PLUTO!

NASA has released photos of Pluto and its moon, the aptly named Charon.

The craft New Horizons made its closest approach to Pluto today, 14 July 2015.

Here is a false color composite:

pluto charon

 

New Horizons’ almost 10-year, three-billion-mile journey to closest approach at Pluto took about one minute less than predicted when the craft was launched in January 2006. The spacecraft threaded the needle through a 36-by-57 mile (60 by 90 kilometers) window in space — the equivalent of a commercial airliner arriving no more off target than the width of a tennis ball.

Because New Horizons is the fastest spacecraft ever launched – hurtling through the Pluto system at more than 30,000 mph, a collision with a particle as small as a grain of rice could incapacitate the spacecraft. Once it reestablishes contact Tuesday night, it will take 16 months for New Horizons to send its cache of data – 10 years’ worth — back to Earth.

More HERE.

Pluto 02

Posted in Just Too Cool, Look! Up in the sky! | Tagged , , ,
10 Comments

The View From The Fascist Fainting Couch

fainting couch 02Over at the Fishwrap (aka National Sodomitic Reporter – organ of record for the promotion of heresy and same-sex impurity for liberal catholics) MS Winters has had still another case of the vapors.

From his view athwart the NSR fainting couch, Winters penned a long, mostly dull, yet nasty screed against, among others, his favorite bête noire, Acton Institute.  HERE

Notice what Winters does.  First, he indulges in a simply nasty ad hominem attack (which I don’t cite here) on Fr. Robert Sirico, head of Acton Institute. Later, he suggests that Pope Francis – yes, the Pope – should censor Acton… why?

Pope Francis said on the plane back from Latin America that before he comes to the U.S. in September he will read some of the criticisms of his words. Here are two candidates for his reading. Gregg and his colleagues at Acton are ideologues, pure and simple, and the pope need not address their arguments, only their influence. Well funded, they try to spread their laissez faire Gospel throughout the ecclesial world, flying in bishops from developing nations to their seminars and lectures. Anything the pope could do to clip their wings would be welcome.

Get that?

Scratch a liberal and a fascist bleeds.

Winters wants his enemy to be repressed by papal authority.

It is marvelously ironic that anyone at the Fishwrap wants an intervention of papal authority.  When has the Fishwrap respected ecclesial authority?

Moreover, the claim that Acton pushes “laissez faire” capitalism is a lie, but the Wile. E. Coyote of contemporary liberal catholicism is willing to tell it boldly and repeatedly. HERE

What else might lie behind MsW’s fascist approach to Acton?

Think about what is at stake for Fishwrap and its writers.

Who will hold the line on the Church’s moral teaching at the Synod of Bishops?  Bishops from “developing countries” (read: Africa).

Bishops in developing countries are willing to listen to Acton because what Acton promotes (not laissez-faire capitalism) helps to lift real people from poverty.

Finally, what’s sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.

To the Catholic Bishops of these United States:

Please require that the Fishwrap remove the word “Catholic” from their title.

Require them – finally – to stop pretending.  Require them to follow the ruling of the bishop of the place where they have their offices, Kansas City.

national-schismatic-reporter-color_cropped

“Hey… does that look like a snake to you?”
“Yah… it does kinda!”
“No, it’s a viper.”
“Yah, a viper. You know.. it’s a kind of snake. Poisonous. With venom.”
“But… it’s still a snake… right?”
“You know the old Persian proverb….”

“Okay, I’ll bite. What Per….”
“He has eaten so many snakes that he has become a viper.”

“What the hell are you talking about?”
“I thought we were talking about the Fishwrap.”
“We ARE talking about…”
“Shut up and watch the movie!”

 

Posted in Liberals, One Man & One Woman, Self-absorbed Promethean Neopelagians, Sin That Cries To Heaven, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , , , , ,
16 Comments

UPDATE: Want to study Latin with the famous Fr. Reginald Foster? Now you can!

Ossa Latinitatis Sola

CLICK ME!

UPDATE 14 July:

I will, along with you readers, take partial credit for this:

15_07_14_Ossa_amazon

 

From what I can tell from my Amazon stats, you have purchased, so far, 276 copies.

That’s a good start!

