope francis quotes on mercyCaroline Perkins, ChurchPOP"Mercy: the bridge that connects God and humanity, opening our hearts to the hope of being loved forever despite our sinfulness." (Misericordiae Vultus, April 11, 2015)pope francis quotes on compassionCaroline Perkins, ChurchPOP"We have realized that we are on the same boat, all of us fragile and disoriented... all of us called to row together." (Prayer during COVID-19 pandemic, March 27, 2020)famous pope francis quotesCaroline Perkins, ChurchPOP"Jesus keeps knocking on our door in the faces of our brothers and sisters, in the faces of our neighbors, in the faces of those at our side."pope francis quotes on hellCaroline Perkins, ChurchPOP"The devil exists even in the 21st century and we shouldn't be naive. ... We have to learn from the Gospel how to fight against him.” (Homily, April 11, 2014)pope francis quotes on mercyCaroline Perkins, ChurchPOP"The confessional must not be a torture chamber, but an encounter with the Lord's mercy." (Amoris Laetitia, April 8, 2016)famous pope francis quotesCaroline Perkins, ChurchPOP“Faith makes us open to the quiet presence of God at every moment of our lives, in every person and in every situation.” (Cuba/U.S. Visit, 2015)pope francis quotes on happinessCaroline Perkins, ChurchPOP"Joy springs from a grateful heart." (Sept. 23, 2015)

    Prayer for a Deceased Pope 

    God, Who, in Thine ineffable providence, didst will that Thy servant Francis ... should be numbered among the high priests; grant, we beseech Thee, that he, who on earth held the place of Thine only-begotten Son, may be joined forevermore to the fellowship of Thy holy pontiffs. Through the same Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth with Thee in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God, world without end. Amen.

    Source: Roman Missal

  3. Site: PeakProsperity
    4 days 18 hours ago
    Author: Chris Martenson
    Here's another Fat Pipe for your smoking pleasure!
  4. Site: OnePeterFive
    4 days 18 hours ago
    Author: T. S. Flanders

    A few months ago I asked my spiritual father the following question. This is a questioned that has burned in me for years since I took over the editorship of OnePeterFive. It is a question that has troubled by conscience and caused me to lose a great deal of sleep. Here’s the question: My spiritual father responded with this wisdom: And so, as an act of humility and love for…

    Source

  5. Site: Mises Institute
    4 days 18 hours ago
    Author: George Ford Smith
    The ruling classes and their media blamed the 2008 financial crisis on free markets and too little government regulation. However, because the Federal Reserve promised to help cover losses in financial markets, it practically invited reckless behavior.
  6. Site: southern orders
    4 days 19 hours ago

     I had forgotten that this video existed. But today, someone posted it on their facebook. So here it is!

  7. Site: Catholic Herald
    4 days 19 hours ago
    Author: The Catholic Herald

    The Holy Father has died at the age of 88. Pope Francis went to his eternal reward at 7.35 am Rome time at his residence in the Vatican’s Casa Santa Marta.

    Cardinal Kevin Farrell, Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church, released the following statement: “At 7.35 this morning (local time), the Bishop of Rome, Francis, returned to the house of the Father. His entire life was dedicated to the service of the Lord and His Church. He taught us to live the values of the Gospel with fidelity, courage and universal love, especially in favour of the poorest and most marginalised. With immense gratitude for his example as a true disciple of the Lord Jesus, we commend the soul of Pope Francis to the infinite merciful love of the One and Triune God.”

    A pope of many firsts, he was the first Jesuit pope, the first pope from the Americas, and the first from the southern hemisphere. He was also the first non-European pontiff since Gregory III.

    On February 14, he was admitted to Gemelli Hospital with bronchitis. On February 22, he experienced a respiratory crisis, and his condition was deemed critical. On February 23, he was diagnosed with early-stage kidney failure, further complicating his recovery. On February 28, he suffered a bronchial spasm, and on March 3 he had two serious episodes in which he struggled to breathe and doctors had to clear mucus from his lungs. On March 23, he was discharged from hospital after a five-week stay and continued his recovery at Domus Sanctae Marthae (St Martha’s House) in Vatican City, with instructions to rest.

    He seemed to be making a remarkable recovery, and appeared multiple times to greet crowds, despite being advised by doctors to observe a two-month period of rest. His last public appearance was on April 20, Easter Sunday, when he delivered the Urbi et Orbi Easter blessing.

    His final message to the world, characteristically, called for peace. Referencing the Israel-Hamas conflict, he said: “Call a ceasefire, release the hostages and come to the aid of a starving people that aspires to a future of peace.”

    Italy’s Prime Minister, Giorgia Meloni, was one of the first world leaders to pay tribute, stating: “This news saddens us deeply. I had the privilege of enjoying his friendship. He asked the world, once again, for the courage to change direction, to follow a path that does not destroy, but cultivates, repairs, protects.

    “His teachings and his legacy will not be lost. We greet the Holy Father with hearts full of sadness, but we know that he is now in the peace of the Lord.”

    Cardinal Vincent Nichols, President of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales and Archbishop of Westminster, released the following statement:

    “The death of Pope Francis brings great sadness to so many around the world, both within the Catholic Church and in societies in general. A voice proclaiming the innate dignity of every human being, especially those who are poor or marginalised, is now silent. The legacy he leaves is one we must seek to carry forward and strengthen.

    “Pope Francis was called to priesthood through his experience of the mercy and compassion of God. This remained the core of his ministry, as Priest, Bishop and Pontiff. Only in understanding the love and mercy of God towards each one of us can we fashion societies and communities that bear the mark of the ‘kingdom of God’.

    “This same focus and emphasis lay at this desire to see membership of the Church as being rooted in ‘missionary discipleship’, a dynamic and powerful vision for every Christian and every community.

    “Now we pray for the repose of his soul, that he may know, in full measure, the merciful and loving embrace of the Father, of the one God to whom he gave his life in unstinting service.
    “May he now rest in peace and rise in glory.”

    His Majesty the King later added his own voice to the tributes, saying: “My wife and I were most deeply saddened to learn of the death of Pope Francis. Our heavy hearts have been somewhat eased, however, to know that His Holiness was able to share an Easter Greeting with the Church and the world he served with such devotion throughout his life and ministry.

    “His Holiness will be remembered for his compassion, his concern for the unity of the Church and for his tireless commitment to the common causes of all people of faith, and to those of goodwill who work for the benefit of others.

    “His belief that care for Creation is an existential expression of faith in God resounded with so many across the world. Through his work and care for both people and planet, he profoundly touched the lives of so many.”

    Sir Keir Starmer, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, said that “Pope Francis was a pope for the poor, the downtrodden and the forgotten. He was close to the realities of human fragility, meeting Christians around the world facing war, famine, persecution and poverty. Yet he never lost the faith-fuelled hope of a better world.

    “That hope was at the heart of his papacy. His determination to visibly live out his faith inspired people across the world to see afresh the church’s teachings of mercy and charity. With his death, we are reminded once more of his call to care for one another across different faiths, backgrounds, nations and beliefs.”

    US President Donald Trump, whose relationship with the Vatican has been strained in recent months, was brief in his tribute, writing: “Rest in peace Pope Francis! May God bless him and all who loved him!” His vice president JD Vance, however, who met Pope Francis the day before he died, wrote at more length.

    Writing on X, he wrote: “I just learned of the passing of Pope Francis. My heart goes out to the millions of Christians all over the world who loved him. I was happy to see him yesterday, though he was obviously very ill… May God rest his soul.”

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    The post Pope Francis dies at the Vatican, aged 88 first appeared on Catholic Herald.

    The post Pope Francis dies at the Vatican, aged 88 appeared first on Catholic Herald.

  8. Site: Henrymakow.com
    4 days 19 hours ago

    Pope Vance.jpg
    (left, Satanists. JD Vance & Pope Francis, signal their loyalty to Lucifer. Francis dies 24 hrs. later.)

    Humanity is prisoner of a satanic cult 
    that is fulfilling Biblical End Times Prophecy 
    requiring a nuclear catastrophe as a prerequisite 
    for the return of the "Jewish Messiah."
    The cult is called Chabad.
    Trump, Putin and Satanyahu are members. 
    All world wars are preplanned and instigated by Freemasons
    embedded on both sides with the aim of depopulation
    and destroying Christian civilization.



