Depressing autopsy of how Pres. Obama promotes Socialism in less than 5 minutes

Here is a brief video from Dick Morris (who knows a thing or two about political maneuvering). He explains “How Obama Used the Economic Crisis to Promote Socialism in America”.

Remember now-Mayor of Chicago’s phrase: Never let a crisis go to waste?

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Posted in Pò sì jiù, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
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The “Dripping With Irony Award” goes to…

I read this and had to set my coffee cup down…

From CNS:

Pelosi: ‘I’m Like a Lioness’ When It Comes to Protecting Children

(CNSNews.com) — House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) yesterday described herself as a “lioness” when it comes to protecting children.

[…]

“As you probably know by now, that when it comes to the children from my standpoint, I’m like a lioness,” she said. “Just don’t mess with the children, okay?”

Surreal… surreal and loathsome.

Posted in 1983 CIC can. 915, You must be joking! | Tagged , ,
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Chicago: meltdown

I saw this astonishing and yet not at all surprising piece by Rich Lowry.

But will anything useful be done about this?  Who wants to bet?

Chicago suffering social meltdown

For most of the country, July Fourth weekend means hot dogs, fireworks and relaxing time with family. In certain neighborhoods in Chicago, it means something very different. For the second year running, Chicago saw a spate of violence over the long holiday weekend that would generate headlines if it happened in Kabul.

“It’s Groundhog Day here in Chicago” is how Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy put it. This year, the tally of shame was more than 80 people shot and 14 killed. Last year, a slightly longer July Fourth weekend — the holiday fell on a Thursday — saw 75 people shot and 12 fatalities.

The astonishing numbers underline how Chicago, despite recent progress on crime, is still a byword for gunplay and urban chaos. It is a city where life, at least among young men living in the most dangerous neighborhoods, is cheap.

Chicago’s killings can’t readily be interpreted through a racial prism, so they don’t provoke gales of outrage from the nation’s opinion-makers. Only very rarely do they become national causes, as in the heartbreaking case of 15-year-old Hadiya Pendleton, shot to death shortly after performing at President Barack Obama’s inauguration last year.

Chicago saw its homicides soar from roughly 430 in 2011 to more than 500 in 2012, before it got them back down below 2011 levels last year, thanks to more aggressive policing. They are running slightly lower again this year, although they are still higher than in New York City, even though Chicago is a third of the size.

Why is Chicago the nation’s murder capital? [BTW… Honduras, where Card. Rodriguez Maradiaga is prelate, is apparently the murder capital of the world.] Its officials always want [pointlessly] to talk about gun laws, and Superintendent McCarthy complained about their laxity after the latest shootings. This is bizarre, since Chicago has some of the strictest gun laws in the country, and has been slapped down in the courts for trampling on the Second Amendment in its zeal to make it all but impossible to own guns. Chicago is a running illustration of the cliche that if you ban guns, only criminals will own them. [Exactly.]

Gun laws are beside the point. The tony Chicago neighborhood of Hyde Park could have the same laws as gun-friendly Vermont and it would still be extremely safe. What Chicago is suffering from is not a random citywide phenomenon, but a specific, highly concentrated one.

Overall, according to Chicago magazine, the rate of nonfatal gunshot injury in Chicago was 46.5 per 100,000 from 2006 to 2012. But it was only 1.62 per 100,000 for whites. For blacks, it was 112.83 per 100,000. For black males, 239.77, and for black males aged 18-34, 599.65, or “a staggering one in 200.

A study by sociologist Andrew Papachristos shows that the shootings overwhelmingly occur among a small network of criminal offenders.

Chicago is grappling with the profound social breakdown of certain neighborhoods, where the two-parent family has been obliterated and where, too often, young men consider lawlessness the norm. It is here, as Heather Mac Donald of City Journal writes, that gang members define themselves not by “family, or academic accomplishments or interests, but ruthless fealty to small, otherwise indistinguishable, pieces of territory.”

[…]

One enormous problem: fatherless homes.

When you screw around with how God made us to live, through social engineering and programs which clearly promote a breakdown of the family, civic chaos will be the result.

Posted in Pò sì jiù, The Coming Storm, The Drill | Tagged ,
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Ft. Worth, TX – Sunday 13 July – TLM with Bp. Olson

I was delighted to receive news that His Excellency Most Rev. Michael Olson, Bishop of Ft. Worth, will preside at Holy Mass celebrated in the Extraordinary Form on Sunday 13 July.  HERE

Details are a little sketchy.  I assume that Mass will be at St. Mary of the Assumption located on the South side of downtown Fort Worth. There may be a pot luck after. It seems that Mass may begin at 5:30 pm. The web site of the TLM community isn’t too descriptive, but I think those are the basics.

I think this is great news!

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged ,
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Advice from a priest: use protection!