UPDATE Published on: Jun 22, 2015 @ 11:23

I’m reposting this so more of you can have this opportunity.

So far I see that 211 volumes have been ordered through my link.  Happy people!

Now available for order in the UK – £23.75! HERE

___ Original Jun 11, 2015 @ 17:52 CDT ___

I was blessed to have many years of study of Latin with the former Latin scribe for 4 Popes, Fr. Reginald Foster, OCD.

Foster had intense courses for all comers during the academic year and super intense courses during the summers. The homework sheets took most people several hours to complete. There were amazing field trips. You learned to write and to speak. Latin became a working, active language, not a dormant passive tool.

After some health problems and changes, after 40 years of teaching and writing Latin, Foster returned to these USA. Being a force of nature, he still has summer classes in his native Milwaukee.

Last week I spoke by phone with Fr. Foster, “Reggie”, who told me that his collected years and year and years of homework sheets and other materials, decades of work and experience, had been edited for publication in several volumes by Catholic University Press.

The first one will be released on 8 September: Ossa Latinitatis Sola – 800 pages!

This is Reggie’s compilation of the whole Latin language – 2300 years – in 105 encounters. This can be used by individuals or in a classroom.

To Pre-Order click USA HERE  – UK HERE

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

There will later be volumes of his famous – infamous – homework sheets or Ludi Domestici and also his field trip materials.  I still have lots of them squirreled away.  Having them bound in volumes will be invaluable.

Posted in ACTION ITEM!, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged , ,
25 Comments

Wherein Fr. Z expects rejection… again… yet hope springs eternal

As July zooms by, and August swiftly comes, we all recall I’m sure that quote of Emerson, “Do what we can, summer will have its flies.”

Thus, my mind turns to the upcoming annual assembly of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, LCWR.

Once again, they are gathering and, once again, I must apply for press credentials and, once again, I expect to be rejected.

Rejected. Always rejected by the nuns.

This year the nuns will meditate on “the Great Deep”.  From their site:

Springs of the Great Deep Burst Forth: Meeting the Thirsts of the World

Over the years, women religious have been drawn to live more deeply out of a contemplative stance. This stance leads us to explore the world with a vision that penetrates below the surface and draws wisdom and insight from those great depths. The assembly theme, “Springs of the Great Deep Burst Forth: Meeting the Thirsts of the World,” comes in part from the account of the creation of the world in Genesis 7:11. As the Israelites named the enormous reservoir of water that they believed was beneath the surface of the earth “The Great Deep,” so we use the same name for the reservoir of wisdom that we believe can be accessed through living a life of contemplation.

This assembly will explore what is being accessed these days from the Great Deep by women religious, as well as what may be drawn from it to meet the many urgent thirsts experienced throughout the world.

Shall I be granted press credentials?

To quote the Pope.. Alexander Pope:

Hope springs eternal in the human breast;
Man never is, but always to be blessed:
The soul, uneasy and confined from home,
Rests and expatiates in a life to come.

Apologies for the patriarch language.

Posted in Lighter fare, Magisterium of Nuns, Women Religious | Tagged , , , ,
31 Comments

Happy Anniversary ‘Quo primum’!

4_30_pius_vToday is the anniversary of the Apostolic Constitution Quo primum of St. Pius V, by which – following on the workd of the Council of Trent – the saintly Pope promulgated the Missale Romanum in 1570.

Quo primum set the West on a new course.

I have some posts about Quo primum.  For example:

Thanks to Pope Benedict XVI we once again have the unquestioned freedom to use the Missale Romanum, which remained mostly unchanged from the time it was promulgated in 1570.

Here is the oldie podcast, for your convenience.

Posted in Benedict XVI, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Linking Back, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged , ,
10 Comments

UPCOMING SERVER MAINTENANCE

There will be some maintenance work done to the servers on two dates of August.

5-Aug-2015: Window 20:00 – 23:59 UTC / 13:00 – 17:00 PDT
13-Aug-2015: Window 20:00 – 23:59 UTC / 13:00 – 17:00 PDT

FYI.

Also, I am contemplating other possible changes.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes | Tagged
2 Comments

Can you believe how ridiculous this is getting?

Can you believe how ridiculous this is getting?