    Disclaimer- Normally I abhor repetition but since no one is paying any attention, it doesn't matter.



    Klaus Schwab Steps Down From WEF Board, Pope Dies, Amid Globalist Retreat

    "On the same day Pope Francis--known for his inclusive beliefs--passed away, another globalist fell: Klaus Schwab, the architect of the World Economic Forum's dystopian agenda, announced he was stepping down from the WEF board. It marks the end of an era for Schwab, who championed radical wokeness, bug eating, mass vaccination campaigns, population control, and climate de-growth policies through what often resembled digital communism--social credit scores, central bank digital currencies, and many more China-like policies. Meanwhile, cultural shifts across the Americas signal a rising movement toward traditional values, sending the WEF's ideology into a tailspin.


    Michael Hoffman - Another Papal Criminal Passes into History




    will not be missed.jpg
    Left, reverse racist

    Susan-POPE FRANCIS DEAD ON MONDAY PAST EASTER

    "Well here's my tweet from almost 18 months ago and it certainly aged well. For comprehensive information and historical accounting of who this person was, I refer you to Brother Alexis Bugnolo, American Expat living in Rome, Franciscan Monk who has been on the Dr Jane Ruby Show many times, Good riddance, now you face the only real Judge, our Lord above. Wonder who the next C I A instalment will be? "


    -


    Mike Adams--Trump puts America on the path of ECONOMIC SUICIDE


    "Trump just announced new penalties for cargo ships docking with U.S. ports, stating that if the ship itself was originally made in China, there will be another 1.5 million dollar fee on top of the insane tariffs already announced.

    This is causing Chinese factories to literally abandon goods in transit, forfeiting entire container loads of goods destined for the U.S.

    The cargo shipping companies will be forced to redirect those loads to Mexico or South America, flooding those countries with low-cost Chinese goods while America's shelves run empty and shocking levels of supply chain scarcity kick in. You are about to find yourself living in a third world country. Right here in America."


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    al-aqsa-mosque.jpeg
    In a new act of incitement led by colonial organizations and extremist hardliners, radical Hebrew platforms have published an AI-generated video depicting the destruction of Al-Aqsa Mosque and the construction of the so-called Third Temple, under the title: "Next Year in Jerusalem."


    Thomas Stone- Trump's economic policies; "uncertainty" and a falling dollar are proving successful

    Trump and "uncertainty"
    Don't believe the deceptive government statistics. CCP China is getting destroyed under an avalanche of fake government economic data. A quick look at the falling US dollar index indicates that the Trump regime is getting what it wants. Why wait for the Rothschild hireling Fed Chair Powell to act when the Trump regime can begin responding proactively on its own?

    To wit, I present you with Exhibit A; the tanking USDX. By talking down the dollar, Trump achieves a lot. Who says "uncertainty" is a bad thing?



    ---
    The Persecution of Dr. Reiner Fuellmich:
    The biggest judicial scandal ever seen in Germany


    Thanks to his brilliant investigative work, and after consulting more than 150 scientists and experts in all fields around the world, as well as numerous whistleblowers (from Pfizer, WHO, CDC, UN), he was able to collect an abundance of evidence of what he calls "the biggest crime ever perpetrated against humanity."

    1560A666D3594322B37250EBE8BE16CA.jpg

    This is from Jan 2019. Could be today. 


    The Pilgrims Society: Subverting American Sovereignty Since 1902

    EXPOSE: Sir Henry Kissinger--A Mastermind of the Pilgrims Society's Plot to Annex America Into The British Empire

    A Sinister Scheme Born in 1902: The Pilgrims Society's Imperial Ambitions Finally Being Dragged Into The Light!

    Substantial evidence exposes Sir Henry Alfred Kissinger as a central figure in the British Pilgrims Society's audacious plan to subvert American sovereignty and drag the United States back under the yoke of the British Empire. This clandestine operation, rooted in the imperialist vision of Cecil Rhodes, was hatched on July 16, 1902, in London, with its American "branch" established mere months later on January 13, 1903, in New York. For over a century, this shadowy organization has woven a web of influence, with Kissinger at its heart during his most active years, orchestrating a silent coup against the American Republic.


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    1745240307162.jpg
    "Tonight we cooked water and milk to satisfy our hunger. The price of a kilo of milk is $36. We bought it thanks to your donations. Thank you always."

    A Way to Help Gaza

    -
    Chinese use AI to mock US sweatshops


    Japan Posts Record Population Drop, Shrinking For 14th Year, As Demographic Crisis Deepens


    Japan's already collapsing population just posted its biggest annual drop on record, falling by 898,000 people as of last October compared to a year earlier, Kyodo News reported.

    This marked the 14th consecutive year of population decline in the country, according to a government estimate. The previous record drop was 861,000, reported in July 2024.

    This was the largest demographic drop since 1968.

    Some more details: according to the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications, Japan's total population was 123,802,000, as of October 1, 2024, down by 550,000 or a 0.44% year-on-year decrease.

  9. Site: The Remnant Newspaper
    4 days 19 hours ago
    Author: angelinemarietherese@gmail.com (Angeline Tan | Remnant Columnist, Singapore)
  10. Site: Catholic Herald
    4 days 19 hours ago
    Author: The Catholic Herald

    HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS, who died on Easter Monday, 21 April, at the age of 88, came to the papacy in 2013 in circumstances that were more unusual and unsettling than the Church had seen for centuries. Benedict XVI, in advancing age and declining health, had done what then seemed unthinkable and had resigned, preferring to live out his old age in the relative privacy of retirement. It was a stark contrast to John Paul II, whose long and painful decline towards his own death in 2005 was spent in the full glare of the media. 

    The conclave of 2013 was therefore highly unusual. When the cardinal protodeacon, the late Jean-Louis Tauran, painfully beset with Parkinson’s disease, appeared on the balcony of St Peter’s Basilica on the evening of 13 March, his task was relatively simple: to pronounce the traditional “habemus papam” to the crowd in the square below – and thus to the waiting world – and also to announce whom the conclave had elected. The first announcement was greeted with the usual wild cheering; the second with considerably less: “Cardinalem Bergoglio”.

    It was not that the Archbishop of Buenos Aires was an unpopular choice; it was that very few people knew who he was. That situation would change over the following days, months and years; he was a candidate for whom many liberal cardinals had lobbied as they felt he would represent a necessary corrective to the Benedict years – he had in fact come close to being elected in 2005 – and who in their eyes would make the Church seem more relevant to the modern world. His choice of name said it all: “Francis”, after the enigmatic mystic of Assisi who loved nature and gave up all that he had to follow the Lord. It was a strong gesture that captured international attention. 

    Born on 17 December 1936, Jorge Mario Bergoglio was ten years old when Juan Perón came to power in Argentina. The charismatic demagogue relied on a cult of personality that revolved around himself and his popular wife, Eva. While a number of Catholic intellectuals commended the early programme of Peronism, Perón ruled in a personal and arbitrary fashion, often relying upon open intimidation against individuals, families, and institutions that opposed him. He was overthrown in 1956, but the preceding decade was one that profoundly affected Argentine life, and spanned the young Bergoglio’s teenage years.

    Bergoglio joined the Society of Jesus in 1958, and was ordained to the priesthood in 1969. After various deployments he was elected provincial superior in Argentina in 1973 and later served as rector of the Jesuit seminary at San Miguel. He was named an auxiliary bishop in the archdiocese of Buenos Aires in 1992, by which time his relationship with the Jesuits had become strained; he became Archbishop of Buenos Aires and Primate of Argentina five years later, and was made a cardinal by John Paul II in 2001. He left Argentina to attend the conclave of 2013; unlike John Paul II and Benedict XVI before him he never again set foot in his native land. 

    When he appeared as Pope on the balcony of St Peter’s without the traditional red shoulder cape and state stole, it was immediately obvious that his would be a pontificate of image and gesture. John Paul II had been a charismatic warrior and Benedict XVI a gentle scholar. Francis would be neither; rather, he would model his papacy on a down-to-earth approach of inclusion and dialogue, accessibility and immediacy, which would radiate from his robust personal humility. Many people interpreted it at the time as a development that would drag the Catholic Church, kicking and screaming if necessary, into the twenty-first century.