I am sure you remember my scare-warnings that, “It doesn’t happen to you, until it does!”

One of the things you need to plan for is the protection of your electronic stuff, which we rely on a lot and often spend a lot of money on.  That’s why people need “Uninterruptible Power Sources” or UPS.  I have posted about them HERE and HERE.

These things are powerful surge protectors and back-up batteries which will keep your equipment running steady on in the case of power loss.  They can give you time to shut things like computers down normally or keep them safe from momentary or short power outages.  They come with software which will shut your computer down automatically if the battery runs low.  Useful if you are away.

I just had a note from a priest who lives in the countryside.

I have two APC Back-UPS ES 550. I had all electronics plugged in. Just now, out of the blue sky, though there were some nearby clouds, lightning hit my little dwelling. A direct hit, leaving things literally sizzling outside for a couple of seconds. Everything inside was in good working order, however, because of the UPS units. They have saved equipment and work many times. I suppose I should replace them one day. They must wear out after a while. I’ll have to search WDTPRS for a link. Thanks for prepping us all for those times when “It doesn’t happen to you, until it does.”

There are lots of options.  A good one is HERE.

I have had the best experience from APC products, included customer service hands down.  I have had the worst with Ultra.  Yuck.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Mail from priests, Semper Paratus, The Drill | Tagged ,
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HHS money to church entities long before waves of illegal immigrants

Via Pewsitter I learned of this from Liberty News. My emphases.

EXCLUSIVE: HHS Bankrolled Catholic and Baptist Church from 2010 to 2013 to Prepare for Obama’s 2014 Invasion!

A month or two ago news broke that Obama’s HHS was calling for private contractors to help transport illegal aliens throughout the interior United States. What made this already big news even bigger is the fact that the original call for proposals came out in January, long before the bulk of the illegal alien surge began.
The breaking news you’re about to read is ten times bigger, because the following proves the Obama administration was bankrolling America’s churches back in 2010. And the tens of millions were flowing in to prepare for the invasion currently underway.
The following is a small taste of what’s out there in grant records. This is just the tip of the iceberg, folks.
Between Dec 2010 and Nov 2013, the Catholic Charities Diocese of Galveston received $15,549,078 in federal grants from Health & Human Services for “Unaccompanied Alien Children Project” with a program description of “Refugee and Entry Assistance.”
Last year, the Catholic Charities Diocese of Fort Worth received $350,000 from Department of Homeland Security for “citizenship and education training” with a program description of “citizenship and immigration services.”
Between September 2010 and September 2013, the Catholic Charities of Dallas received $823,658 from the Department of Homeland Security for “Citizenship Education Training” for “refugee and entrant assistance.”
From Dec 2012 to January 2014, Baptist Child & Family Services received $62,111,126 in federal grants from Health & Human Services for “Unaccompanied Alien Children Program.”

All that money from the feds… from our taxes.  What could go wrong?

Moderation queue is ON.

UPDATE:

I was sent a link to the Catholic Charities site of Galveston-Houston, which is fair and appropriate to post.  HERE  They give their criteria for assistance for deferred action in regard to illegal immigrants.

Posted in Liberals, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
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Pontifical Masses proliferate

Is it just me, or has there been an increase in the number of Pontifical Masses in the traditional Roman Rite lately?

I just saw this at NLM:

On the occasion of the 7th anniversary of the promulgation of Summorum Pontificum, His Excellency Archbishop Michael J. Sheehan celebrated a Pontifical Mass at the Throne in Albuquerque, NM. All the best from NLM to Archbishop Sheehan and all those who helped to make this Mass possible.

Also, I heard that in my native place of St. Paul and Minneapolis Most Rev. Drew Cozzens will be present, at least, for a Solemn Mass and then confer the Sacrament of Confirmation.  UPDATE: I am told that it will be a Pontifical Mass.  Even Better!

Lately, the Extraordinary Ordinary, Most Rev. Robert C. Morlino pontificate at the throne in Madison. He is slated to do so again on 15 August.

It takes some effort to get these Masses together.  There are lots of moving parts.  People have to give of their time and have some practices.  It is good to see that they are becoming more common.  This is part of the unstoppable trend.

Don’t give up.  Don’t flag.  Don’t back off.

Posted in Brick by Brick, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged ,
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No, this isn’t a war zone.

I saw a piece at the Daily Mail with beautifully horrible photos of wrecked and run-down church in Philadelphia.   HERE

Here is one of them.

No, this isn’t a war zone (technically, at least).

First, Our Lord promised that, in the end, Hell wouldn’t prevail against His Church.  He didn’t say anything about Hell not prevailing in Philadelphia… or where you live.