At a guitar shop, teenagers complained that a guitar with the Confederate flag was on display! HERE

union jack guitar

 

Ummm… no, kids.  Fail.

 

Thank you, American educators!  Well done.

And then there was the story in the American Mirror about the guy who called 911 because someone was selling Confederate memorabilia at a flea market.  The emergency? He was offended!

It gets worse.  The police dispatched a car!

This is getting ridiculous.

 

 

Posted in Liberals, Puir Slow-Witted Gowk, You must be joking! | Tagged
28 Comments

Of doilies, germs, and typographical symblos

From a reader…

Just when you have just about seen it all.

Went to mass in small town.

• All altar girls
• Processing the servers, choir, emhc’s, lectionary, etc.
• Alb and stole only for the priest (it was a hot day)

But then the purification of the fingers for the EMHC…

You can guess what is under the cloth…

sanitizer 01

sanitizer 02.png

 

The doily covering is cute in an old-lady sort of way.

Yah, okay.  Well… not much to see here, I think.

I admit that, a couple times, when I had a bad cold, I – as celebrant – used some of that sanitizer goo from a little bottle before distributing Communion.

This seems to respond to paranoia about germs. It’s tacky, but it isn’t a liturgical abuse. The liturgical abuse was the lack of proper vestments.

Before the priest vests for Mass, indeed before servers vest, they should wash their hands and recite the prayer:

Da, Domine, virtutem manibus meis ad abstergendam omnem maculam immundam; ut sine pollutione mentis et corporis valeam tibi servire.

Give strength to my hands, Lord, to wipe away every stain, so that without impurity of mind and body I may be able to serve you.

Perhaps with sanitizer, this could be modified to say:

Da Domine virtutem squirt manibus meis ad abstergendam omnem maculam et cimicem immundam, ut sine contagio mentis et corporis valeam tibi servire.

If the is the rubrical typographical symbol for making the sign of the Cross, what would indicate the pressing of the sanitizer squirt button? Perhaps !?

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged
28 Comments

3 views of Pope Francis after the South America trip

I bring to your attention three interesting analysis pieces about Pope Francis following his trip to South America.

First, check out George Weigel at National Review. My impression is that Mr. Weigel has drawn a line through the pontificate (at least one aspect of the pontificate), but probably only in pencil rather than in ink. Excerpt:

Has the Vatican Already Forgotten the Lessons of John Paul II?

[…]

John Paul was wily enough to let Casaroli continue his diplomacy behind the Iron Curtain, so that the Communist powers couldn’t publicly accuse this Pole of reneging on previous deals and acting as a front for NATO. Yet while he never would have put it as Ronald Reagan did when the future president said that his idea of ending the Cold War was that “we win and they lose,” the Polish pope knew that this was indeed a zero-sum game: Someone was going to win and someone was going to lose, not so much for reasons of power but because Communism was based on a false understanding of the human person, human community, human origins, and human destiny. And by restoring to his own Polish people the truth about themselves, John Paul II helped them forge tools of liberation that Communism could not match, while reinforcing the similar strategy of resistance by “living in the truth” that was being deployed by secular, anti-Communist human-rights activists such as Václav Havel, using what Havel famously called “the power of the powerless.”

The people in charge of Vatican diplomacy today seem to have missed all this or forgotten all this — or are, perhaps, deliberately ignoring it (not least because of the overwhelming archival evidence that the most important concrete effect of the Ostpolitik was to open the Vatican to serious penetration by Warsaw Pact intelligence services, an unhappy fact I thoroughly documented in the second volume of my John Paul II biography, The End and the Beginning). Those guiding the Holy See’s interface with politics today were born and bred in the Casaroli School. And they are busily replicating Casaroli’s accommodationist (or, if you prefer, less confrontational) formula. This seems clear, if unfortunately clear, in the Vatican’s diplomacy with Vladimir Putin’s Russia, and in the Holy See’s refusal to describe what is afoot in Ukraine as a gross violation of international law: an armed aggression by one state against another. It seems evident in the welcome that was afforded Raúl Castro in the Vatican several months ago. Now, to judge from the just-concluded papal visit to Ecuador, Bolivia, and Paraguay, Casaroli 2.0 seems to be informing the Vatican’s approach to the new authoritarians of continental Latin America.