    The archbishop who had travelled by public transport in Buenos Aires brought his preference for austerity with him to Rome. He declined to live in the historic papal apartments and chose the Casa Santa Marta instead, but still worked there. Whole sets of new vestments were commissioned to match his simple tastes, and the existing articles mothballed. As some commentators observed at the time, the emphasis on visible simplicity cost far more than if Francis had just followed the time-hallowed customs of his predecessors. Although true, it missed the point; this was a papacy that was intended to appear different to the world at large, and thus also to appeal to it. At the start all things seemed possible.

    Twelve years later, however, its fruits have been very mixed. More informal than monarchical, Francis was not legalistic; when asked about homosexuality, he famously asked, “Who am I to judge?” His spontaneity could cause problems – not least for priests on the ground who would be called upon to explain the pope’s latest comments to their people in the pews. Frequently after an off-the-cuff remark that had been picked up by the media a Vatican clarification would need to be issued to emphasise that the Church’s teaching had not changed. On his way to his last World Youth Day, in Lisbon in 2023, he observed that he was still going to “stir things up”.

    Such an approach was stimulating, certainly, but it could also be jarring. Frequent sharp words for the parish clergy were not always universally appreciated or well-received. Sometimes they were “rigid”, sometimes pastorally “delinquent” and sometimes “mummy’s boys”; he also called for a generation of priests who played soccer instead of going into communities to “dogmatise”. After Fr Jacques Hamel was martyred in Rouen in 2016 by Islamic extremists who slit his throat while he stood at the altar, Francis refused to attribute specific religious motivation to the murder in the course of another bewildering aeroplane interview: “I don’t like to speak of Islamic violence… There are violent Catholics!”

    On other issues he was more robust. Francis’s concern for the environment resulted in a memorable encyclical, Laudato Si’, in 2015; its sequel, Laudate Deum, appeared in 2023. He was compassionately concerned for the plight of migrants, memorably visiting Lampedusa early on in his papacy, and produced motu proprio after motu proprio on a plethora of subjects close to his heart. He made good his promise to keep what he called “the Church at the peripheries” in his sights; only last year he made a gruelling pastoral visit to Asia and Oceania.

    On a similar theme, members of the Synod on the Amazon met in Rome in 2019; they brought with them images of a naked pregnant woman which were placed in churches around the city. Presented as “Our Lady of the Amazon”, a row broke out after Francis referred to them as “Pachamama” – an indigenous pagan “Earth Mother” deity – and they were collected and thrown into the Tiber by a young Austrian convert. Francis, “as bishop of the diocese”, immediately asked forgiveness from those offended by the reaction.

    Francis had the gift of the arresting phrase: when a gay man challenged him to address his situation, he replied that the most important thing was not that the man was gay, but that he was a human being. Like many of his predecessors he longed to be a peacemaker, but sometimes struggled to be heard on his own terms; when he urged Russia and Ukraine to find a way of settling their differences his comments were interpreted by many in Ukraine and its diaspora as advocating for the appeasement of an aggressor.

    When Archbishop Konrad Krajewski, the papal almoner, was raised to the cardinalate in 2018 he gave a dinner after the ceremony for a large number of Rome’s homeless people; Francis turned up unannounced and spent the evening eating with and chatting to the guests. He also promoted women to senior roles within the Vatican, from foreign affairs to finance, which was a substantive change – although observers were surprised when he named a pro-abortion atheist and Catholics who publicly dissented from the Church’s teachings to the Pontifical Academy for Life.

    Similar consternation was caused by Francis’s appointment of his fellow Argentinian Víctor Manuel Fernández as Prefect of the Dicastery of the Doctrine of the Faith in 2023; he arrived in Rome with a reputation as a writer of erotic verse and soon became embroiled in controversy when a book of his resurfaced in which Fernández laid out with startlingly intimate detail the differences between the male and female orgasms, the working-out of God’s love in either, and how “orgasm, lived in the presence of God, can also be a sublime act of worship.”

    For his part Fernández announced that he had come “to ensure that that both the documents of the dicastery and those of others ‘accept the recent Magisterium’,” and calmly explained that anyone who raised concerns about his appointment – he had also spent some time being investigated for unorthodoxy in his theological works – were the enemies of Francis and of his papacy. Fernández’s first document for Francis, Fiducia Supplicans, cited (with one exception) only Francis’s own teachings and was written vaguely enough to convey the impression, but not the fact, that same-sex relationships might receive the Church’s blessing – which was inevitably how the mainstream press reported it.

    Fiducia Supplicans caused so much confusion that a number of bishops’ conferences rejected it: a dangerous moment both for the principle of the reception of the deposit of faith and the teaching office of the Successor of Peter. Having authorised the most controversial papal document since Humanae Vitae, Francis lamented, without irony, what he called “ecclesial ideologies” which caused Catholics to pursue their “own ideas or [their] own projects” rather than seeking Jesus and “the meaning of Holy Mother Church”.

    Each Vatican attempt to explain the document, even those of the Pope himself, only contributed to the bewilderment. In the face of robust pushback – including from some entire bishops’ conferences – Francis told La Stampa that “those who protest vehemently belong to small ideological groups.” He said that he was unbothered by the risk of schism, and that “we must leave them to it and move on”. Simultaneously he made startling generalisations about the Church in Africa, calling Africans “a special case” for whom “homosexuality is something ‘bad’ from a cultural point of view”.

    Other qualities which made Francis attractively informal could also be problematic in practice. Reliance on special advisers rather than traditional governance structures merely bypassed the Curia, rather than reforming it in any meaningful way. His attempts to be non-judgmental about divorced and remarried Catholics receiving Holy Communion, which he subcontracted to local priests or bishops, ran counter to Tradition and Scripture and were also met with opposition. Meanwhile, his vocal condemnation of clerical abuse was not followed through with systemic change; in the case of clerical abusers in Chile and Argentina there were real and serious errors on Francis’s part, which proved impossible to brush off despite his open willingness to acknowledge and apologise for his mistakes from time to time.

    On his way back from World Youth Day in Lisbon in 2023 he insisted, after having met with abuse survivors, that “things are going well”, but many remained unconvinced. An element of personal loyalty to Francis himself, rather than to the Chair of Peter which he occupied, sometimes blurred boundaries. When it transpired that a friend of his, the controversial Fr Marko Rupnik – who had been accused of abusing dozens of women – had been quietly allowed to return to ministry in his native Slovenia, Francis chose the moment of the ensuing media frenzy to denounce what he called the “scandal” of priests wearing traditional clerical garments. The progressive Cardinal Gottfried Danneels presided for 30 years over the catastrophic decline of the Church in Belgium and was seriously implicated in the covering-up of child abuse, but nevertheless enjoyed Francis’s full confidence until his death and was even appointed to the Synod on the Family.

    Bishops who tolerated “clown masses” in their dioceses, or others who encouraged their clergy to bless same-sex relationships were left untroubled; meanwhile Bishop Joseph Strickland of Tyler in Texas, who had been candid regarding his concerns about the direction in which Francis was leading the Church, was removed from office for “administrative” reasons. Cardinal Raymond Burke, a leading traditionalist, found himself regarded as Francis’s “enemy”; he was summarily evicted from his Vatican apartment and his pension was stopped.

    In 2016 Cardinal Burke had been among the cardinals who wrote to Francis asking for clarification about the intentions of Amoris Laetitia, a 2016 document so loosely worded as to be capable of a number of different interpretations about the Church’s pastoral response to Catholics who had been divorced and civilly remarried without an annulment. As different dioceses began to implement its instructions in different ways, Francis calmly rose about the fracas by refusing to acknowledge their questions.

    After Donald Trump returned to the White House in 2025 some commentators detected a game of tit-for-tat; when an outspoken Francis-critic, Brian Burch, was named as the new American ambassador to the Holy See Francis sent one of his protégés, Cardinal Robert McElroy – a noted liberal regarded by many to have been too close for comfort to the scandal surrounding former-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick – to be Archbishop of Washington. Francis’s regular and outspoken commentary about American political life may yet make it difficult for his successor to build bridges with the present US administration.