Second, if you want your parish, you can keep your parish.  Gosh, in the wake of the “Affordable Care Act”, that sounds a little ominous, doesn’t it.  The point is that parishes have bills to pay and parishes need priests.  If you don’t pay the bills and if you don’t provide solid vocations to the priesthood through prayer, promotion and sacrifice, this is what happens.  That means that you, dear readers, must with joy support interest in a vocation to the priesthood in your families.  It also means that you should also provide feedback and support for formation for priests.  Lousy priests can equate to everything from emptying pews to emptying coffers.  Be engaged.

So, photos like these can also underscore the creative destruction that takes place from time to time everywhere.  Sometimes things break down.  Then something new is rebuilt.

But none of what you want and need as Catholics is free.  You can and must (it is a precept of the Church) contribute by your time, your talents and your treasure.

If you don’t contribute, you are part of the problem.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Our Catholic Identity, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
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Dems vote for constitutional amendment to limit free speech and freedom of religion

This is by Zac Morgan, a staff attorney at the Center for Competitive Politics writing at NRO.  My emphases and comments.

Does Religious Speech Threaten Democracy?
It could be restricted or banned under a constitutional amendment Democrats have proposed.

The Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday approved by a 10–8 vote a constitutional amendment that, if passed, would functionally eliminate the political rights of speech and association. While the committee made the language more succinct than in its original iteration, the law still poses a profound threat to fundamental liberties. [Mind you, a constitutional amendment doesn’t happen over night, but… it has to start somewhere.]

For instance, Congress probably would have the power to ban religious sermons and church literature. [Can you feel things sliding in this direction?  This will fail, of course.  BUT… in the failure, they will have bumped the paradigm a little bit in this direction.  Call it creeping incrementalism.  That’s how liberals work.]

Section 1 of the amendment permits Congress and the states to “advance democratic self-government” — whatever that means — “and political equality” by “regulat[ing] and set[ting] reasonable limits on the raising and spending of money by candidates and others to influence elections.” [Thus limiting free speech.  “No. You may not freely spend your own money to advance some cause.”]

Section 2 specifically permits the federal and state governments to “distinguish between natural persons and corporations or other artificial entities created by law, including prohibiting such entities from spending money to influence elections.”

And section 3 — in a perfect demonstration that the eight Judiciary Committee members who are lawyers, yet voted for the measure, failed to pay attention in law school — claims to prevent anyone from reading the amendment in such a way as “to grant Congress or the States the power to abridge the freedom of the press.” [the press… which is on the side of the dems]

The First Amendment, as drafted by men such as Fisher Ames and James Madison, protects five freedoms: speech, press, assembly, petition, and religion. The newly minted constitutional amendment mentions only one of those as being untarnished — “press.”

Under a longstanding principle of statutory interpretation — expressio unius est exclusio alterius — the explicit naming of one member of a class means that the other members of that class are excluded. So, under this amendment, as long as the interests of “democratic self-governance” and “political equality” are “reasonably” at issue, Congress or the states may infringe on speech, assembly, petition, and religious freedoms.

There’s honestly no limit to the number of examples of “reasonable” restrictions that could be drawn under this amendment, but let’s discuss a particularly troubling one.

[…]

Read the rest there.

 

Posted in Blatteroons, Liberals, Pò sì jiù, Religious Liberty | Tagged , , ,
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Benedict XVI empowered a movement that will bring beauty back to the sanctuary and to the whole world.

I saw this in The Week.  My emphases and comments:

In defense of Pope Benedict and the Latin Mass

Twelve summers ago I entered a dusty little church in a Polish neighborhood in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., that Poles had abandoned long ago. It was a 45-minute drive from my home. The old, wooden high altar and the sanctuary it sat in had not been renovated, marked as they were by New York state as too historically important to endure the trendy changes of church architecture in the 1960s, ’70s, and ’80s. The people there were a crusty lot, hardened by years of struggle between their own bishops and priests. Some were made saintly by this. Others were conspiracists, and grouchy.  A few seemed to be all of the above.  [Sounds about right.] I watched the women, young and old, adjust mantillas on their heads, and pray sotto voce. I marveled at the pious silence of the children. A few amateurs intoned the Gregorian chants for that day, as a priest quietly and efficiently offered the old Latin Mass. [Situation normal.]

Seven years ago this week, Pope Benedict would deliver the relief of my life. [Do I hear an “Amen!”?] He declared that what we did in those days was legal. He affirmed what we told ourselves as we were chased out of that parish, that this form of worship had never been abolished and never ought to be. On the very portentous [c’mon… it’s either portentous or it isn’t] date of July 7, 2007, he issued the document Summorum Pontificum, which liberated that Mass. By doing so he established his legacy as a brave pope. He also did a great service for culture and the arts, for the whole world — even for nonbelievers. [Again, an “Amen!”? So far, Summorum Pontificum is one of the most important documents of the 21st century.]