[…]

Read the rest there. He also comments on the Commie-crux or the Sickle-fix.

Next, look at Sam Gregg’s hard-hitting piece at The Stream. Excerpt:

Don’t Cry for Me Argentina: Pope Francis and Economic Populism
The notion of a Latin American “Third Way” between capitalism and socialism is utopian sentimental nonsense.

[…]

In the first place, Francis discussed the injustice inflicted by “a system,” by which he seems to mean economic globalization. This “system,” he argued, has resulted in “an economy of exclusion” that denies millions the blessings of prosperity. Francis then specifically attacked “corporations, loan agencies, certain ‘free trade’ treaties” as part of an “anonymous influence of mammon” and “new colonialism.”

Some of this rhetoric is hard to distinguish from that used by Latin American populists, ranging from Argentina’s long-deceased Juan Perón to Bolivia’s Morales and Ecuador’s Rafael Correa. Leaving that aside, one wonders whether Pope Francis and his advisors have ever studied the respective merits of free trade versus protectionism. My suspicion is they haven’t, since tariffs and subsidies are precisely what allow already-wealthy countries to limit developing countries’ access to global markets. By definition, it’s protectionism that is an economy of exclusion — not free trade.

Likewise while the historical record of multinational corporations in developing nations isn’t lily-white, they have bought desperately-needed investment and jobs to Latin America. Francis lamented that new forms of colonialism often reduce developing nations to being “mere providers of raw material and cheap labor.” Yet if developing countries stopped capitalizing on what’s often their comparative advantage in the global economy — i.e., their lower labor costs and vast natural resources — it’s hard to see how they could generate enough wealth to lift millions out of poverty.

Moreover, whoever might be the “loan agencies” the pope has in mind, developing nations need infusions of foreign capital if they want to diminish poverty.

[…]

Finally, check out the formerly nearly ubiquitous John L Allen at Crux. Excerpt:

Under Francis, there’s a new dogma: Papal fallibility

[…]

In that context, it’s especially striking that Pope Francis appears determined to set the record straight by embracing what one might dub his own “dogma of fallibility.” The pontiff seems utterly unabashed about admitting mistakes, confessing ignorance, and acknowledging that he may have left himself open to misinterpretation.

Whether such candor is charming or simply confusing, leaving one to wonder if the pope actually means what he says, perhaps is in the eye of the beholder. In any case, it’s become a defining feature of Francis’ style.

A classic, almost emblematic case in point came during the pontiff’s airborne news conference on the way back to Rome on Sunday after a week-long trip to Latin America.

During a 65-minute session with reporters, Francis embraced his own fallibility at least seven times:

[…]

To be clear, it’s hardly as if Francis was backing away from his stinging critique of what he termed in Bolivia a global economic system that “imposes the mentality of profit at any price” at the expense of the poor.

On the contrary, he took another swipe during the news conference at what he termed a “new colonization … the colonization of consumerism,” which the pontiff said causes “disequilibrium in the personality … in the internal economy, in social justice, even in physical and mental health.”

What he added, however, was a dose of personal humility in acknowledging a lack of technical expertise and a capacity for error when he speaks on such matters, both in the substance of his positions and in the way he formulates them.

[…]

What’s great about that piece, is that the ever-nimble Allen uses even the occasion of the Pope being wrong to show how humble Francis is.  Gotta hand it to you, John.  You’re good!

Posted in Francis, The Drill | Tagged , , ,
20 Comments

28-29 July: LaCrosse – Excellent annual conference for canonists and lawyers

OL Guadalupe Shrine WIOnce again this year, the Speculum Iustitiae Conference for canon and civil lawyers will be held at the beautiful Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe near LaCrosse.

If you haven’t been to the Shrine, you are in for a treat.

Raymond Card. Burke is the patron of this event, which I have attended several times.  It is always informative and great people attend.

This year the topic is marriage.

Archbp. Broglio of the Military Services will also be there to speak.

Click HERE for the pamphlet with the schedule.

Click HERE for registration.

 

 

Posted in Events, One Man & One Woman, Priests and Priesthood, Religious Liberty, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged , ,
Comments Off on 28-29 July: LaCrosse – Excellent annual conference for canonists and lawyers