    Francis’s spontaneous style sometimes degenerated into coarseness; in 2023 a group of Spanish seminarians were startled to find the Sovereign Pontiff effing and blinding on the subject of career-minded clergy, while in 2024 the Vatican issued an apology after he was said to have descried “faggotry” in seminaries during a meeting of the Italian bishops’ conference. On other occasions a very hot temper bubbled up from below. Videos continue to circulate of Francis shouting and striking a woman’s hand when she sought to hold onto his, and of him refusing to let a queue of people kiss the apostolic ring, with its associated indulgence. He often seemed impatient of this honour paid by others to his holy office; Queen Sofia of Spain, exercising her privilège du blanc and wearing a towering Spanish veil, was less easily rebuffed.

    Surely the defining element of his papacy will be the controversial foray into synodality, however, which neatly summed up Francis’s strengths and weaknesses. It has been a vast listening exercise and an opportunity for the people of God to have their say about the Church. The problem is that some modernisers consider that if a majority criticise Church teaching, then the Church must change. That they were allowed to believe this from the outset is unfortunate, to say the least; the mismatch between expectations and reality may well yet be damaging. The exclusion of the parish clergy from the synodal process – on whom inevitably fell the burden of the management of expectations raised and to whom belongs the pastoral care of bruised and disappointed parishioners – was baffling.

    Appropriately for a Jesuit, Francis’s yearning to find a way for the Church to minister in China was very real, yet there continue to be serious concerns about the deal that was struck in the Sino-Vatican Pact; in practice it has meant voluntarily betraying the interests of those who kept the faith alive in the darkest days and subjecting the official church to the godless priorities of the Chinese Communist Party. When Cardinal Joseph Zen rushed to Rome to plead for a reconsideration of the matter, he was refused an audience. The Vatican has received little in return for its own willingness to compromise.

    Bizarrely, for all his talk about subsidiarity, Francis reopened the liturgy wars that Benedict XVI had brought to a close. Most traditionalist Catholics are loyal to the pope, but under Francis they were treated as if they were a faction to be suppressed rather than a community with a legitimate desire for dignified worship in the Tridentine Rite; he even claimed that the vestments of their priests “sometimes conceal mental imbalance, emotional deviation [and] behavioural difficulties”. Given all the challenges facing the Church, it exposed a strange set of priorities; it also represented an odd exception to the principle that a local bishop is best placed to understand and order the life of his diocese.

    In many ways Francis’s pontificate was exhilarating; he seemed totally untroubled by the fact that during most of it his immediate predecessor was still living, and while paying Benedict regular courtesy calls exercised the Petrine Office as if he were not. At a time of extraordinary change for humanity, as galloping technological advances threatened to outstrip the world’s moral capacity to deal with them, he made the Church attractive to very many people who had been alienated from it for a variety of reasons. At the same time he regularly raised hopes of change in several directions which could never be realised and often showed a taste for the exercise of authority and power as they were dashed. Deep compassion and steely authoritarianism sometimes seemed to go hand in hand: an iron fist in a velvet glove.

    Francis seemed untroubled when the President of Argentina, Javier Milei, called him an “imbecile”, a “filthy leftist” and “a malignant presence on earth”; brushing off the insults he later embraced Milei warmly at the Vatican, after which vinegar turned to honey. Elsewhere, his broad smile frequently lit up many a room and comforted many a sufferer; Francis’s unforced joy at being able to spend time and share a kind word with children, the sick and the vulnerable was palpable. His successes were real and he was very greatly loved in many quarters.

    He lived long enough to give Urbi et Orbi on Easter morning, although he looked so poorly that it seemed unlikely he had much time left. Surprising to the end, he broke with tradition and met with American vice president JD Vance privately during Mass, before he appeared on the balcony.

    To die in the Easter Octave is a particular grace, for pope and peasant alike. As Francis now leaves the world stage, as the Church turns to prayer and preparations are made for the funeral rites which he himself planned, it is no exaggeration to say that a remarkable – if frequently confusing and sometimes bewildering – papacy has drawn to its close. It will be for the historians of the future to evaluate the full extent of its impact in the context of what has been and what is yet to come.

    ***

    O God, Who in Thine ineffable providence didst will that Thy servant Francis should be
    numbered among the high priests, grant, we beseech Thee, that he who on earth held the
    place of Thine only-begotten Son may be joined forevermore to the fellowship of Thy
    holy pontiffs. Through the same Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth with
    Thee in the unity of the Holy Ghost, God, world without end. Amen.

    Loading

    The post His Holiness Pope Francis: 1936-2025 first appeared on Catholic Herald.

    The post His Holiness Pope Francis: 1936-2025 appeared first on Catholic Herald.

  11. Site: Ron Paul Institute - Featured Articles
    4 days 21 hours ago
    Author: Ian Proud

    In 1997, veteran U.S. diplomat George Kennan stated that ‘expanding NATO would be the most fateful error of American foreign policy in the entire post-Cold War era’. Twenty-eight years later, who would say he was wrong?

    George Kennan famously authored the U.S. policy of containment of the Soviet Union, in an article in the New York Times of 1947, which he signed X, to maintain his anonymity. His view was that containment would lead to the eventual break up or mellowing of Soviet power and, as it turns out, the former prediction came to pass.

    Yet, he was opposed to the expansion of NATO after the collapse of the Soviet Union and argued that asking European nations to choose between NATO and Russia would eventually lead to conflict.

    In an article in the New York Times of 5 February 1997 he asked: ‘Why, with all the hopeful possibilities engendered by the end of the cold war, should East-West relations become centred on the question of who would be allied with whom and, by implication, against whom in some fanciful, totally unforeseeable and most improbable future military conflict?’

    His article was intended to influence discussions ahead of the July 1997 NATO Summit in Madrid which would consider the planned expansion of NATO to include the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia. Each state had suffered under Soviet repression after World War II but were now free and democratic after the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact.

    Kennan’s warning went unheeded, the NATO Summit agreed to the inclusion of three of the four former Warsaw Pact countries within NATO, excluding Slovakia which had not received the required number of votes in a referendum.

    On 1 May 1998, the U.S. Senate passed a resolution approving expansion, as every NATO member state is required to do. After the Senate Resolution, then President Clinton said at the White House, ”by admitting Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic, we come even closer than ever to realizing a dream of a generation – a Europe that is united, democratic and secure for the first time since the rise of nation-states on the European continent.’

    The idea then, which continues today, is that NATO is a military alliance of countries with the same democratic principles acting as a bulwark against military aggression, by implication, from Russia. Yet, Kennan seemed to consider absurd the idea – which peppers political and media discourse still today – that Russia aspires to conquer western Europe by military means.

    In a separate New York Times article on 2 May 1998, the day after the U.S. Senate resolution, Kennan said, ‘I was particularly bothered by the references to Russia as a country dying to attack Western Europe. Don’t people understand? Our differences in the cold war were with the Soviet Communist regime. And now we are turning our backs on the very people who mounted the greatest bloodless revolution in history to remove that Soviet regime.’

    In his 1997 article, Kennan went on to say that Russia would ‘have no choice but to accept [NATO] expansion as a military fait accompli. But they would continue to regard it as a rebuff by the West and would likely look elsewhere for guarantees of a secure and hopeful future for themselves.’

    Russia did accept the expansion of NATO as a fait accompli, in part because she was too weak to resist. In 1998, the Russian Federation was possibly at its lowest point after the collapse of the Soviet Union. On 17 August 1998, Russia defaulted on its sovereign debt and devalued the rouble. In visibly declining health, President Yeltsin cut an increasingly weak and erratic figure on the world stage. The billionaire oligarch class had built an outsized role in Russian politics, having swept up state assets under the Loans for Shares scheme, and having bankrolled Yeltsin’s 1996 election success, for their own personal gain. Russia was politically, economically and militarily weak, and internally distracted by a costly war in Chechnya. It was by no measure comparable to the fearsome might of the Soviet Union, or a threat to NATO. Indeed, tentatively, and in ways that were sometimes strained, Russia and NATO ended up collaborating, including in Kosovo in 1999.