Why does it matter to nonbelievers? Because beauty matters to everyone. In 1971, Agatha Christie, not a Catholic, was so appalled at the disappearance of the traditional Mass and the effect this would have on English culture that she signed a petition to Pope Paul VI to keep it alive in England. It read, in part:

The rite in question, in its magnificent Latin text, has also inspired a host of priceless achievements in the arts — not only mystical works, but works by poets, philosophers, musicians, architects, painters and sculptors in all countries and epochs. Thus, it belongs to universal culture as well as to churchmen and formal Christians. [Traditio] [Paul VI was a great fan of Agatha Christie.  Sometimes the indult granted for England was called the “Agatha Christie Indult”.]

Because of Benedict’s intervention, my own parish in Norwalk, Conn., [Great place with a great parish priest!] is treated not only to Gregorian chant, but to Renaissance-era motets, and Masses composed by Morales and Monteverdi. It is an aesthetic high crime that so much of the modern church continues to force saccharine and theologically insipid hymns like “Here I am, Lord” on its people, while leaving William Byrd’s Ave Verum Corpus in a dusty attic. [Abandoning Latin slammed the door to the Church’s treasury of sacred music, thus robbing millions of the patrimony.  Thieves.  Also, back in the day, a group of advisors to the liturgy committee of the US bishops conference said that the purpose of music was to create a “human experience”.  FAIL!  Moreover, sacred music is not just an ad on.  It is PRAYER.  This makes me sooooo angry.]

Summorum came too late to save that community in Poughkeepsie. In the New York Archdiocese as then ruled by Cardinal Edward Egan, the offense of saying this Mass and publishing tracts in its favor was treated as a far more serious crime and scandal than clerical pederasty. [Exaggerating to make a point.] Cardinal Egan suspended my Poughkeepsie priest, and effectively exiled him from the life of the church. Priests who knew about the situation observed darkly that if he had raped children instead of saying this Mass, his career would have been better off. [Plus ça change…]

The modus operandi then was that these Latin Mass people — “the crazies,” as they were called in the archbishop’s office — [Many of the same people are still in the chancery there, btw.] should be contained in Saint Agnes in midtown Manhattan or in a few obscure parishes along the Hudson River. Egan was all too happy to see that Poughkeepsie parish closed and the building sold. He smudged us out like a penciled mistake.

Benedict’s intervention urged bishops to make every accommodation for communities like ours. He grounded this in a solid principle of religion, writing: “What was sacred for prior generations, remains sacred and great for us as well, and cannot be suddenly prohibited altogether or even judged harmful.”

The growth of this movement within the church has been phenomenal. In 1988, there were 20 regularly scheduled and diocesan-approved Latin Masses in the United States. After Summorum Pontificum, there are now more than 500. And because the movement to restore beauty and solemnity to worship is growing, it is also becoming more mainstream and diverse, less “crusty” and forbidding as it seemed to me over a decade ago.

Benedict’s intervention was not perfect. [True.] His intellectual attempt to save the Council and the new Mass from criticism with a “hermeneutic of continuity” was a noble failure. [It’s a little too early to tell what the effect of the “gravitational pull” the use of two forms will create.] If the council intended continuity, why did it throw every aspect of Catholic worship up for possible revision in its documents?  [I don’t think it did.  The Council Fathers actually called for very few things to be done in the reform.  BUT… and this is huge… the “experts” who were handed the job used their position and the authority of the Council to run wayyyy beyond their mandate.  And the got Paul VI to sign off on the disaster.  If you want to know more about this, try the revelatory kiss-n-tell by Piero Marini.  An enemy of Benedict XVI’s vision, he describes the inner workings of and thought driving the Consilium.]Why was the council swiftly followed by the worst spasm of iconoclasm in the history of the church — a tearing down of altars, images, statues —

Click!

and a hasty revision to nearly every part of Catholic life? [Change the way we pray and you will change what we believe and, therefore, how we behave as Catholics.]

A first-year student of religious studies would recognize that changing a religion’s central act of worship — altering the rationales for it, modifying all its physical and verbal aspects — is not merely an “update” or sign of organic growth and maturation, but a mixture of vandalism and revolution. Even today, as more young and growing families attach themselves to the ancient rite, rearguard apologists for the 1960s insist on a 1930s critique that the old Mass cannot speak to modern man. But that is another, sadder essay.

Luckily, the maligned and misunderstood Pope Benedict made this generous gesture to embattled Latin Massers seven years ago. It has empowered a movement in the church that will bring back beauty not only to the sanctuary, but to the whole world as well.

Well done.

Sounds a little familiar.

What does that remind me of?

Posted in Be The Maquis, Fr. Z KUDOS, Hard-Identity Catholicism, HONORED GUESTS, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged , , , , , , ,
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