    The next crunch point came after the terrorist attacks in New York and Washington DC on 11 September 2001.

    President Putin was one of the first world leaders to phone President Bush to express his condolences to the president and to the American people and offer his unequivocal support for whatever reactions the American president might decide to take. This led quite quickly to a period of U.S.-Russia cooperation, including concrete Russian assistance to the U.S. campaign in Afghanistan and acquiescence to the establishment of U.S. bases in Central Asia.

    Michael McFaul, who is now one of the most vocal anti-Russia hawks, wrote an article for the Carnegie Endowment, saying that ‘the potential to build a new foundation for Russia-American relations is great.’ He advanced a radical agenda, starting with a declaration that ‘the United States no longer recognizes Russia as the successor state to the Soviet Union.’ In substantive terms, this meant a repudiation of the idea that Russia represented a threat to NATO in the way that the Soviet Union had.

    McFaul proposed deeper Russia-NATO collaboration and possible future Russian membership, which President Putin had shown a willingness to consider. He also recommended other measures, including removing Soviet era trade restrictions, lifting a ban on NATO countries buying Russian weapons and encouraging a closer relationship between Russia and the EU.

    However, one week after McFaul’s article, the Brookings Institution wrote an article, raising a red flag against any departure from U.S. engagement on across the globe as a concession to the new ‘war on terror.’ Among other things, it pointed out that ‘the new premium on Russian cooperation.. might make it harder or more costly for Washington to proceed with current policy plans to withdraw from the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) treaty, enlarge NATO, or press for human rights in Chechnya.

    Deepening Russian-American collaboration immediately ran up against the separate juggernaut of NATO expansion which had continued to gather pace after the 1998. Nine other former Soviet or Warsaw Pact countries were already waiting in the wings to join NATO, and a comprehensive reboot of relations with Russia would have made expansion more difficult. In the teeth of Russian concern about the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, and western concern about President Putin’s clampdown on the oligarchs, U.S.-Russia collaboration lost steam and NATO pressed on regardless. Seven new Members joined the military alliance in 2004, including the Baltic States, Bulgaria, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia, bringing NATO much closer to Russia’s border.

    In his 5 February 1997 article, Kennan said that NATO expansion ‘may be expected to inflame the nationalistic, anti-Western and militaristic tendencies in Russian opinion; to have an adverse effect on the development of Russian democracy; to restore the atmosphere of the cold war to East-West relations, and to impel Russian foreign policy in directions decidedly not to our liking.’

    Ten years later, on 10 February 2007, President Putin made his now famous speech at the Munich Security Conference, in which he said, ‘I think it is obvious that NATO expansion does not have any relation with the modernisation of the Alliance itself or with ensuring security in Europe. On the contrary, it represents a serious provocation that reduces the level of mutual trust. And we have the right to ask: against whom is this expansion intended?’

    The following year at the 2008 NATO Bucharest summit, nonetheless advanced the idea of Georgia and Ukraine joining NATO one day. President Putin, who joined part of the Summit, conceded in his speech that he could not veto NATO expansion. But he went on to asset that ‘if we introduce [Ukraine] into NATO.. it may put the state on the verge of its existence. Complicated internal political problems are taking place there. We should act.. very-very carefully.’

    His views were again ignored, and the idea of Georgian and Ukrainian membership of NATO was set in train with the consequences that we see today.

    However, a central truth of NATO expansion towards Ukraine, visible to me in 2013 when I first started to focus on Russia, is that western powers have never committed to fighting for Ukraine’s right to join. This is exactly the point that George Kennan acknowledge in his 1998 comments. He said, ‘we have signed up to protect a whole series of countries, even though we have neither the resources nor the intention to do so in any serious way.’

    Looking at Ukraine today, with its de facto exclusion from NATO membership, denied the deployment of U.S. military force to support for its war effort and practically bankrupt from the slow depletion of western financial support, who would say that Kennan was wrong, 28 years ago?

    The 1998 New York Times article in which Kennan was widely quoted also noted that ‘future historians will surely remark upon the utter poverty of imagination that characterized U.S. foreign policy in the late 1990’s’. History would surely judge western foreign policy since 2013 more harshly still.

    Reprinted with permission from Strategic Culture Foundation.

  12. Site: Ron Paul Institute - Featured Articles
    4 days 21 hours ago
    Author: Ron Paul

    Those who hoped the second Trump Administration would reject big spending, war, and restrictions on liberty continue to be disappointed. A new disappointment came when Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced her department would in May begin enforcing the REAL ID law.

    Passed in 2005, the REAL ID Act created federal standards for driver’s licenses. The law requires everyone applying for a driver’s license to provide the DMV with his social security number, proof of legal residence, and two proofs of his home address. The REAL ID Act allows the Homeland Security Department to mandate, as it sees fit, the including of addition items in the related government database, including “biometric” identifiers. Biometric identifiers include personal data such as retina scans, fingerprints, and DNA.

    People who doubt that this database will be used to violate the rights of US citizens should ask what a present-day J. Edgar Hoover — a former FBI director who was notorious for collecting private information on politicians and other prominent individuals — would do with a database containing personal and even biometric information on American citizens. They should also consider the IRS’s history of targeting presidents’ political opponents. Americans also have the threat of violations of their rights by hackers. The government has a poor track record of protecting data of US citizens.

    REAL ID’s supporters deny the law turns state driver’s licenses into national ID cards because states have no mandate to implement REAL ID. However, citizens of any state that refuses to adopt REAL ID will be unable to use their state-issued IDs for boarding an airplane or riding on a train.

    Once the initial uses of REAL ID are established, the government will then require REAL ID for other activities. For instance, local transportation authorities may be offered federal funds to implement REAL ID requirements for public transportation. Several pro-Second Amendment organizations oppose REAL ID because it could be used to monitor gun owners. There is nothing in the law prohibiting a future progressive Homeland Security secretary from requiring REAL ID for a firearms purchase. Imposing a REAL ID mandate on gun ownership would further the authoritarian objective of having a database containing the name and address of, and how many and what type of firearms are owned by, every law-abiding gun owner in the country.

    REAL ID also menaces health freedom. One of the few victories for liberty during the covid hysteria was the failure of “vaccine passport” schemes to be more widely imposed. These schemes attempted to forbid people from returning to their normal lives unless they proved they were “fully vaccinated” against covid.

    REAL ID was marketed as a weapon in the “war on terror.” However, Thomas Massie, the most consistent and courageous defender of liberty in the House of Representatives, pointed out that 9-11 hijackers used passports from their own countries. Rep. Massie wrote, “As long as the pilot’s door is locked and no one has weapons, why do you care that someone who flies has government permission?”

    Like most post-9-11 security bills, REAL ID does nothing to protect the American people’s safety. It does, though, do much to endanger their liberty. REAL ID could even be the final piece of the transformation of America into a total surveillance society where government monitors, and thus controls, our actions. Americans who understand the danger must work to get the Trump administration to reverse its position.

  13. Site: non veni pacem
    4 days 21 hours ago
    Author: Mark Docherty

    (Prudent deployment from Miss B. The timing is remarkable, IYKYK.)

    St. Catherine of Siena in prayer, Cristofano Allori, ARSH 1610

    Won’t you join me in a Novena to St. Catherine of Siena, asking her intercession for the restoration of the Papacy?

    In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.

    Heavenly Father, Thy glory is in Thy saints. We praise Thy glory in the life of the admirable St. Catherine of Siena, virgin and doctor of the Church. Her whole life was a noble sacrifice inspired by an ardent love of Jesus, Thy unblemished Lamb.

    In troubled times she strenuously upheld the rights of His beloved spouse, The Church. Father, honor her merits and hear her prayers for each of us, and for Thy Holy Catholic Church.

    Help us to pass unscathed through the corruption of this world, and to remain unshakably faithful to Thy Holy Catholic Church in word, deed, and example.

    Help us always to see in the Petrine See and true Vicar of Christ an anchor in the storms of life, and a beacon of light to the harbor of Thy Love, in this dark night of Thy times and men’s souls.

    Grant also to each of us our special petition:

    For the restoration of the Papacy from twelve years of usurpation by an Antipope and 28 months of vacancy since the death of Pope Benedict XVI; for a true, valid, virile, deeply Catholic Pope; that we receive the gift of Counsel so that we may quickly and accurately discern the truth of current events and react rightly, and above all, that God’s will be done.

    We ask this through Jesus Christ, Thy Son, in the unity of the Holy Ghost. Amen.

    St. Catherine of Siena, pray for us.

    St. Peter, pray for us.

    Lord Jesus Christ, have mercy on us.

    In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.

     

  14. Site: Mises Institute
    4 days 21 hours ago
    Author: James Bovard
    While establishment historians claim that the British government had no intentions of depriving American colonists of their liberties, actual history tells a different story. Things came to a head April 19, 1775, touching off the American Revolution.
  15. Site: Steyn Online
    4 days 21 hours ago
    If you're in many parts of the Commonwealth (although not Scotland), Happy Easter Monday. If you're in many parts of Europe, Happy Vízbevető, Happy Śmigus-dyngus Happy Velikonoční pondělí or Happy Veľkonočný pondelok, according to taste. If you're in
  16. Site: southern orders
    4 days 21 hours ago

     


    Silerium non Possum has this:

    1. The Congregations of Cardinals: General and Particular

    With the official observation of the death of the Pontiff opens the time of the Congregations of Cardinals, which are distinguished in General and Particular.

    - The General Congregations involve the entire College of Cardinals, even the cardinals over 80 years old who do not have the right to vote in the conclave. Everyone must participate, except for serious impediments. However, cardinals over eighties can decide not to participate.

    - The Particular Congregations are composed of the Camerlengo and three electorate Cardinals, one for each Order (bishops, presbyters, deacons), chosen by sall among those who are already in Rome. These three "Assistants" remain in charge for three days, then they are replaced with a new draw.

    The Particular Congregations deal with ordinary and daily affairs, while the most important issues are delegated to the General Congregations. A decision taken in a Particular Congregation cannot be modified by another of the same type, but only by a General, with a majority of votes.

    The first General Congregation will take place tomorrow, April 22, 2025, at 9 a.m. in the Synod Chamber.

    2. The first acts of the College of Cardinals

    During the first General Congregations (which are held every day), the most urgent acts are carried out. In particular:

    - Establish when and how the Pope's body will be exhibited in the Vatican Basilica, for the tribute of the faithful.

    - Organize the funerals, which will last nine consecutive days (the so-called novendials) and set the date of the funeral, to be completed by the fourth or sixth day, except for special reasons.

    - Prepare the Domus Sanctae Marthae to welcome the electing Cardinals and prepare everything necessary in the Sistine Chapel, where the Conclave will take place. (here an in-depth study)

    - Entrust two meditations to ecclesiastics of proven wisdom, to help the Cardinals to reflect on the problems of the Church and on the choice of the new Pontiff.

    - Approve the expenses related to the vacancy period.

    - Read any documents left by the deceased Pope at the College of Cardinals.

    - Cancel the Fisherman's Ring and the Lead Seal, symbols of papal authority.

    - Draw the rooms of the Domus Sanctae Marthae for the electing Cardinals.

    - Establish the day and time of the beginning of the Conclave.

    3. The Dean of the College presides

    The General Congregations will be chaired by Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the oldest elector by order.

    4. Where the Congregations are held

    The Congregations are held in the new Chamber of the Synod in the Vatican City State.

    Towards the Conclave

    All these steps prepare the decisive moment: the Conclave, the election of the new Pope, which will take place behind closed doors in the Sistine Chapel. But first, the College of Cardinals will have to make a long and deep discernment. Now begins a time of prayer, silence and historical decisions for the universal Church.


    P.L.S.

  17. Site: Fr. Z's Blog
    4 days 22 hours ago
    Author: frz@wdtprs.com (Fr. John Zuhlsdorf)
    From reader(s)… synthesized… QUAERUNTUR: Is it possible to have a Requiem Mass for Francis during the Octave of Easter? It seems that it is not possible, either in the Novus Ordo or in the Vetus Ordo. The Octave outweighs just … Read More →
  18. Site: AsiaNews.it
    4 days 22 hours ago
    For Indian Prime Minister Modi, the pontiff 'was a beacon of compassion, humility and spiritual courage.' The President of Israel Isaac Herzog hopes 'his prayers for peace in the Middle East and for the safe return of the hostages will soon be answered.' Iran also offered its condolences. 'Until the end,' he 'showed the world a beautiful example,' South Korean bishops write. A Mass of suffrage will be held on Wednesday morning at the Holy Sepulchre.
  19. Site: Mises Institute
    4 days 22 hours ago
    Trump needs more easy money for ease the economic destruction of Trump's tax hikes.
  20. Site: Vox Cantoris
    4 days 23 hours ago

    May he have repented for 12 years of horror, and may God have mercy on his soul.  


  21. Site: southern orders
    4 days 23 hours ago


    As Catholics we believe that at the moment of our death we experience our particular judgement. We pray for Pope Francis as he undergoes this experience at the Throne of Almighty God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Given Pope Francis’ state in life and that much was given to him as pope, we can be sure that the particular judgement will be thorough. However, and in the spirit of hope, Pope Francis will have a perfect Lawyer, Advocate, the Crucified and Risen Lord! What could go wrong?

    Retired Archbishop Charles Chaput has penned a kind of obituary of Pope Francis, which seems unkind, but is within the realm of what Pope Francis might experience at his particular judgement. 

    Some will say it is too soon for this kind of critique, but in eternity it has already happened and our prayerful hope is that Pope Francis, even if purgatory is needed, will experience the Divine Mercy of Jesus and eternal life in heaven. (My opinion, and it is only that, is that one’s particular judgement that leads to heaven is a form of purgatory that everyone experiences.)

    This is copied from First Things:

    The Church After Francis

    I have personal memories of Pope Francis that I greatly value: a friendly and generous working relationship at the 1997 Synod on America when we were both newly appointed archbishops; his personal welcome and warmth at Rome’s 2014 Humanum conference; and the extraordinary success of his 2015 visit to Philadelphia for the Eighth World Meeting of Families. He devoted himself to serving the Church and her people in ways that he felt the times demanded. As a brother in the faith, and a successor of Peter, he deserves our ongoing prayers for his eternal life in the presence of the God he loved.

    Having said that, an interregnum between papacies is a time for candor. The lack of it, given today’s challenges, is too expensive. In many ways, whatever its strengths, the Francis pontificate was inadequate to the real issues facing the Church. He had no direct involvement in the Second Vatican Council and seemed to resent the legacy of his immediate predecessors who did; men who worked and suffered to incarnate the council’s teachings faithfully into Catholic life. His personality tended toward the temperamental and autocratic. He resisted even loyal criticism. He had a pattern of ambiguity and loose words that sowed confusion and conflict. In the face of deep cultural fractures on matters of sexual behavior and identity, he condemned gender ideology but seemed to downplay a compelling Christian “theology of the body.” He was impatient with canon law and proper procedure. His signature project, synodality, was heavy on process and deficient in clarity. Despite an inspiring outreach to society’s margins, his papacy lacked a confident, dynamic evangelical zeal. The intellectual excellence to sustain a salvific (and not merely ethical) Christian witness in a skeptical modern world was likewise absent.

    What the Church needs going forward is a leader who can marry personal simplicity with a passion for converting the world to Jesus Christ, a leader who has a heart of courage and a keen intellect to match it. Anything less won’t work.

  22. Site: Mundabor's blog
    4 days 23 hours ago
    Author: Mundabor
    The picture above was taken, the way I understand it, yesterday morning, 20 April 2025, Easter day. I think it is the fitting image to take leave from Francis. The two interpreters are there, smiling, in tune with what should be a relaxed, friendly, actually cordial atmosphere. JD Vance, always the gentleman, is being extremely […]
  23. Site: PaulCraigRoberts.org
    4 days 23 hours ago
    Author: pcr3

    The Deportation Issue is:  Do you prefer White Liberal States to Hispanic States?

    Paul Craig Roberts.

    Like Trump’s on-off-on tariffs, the US Supreme Courts rulings are off-on-maybe-we will see.

    Last week the Court overruled Boasberg and said that Trump had the authority to deport illegal aliens.  But by the time last Saturday arrived, the Court had changed its mind and “paused” the deportation of illegal entrants.  The Court now has decided that those who had entered the US illegally, thus committing a crime, had the right to challenge their deportation in US courts.

    Here is the Supreme Court’s ruling:  “The government is directed not to remove any member of the putative class of detainees from the United States until further order of this court.”  Note the Court’s use of the word “putative.”  The Court is saying that it is uncertain that the illegals are illegals.  Once you have walked in, you are an American, right?  That seems to be the Democrats’ position.  What will the Court’s position be?

    Amazing, isn’t it.  Millions of immigrant-invaders can enter America illegally, but they cannot be deported until they have had their day in court. To be clear, what the US Supreme Court has ruled is that there will be no further deportations.  The 16 or 30 million, or whatever the figure, illegal entrants are here to stay.

    The deportation hearings, which will be shopped to Democrat district and appeal courts, will take years and will not be resolved until Trump’s term is over. 

    For decades American conservatives have thought that the most important reason to have a Republican president is Supreme Court Appointments, but now we see it matters not to have a Republican majority on the Supreme Court. The Court, whether Republican or Democrat, has no comprehension of American survival. The courts are preoccupied with grabbing power from the executive.

    Just as the US took Texas, Colorado, California and the SouthWest from Mexico, the hispanics are taking it back with the aid of the Democrat Party and the US Supreme Court.  And, of course, with the acquiesce  of Republicans who are incapable of fighting.

    The question is: how much do we really care?  Would you prefer to have white liberal Colorado, California, Arizona or Hispanic Colorado, California, and Arizona.  I would prefer the Hispanics.  They are more decent people than white liberals, and, unlike white liberals, they do not hate America.

    Perhaps the ignorant insouciance of the American courts will have the unintended result of replacing anti-American blue states with Hispanic states.  It would be a huge improvement in the quality of America.  

  24. Site: PaulCraigRoberts.org
    4 days 23 hours ago
    Author: pcr3

    Trump Wants a Russian Nuclear Power Plant as Part of the Peace Deal

    Paul Craig Roberts

    It was only yesterday that I asked what would be the next extraneous factor introduced into the Ukrainian peace deal, and it has already made its appearance.  Trump wants the Zaporozhye nuclear power plant, or so the Wall Street Journal claims.

    Zaporozhye is part of the territory that voted overwhelmingly to rejoin Russia, from which it had been torn by Soviet-era officials and again by Washington during the Yeltsin era.  If only Washington could have had the sense to leave Russia alone, there would not be a Ukrainian conflict.

    It is extraordinary that Washington thinks it can determine what is Russia and what is not.  So far Trump’s peace deal includes handing over Ukraine’s rare earths to Washington, handing over the Russian gas pipeline that transports gas through Ukraine to Europe, and a Russian nuclear power plant.  Will Trump next want a US veto over Putin’s decisions?

    None of these extraneous issues introduced into “peace negotiations” affects Putin’s commitment to negotiation, the implication being that Putin will accept any terms.  One can’t help but wonder at what point Putin regrets not paying more attention to being prepared for conflict than engaging in fruitless negotiations and “peace deals” such as the Minsk Agreement, and quickly bringing a victorious close to the conflict that Washington and its Ukrainian puppet brought to Donbas Russians.  This extraordinary blunder of trusting deals with the West has left Putin with a never-ending, ever-widening conflict with Britain and France threatening war with Russia.  

  25. Site: PaulCraigRoberts.org
    4 days 23 hours ago
    Author: pcr3

    The Congolese government takes its cue from the Biden regime

    Paul Craig Roberts

    RT reports that the “Democratic Republic” of Congo “has banned former President Joseph Kabila’s political party and ordered his assets to be seized.”  https://www.rt.com/africa/616048-dr-congo-seizes-former-president-assets/ 

    This is what the Biden regime and a corrupt New York “judicial” system tried to do to Trump.  Or has the Democrat attempt to imprison Trump and to steal Trump’s New York property already been forgotten?

    In parts of Africa, Asia, and South America, succeeding governments have a habit of criminalizing the previous government.  In the US the Democrats and whore media adopted this practice in their effort to deny Trump reelection.

    Try to imagine what is going to happen to Trump and his supporters when his efforts to renew America are defeated by the American Establishment, and Democrats return to power.  No white heterosexual conservative American will be safe.

    The current conflict is existential.  If Trump goes down, America goes down.

  26. Site: Mises Institute
    4 days 23 hours ago
    The dollar has fallen sharply since President Donald Trump’s inauguration in January.
  27. Site: Saint Louis Catholic
    4 days 23 hours ago
    Author: thetimman

    On the death of Jorge Mario Bergoglio:

    Now is not the time to dissect all of the evil done, caused and allowed. Outrage at the man, his friends and his soft critics should give way to sincere prayers that he was given, and took, a moment before it was too late, to be reconciled with God.

    We all want that moment, whatever evil we have done, caused, and allowed.

    The Risen Savior, Our Lord Jesus Christ, is victorious. He is King.

    I echo Ann B in her call for prayers for the Church and the Papacy:

    Like Our Lady and the nascent Church on Holy Saturday, we watch and pray. Let’s see what the Divine Providence has in store. Let’s give Him room to work, always trusting implicitly in His goodness, and that His Church is VISIBLE.

    Eternal rest grant unto him O Lord, and may perpetual light shine upon him. May he rest in peace. Amen

    May the souls of the faithful departed through the mercy of God rest in peace. Amen.

  28. Site: PaulCraigRoberts.org
    4 days 23 hours ago
    Author: pcr3

    Israel Still Intends to Start World War III

    Where are the American, Russian, Chinese ultimatums to Israel to stop the insanity”

    https://www.rt.com/news/616012-israel-mulls-strike-on-iran/ 

  29. Site: PaulCraigRoberts.org
    4 days 23 hours ago
    Author: pcr3

    Jean Raspail Predicted that the Camp of the Saints also becomes Russia’s fate

    The Director of the Russian Valdai Club says “Russia can’t be like Western Europe, the crisis must be stopped before it starts.”

    Timothy Bordachev describes an idealistic, not realistic, solution for Russia.

    https://www.rt.com/russia/615956-from-tolerance-to-ticking-time-bomb/ 

  30. Site: PaulCraigRoberts.org
    5 days 23 sec ago
    Author: pcr3

    Why is tiny Estonia preaching war with Russia?

    Estonian Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna is an example of the mental instability that affects Baltic politicians.  He says Russia is planning to attack Europe in a “couple of years.”

    Why?  What does Russia want with the myriad problems of Europe?  Broken economies.  Degenerating cultures. Towers of Babel.  

    It is Russia that is under attack from the West.  It is Western governments–France, Estonia, Germany, the UK–issuing military threats to Russia.  Why are militarily impotent countries issuing threats to Russia?

    https://www.rt.com/news/616025-estonia-nato-ukraine-tsahkna/ 

  31. Site: PaulCraigRoberts.org
    5 days 1 min ago
    Author: pcr3
  32. Site: PaulCraigRoberts.org
    5 days 1 min ago
    Author: pcr3

    Judge Boasberg Makes a Fool of Himself

    The activist politicized Democrat judge Boasberg, overruled by the US Supreme Court (https://www.westernjournal.com/trump-admin-scores-second-scotus-win-allowing-move-forward-deportations/?ff_source=email&ff_medium=elliance-patriot-update&ff_campaign=CAN&ff_content=2025-04-18 ), which said the Trump administration has the authority to remove the illegal aliens and which also said that Boasberg has no jurisdiction over the case because the case belongs in Texas, not D.C., alleges that “the fact that his court lacked jurisdiction over the matter does not excuse Trump administration officials from complying with his directives.” https://www.westernjournal.com/white-house-fires-back-judge-boasberg-issues-criminal-contempt-decision-trump-admin/?ff_source=email&ff_medium=elliance-patriot-update&ff_campaign=CAN&ff_content=2025-04-18 

    It appears that Boasberg is so politicized that he doesn’t mind making a fool of himself if it puts out a false narrative for the white liberal press to use to demonize President Trump.

  33. Site: PaulCraigRoberts.org
    5 days 2 min ago
    Author: pcr3

    Laughter Is Good for Us

    https://x.com/RealDonKeith/status/1912496724888690887 

    Of course, the DEI freaks will claim that the laughter is white people laughing at a black man.  

  34. Site: Mundabor's blog
    5 days 31 min ago
    Author: Mundabor
    Because we Christians pray for our enemies, I ask you to say a prayer for the deceased Pope Francis, evil clown and enemy of Christ, who has now already undergone his terrible judgment. Every soul has infinite value, and God ***antecedently*** wants to save all souls. It follows that we, as Christians, have a duty […]
  35. Site: AsiaNews.it
    5 days 40 min ago
    One of the great signs of the pontificate that ended this morning with the death of Pope Francis is his care for the peripheries of the world. The archbishop of Hyderabad, the first Dalit called to join the College of Cardinals in 2022, pays tribute to the late pontiff who 'looked each person in the eye, not as a number, but as a soul beloved by God.'
  36. Site: RadTrad Thomist
    5 days 51 min ago


    He died without revealing the truth about the Imposter Sister Lucy. Sister Lucy Truth will have a daily blog as to what is happening in Rome during this time of funeral and pre-conclave. Pray for us and support us in our goals. 

  37. Site: Mises Institute
    5 days 53 min ago
    Author: Frank Shostak
    Keynesians claim that through the "multiplier," a country can spend itself into prosperity. All that is needed is for government to tax, borrow, print money and spend, and prosperity will follow. Austrian Economists, however, are not fooled by such myths.
  38. Site: Crisis Magazine
    5 days 55 min ago
    Author: Eric Sammons

    I remember distinctly the day Jorge Bergoglio was elected pope. Working for a diocese, I was in the middle of a meeting with an older woman and a deacon. They wanted to know if they could start a support group for families with members who were same-sex attracted. The woman’s son was a practicing homosexual, and she wanted to support him in his lifestyle (i.e., endorse sin). I was in the process…

    Source

  39. Site: Mises Institute
    5 days 55 min ago
    The continuing bear market in bonds is not helped by Trumps repeated calls for more monetary inflation.
  40. Site: Fr. Z's Blog
    5 days 1 hour ago
    Author: frz@wdtprs.com (Fr. John Zuhlsdorf)
    Now that Francis has gone to God, our role is to pray not only that that God will be merciful to him, but also for the election of a new Pope who will be … better than we deserve! Let … Read More →
  41. Site: southern orders
    5 days 1 hour ago


     Eternal rest, O Lord, grant unto Pope Francis, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon him. May he rest in peace. Amen. May his soul and the souls of all the faithful departed rest in peace. Amen. 

    I can’t think of a better way for a dying pope to die. He was able to give his final Easter Urbi et Orbi blessing to the world and say his last words to the Church and all people.

    He was able to ride in the pope mobile into St. Peter’s Square and greet the faithful including children to whom he gave candy. 

    What a heroic Holy Week he had. A visit to a prison on Holy Thursday, meeting with Vice President Vance on Sunday and the Urbi et Orbi blessing and ride in Saint Peter’s Square!

    Death on Easter Monday!

    Prayer for a Deceased Pope (from the Roman Missal)

    God, Who, in Thine ineffable providence, didst will that Thy servant N... should be numbered among the high priests, grant, we beseech Thee, that he, who on earth held the place of Thine only-begotten Son, may be joined forevermore to the fellowship of Thy holy pontiffs. Through the same Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth with Thee in the unity of the Holy Ghost, God, world without end.
    Amen.
  42. Site: Fr. Z's Blog
    5 days 1 hour ago
    Author: frz@wdtprs.com (Fr. John Zuhlsdorf)
    Francis’s soul went before the Just Judge at about 07:35 this morning, Easter Monday. The vast majority of the Catholic world accepted readily that Francis was the legitimate Successor of Peter, the Vicar of Christ. Others questioned whether he was … Read More →
  43. Site: Novus Motus Liturgicus
    5 days 1 hour ago
    In the Roman Rite, the minor Hours of Easter and its octave are celebrated according to a very simple and archaic form, which consists solely of the psalmody, the antiphon Haec dies, and the prayer, with the usual introduction and conclusion. (Haec dies is labeled as an “antiphon” in the Breviary, but it is identical to the first part of the gradual sung at Mass each day of Easter week, and is Gregory DiPippohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13295638279418781125noreply@blogger.com0
  44. Site: Novus Ordo Watch
    5 days 1 hour ago
    Author: admin

    Jorge Bergoglio called to judgment at 88…

    VATICAN ANNOUNCES:
    ‘POPE’ FRANCIS IS DEAD

    LATEST UPDATE: 22-APR-2025 21:55 UTC

    Jorge Mario Bergoglio (Dec. 17, 1936 – Apr. 21, 2025)

    After 4422 days, the reign of terror of the ‘humble Pope’ Francis has finally come to an end: The Argentinian Jesuit Jorge Mario Bergoglio is dead.

    The Chamberlain (Camerlengo) of the Apostolic Chamber, theAmerican ‘Cardinal’ Kevin Farrell, announced the death of the Argentinian apostate this morning at the Vatican (video direct link):

    .

    Subsequently, the director of the Vatican Press Office, Matteo Bruni, released the following statement:

    At 9.47 this morning, His Eminence Cardinal Kevin Joseph Farrell, Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church, announced with sorrow the death of Pope Francis, with these words:

    “Dearest brothers and sisters, with deep sorrow I must announce the death of our Holy Father Francis.

    READ MORE
  45. Site: Novus Ordo Wire – Novus Ordo Watch
    5 days 1 hour ago
    Author: admin

    Jorge Bergoglio called to judgment at 88…

    VATICAN ANNOUNCES:
    ‘POPE’ FRANCIS IS DEAD

    LATEST UPDATE: 22-APR-2025 21:55 UTC

    Jorge Mario Bergoglio (Dec. 17, 1936 – Apr. 21, 2025)

    After 4422 days, the reign of terror of the ‘humble Pope’ Francis has finally come to an end: The Argentinian Jesuit Jorge Mario Bergoglio is dead.

    The Chamberlain (Camerlengo) of the Apostolic Chamber, theAmerican ‘Cardinal’ Kevin Farrell, announced the death of the Argentinian apostate this morning at the Vatican (video direct link):

    .

    Subsequently, the director of the Vatican Press Office, Matteo Bruni, released the following statement:

    At 9.47 this morning, His Eminence Cardinal Kevin Joseph Farrell, Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church, announced with sorrow the death of Pope Francis, with these words:

    “Dearest brothers and sisters, with deep sorrow I must announce the death of our Holy Father Francis.

    READ MORE
  46. Site: Fr. Z's Blog
    5 days 2 hours ago
    Author: frz@wdtprs.com (Fr. John Zuhlsdorf)
    The Roman Station today is St. Peter’s on the Vatican Hill. Today we heard about what a liturgical octave is. Also, Scott Hahn describes how all of creation is like an orchestra played by angels for the sake of divine … Read More →
  47. Site: AsiaNews.it
    5 days 2 hours ago
    The pontiff died suddenly this morning at 7:35 am. Card Farrell, Prefect of the Dicastery for the Laity and Camerlengo of the Church, made the announcement. 'He taught us to live the values of the Gospel with fidelity, courage, and universal love, especially in favor of the poorest and most marginalized.' His last Urbi et Orbi message came yesterday.
  48. Site: LES FEMMES - THE TRUTH
    5 days 2 hours ago
    Author: noreply@blogger.com (Mary Ann Kreitzer)
  49. Site: Crisis Magazine
    5 days 2 hours ago
    Author: Charles Coulombe

    This year, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts will observe Patriots’ Day on Monday, April 21, in honor of events that took place on April 19: the battles of Lexington, Concord, and Menotomy (Arlington). These are generally considered the beginning of the American Revolution, the first civil war, which resulted in the formation of these United States. But this year, the festivities are very special…

    Source

  50. Site: Mises Institute
    5 days 2 hours ago
    The news comes after Elon Musk lowered expectations of the group’s savings from $1 trillion to $150 billion by the end of the fiscal year.

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