ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

The Catholic Church's War on Borders


By David Simcox
Volume 5, Number 3 (Spring 1995)
Issue theme: "Religious lobbies and the immigration debate"






The Catholic Church has developed an elaborate theology of immigration since World War II, and along with this an abundance of moral-political prescriptions it promotes to secular governments for dealing with immigration. These norms have been enunciated by the Vatican, and even more energetically by The Catholic Bishops' Conference (NCCB) here in the United States.
The Church has virtually sacralized immigration, proclaiming it as a 'sacrament of unity,' a process through which the Holy Spirit moves the world toward greater brotherhood. Migration, the Church preaches, witnesses to God's goodness, promotes the unity of the human family, and offers Christians a ministry of love and service to the stranger among us.
Human dignity, as the Church defines it, becomes a critical litmus test of the moral legitimacy of national responses to immigration pressures, just as it has been in Church judgments of other population and reproductive policies. The innate dignity of human beings entitles them to seek work in other lands and to be joined by their families there. This prerogative has in recent decades come to take precedence in Church teaching over the rights of nation-states to protect their borders.
The Church's concept of migrants' rights has moved closer to the absolute since Vatican II. Papal statements in the 1950s at least recognized the need to reconcile the right to migrate with national concern for the common good, as expressed in the regulation of immigration. That prudent approach is heard less now, Since Vatican II, and particularly in the thinking of John Paul II and the U.S. Bishops, any conditions on the right of migrants to cross national borders in search of work or to join family members have all but vanished. In the words of Los Angeles' Cardinal Roger Mahony Catholic social teaching takes what many view to be a counter-cultural position on this matter and insists that the right to immigrate is more fundamental than that of nations to control their borders.1
Oddly, a statement of the Catholic Bishops in late 1994 claimed that 'the Catholic Church has long recognized the right and obligation of nations to control their borders and create systems regulating immigration.' The statement, particularly in asserting states' 'obligation' to control borders, suggest a departure from existing doctrine. But the statement cited no authority for this uncharacteristic position, nor has the concept figured in more recent angry Church discourse on proposition 187 or legal immigration reform.2
The Church's cosmic image of migration as a celestially sanctioned human right, not surprisingly, crimps the debate on immigration regulation for many policy makers, conservationists, advocates of a sound environment and high labor standards, and among millions of ordinary Catholics of good faith. Disputing the Holy Spirit and the Magisterium of a 2000-year old institution is, for many, an intimidating venture.
Moral Imperatives and Institutional Interests
The Church's stress on immigration as a moral imperative has practical as well as mystical roots. Organizational politics, institutional self-interest, and the desire to maximize utility are hard at work. Migration is central to the Church's history of recovery and growth following its losses from the Reformation and the secession of the Church of England. The catholization by Spain, France and Portugal of much of the Western Hemisphere in the 16th and 17th centuries was essentially a work of colonization and migration.
The current immigration mentality of the Church has been deeply influenced by its experiences in the 19th century. In that epoch of mass migration, Catholic-sending nations such as Ireland, Italy and Central Europe populated regions in the Western Hemisphere that were either sparsely populated or heavily Protestant. The most important country of settlement, the United States, was neither heavily Catholic nor culturally congenial to Catholicism.
Catholic immigrants of that era were thus religious pioneers who, though beleaguered and isolated in the host nations, were creating bridgeheads for the spread of the faith in the New World. The Church views itself as having accompanied its sons and daughters in their wanderings. The growth of large Catholic communities in nations where the Church's presence had been weak or non-existent has, for the Church, imbued immigration with a providential character, seemingly a manifestation of God's plan working itself out in the world.
Spiritual and institutional interests have prospered together. Through immigration and high fertility, the Church acquired an important new treasure a community of nearly 60 million souls and contributors in the United States, the World's richest nation. Such temporal power and financial strength counts for a great deal, even in a belief system valuing humility and self-abnegation.
'Since the late 1950s ... the 'common good' of receiving states has been increasingly soft pedaled and in some instances rejected outright.'
But during the 19th century the papacy's outlook on world immigration policy differed from what it is today. The Church's priority mission was to serve spiritually the Catholic immigrants in their new homelands, protect them to the extent possible from discrimination and anti-Catholic hostility, and - in the U.S. - ensure their cultural survival in an overwhelmingly Protestant milieu.3 The U.S. parochial school system is a response to early Catholic feelings that the public schools were expressions of Protestant culture.
Absent then were papal policies asserting the human right of free immigration for all the moral obligation of states to acquiesce in the individual immigration choices of millions. The open immigration policies of the United States and some other major host nations in the 19th century made such special claims unnecessary.
In the 1910s and 1920s Catholic groups, such as the Knights of Columbus and ethnic brotherhoods, fought the mounting restrictionist sentiment. But there is no record of papal opposition to the Johnson-Reed act of 1921 or other major restrictive actions, nor any high-level intimations that such immigration policies contravened God's will.
Radicalization Since World War II
Circumstances in Europe after World War II had much to do with the radicalization of the Catholic Church's teaching on the primacy of immigrants' rights. Major migrations were taking place from the heavily Catholic, labor-surplus countries (Spain, Italy, Portugal and Yugoslavia) to nations such as Germany, Switzerland, France, and the Scandinavian countries, which perceived themselves as labor deficient. Europe was still awash with displaced persons scattered by the war.
It is in this setting that Pius XII issued 'Exsul Familia.' This 1952 document explicitly identified emigration, immigration and family reunification as basic human rights. Worth noting is that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights adopted by the United Nations in that same period also enshrined the freedom to travel and the right of emigration as fundamental.4 But a series of diplomatic objections by the U.S. and other Western countries in the negotiations had blocked the treaty from asserting a comparable right to immigrate.
Since the late 1950s, in subsequent teaching documents of the Vatican and other magisterial bodies within the Church, the 'common good' of receiving states has been increasingly soft-pedaled and in some instances rejected outright. The depreciation of the sovereignty of nation-states in migration matters has several different roots, some old, some recent. Three Theses
First, the Church, in the very catholicity of its name and in its outlook and mission is universalist. It has never been philosophically comfortable with the modern nation-state with its connotation of exclusion and its claims to be the ultimate community. For the Church, a main reason for the existence of states is to promote the human rights of individuals. Borders are often incompatible with human needs. Suffering this outlook is the biblical and early historical view of the Church as a cosmopolitan, multi-class, multi-cultural community for all. In the words of Paul 'there is no Greek or Jew here, circumcised or uncircumcised, foreigner, Scythian, slave or freeman. Rather, Christ is everything in all of you.' (Colossians 3 11).
'In current discourse [the church] draws on writers like Julian Simon to argue that nations must welcome immigration in their own best interest...'
Another transforming factor has been demographics. In the United States and some other Western nations, falling fertility in the 1960s among long-established Catholic populations dimmed the prospects for further Church growth. Predominantly Catholic immigration from Latin America and Vietnam provided both a new ministry and a new opportunity for expansion of the flock. Immigrants, in the words of Reverend Richard Ryscavage of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, are the 'growing edge' of the Church, as they were in the 19th century, and the 'assurance of the Church's health in the 21st century.5
A final tenet in the Church's open border vision is its faith in cornucopian economics as a response to issues of population growth and resource depletion. In current discourse it draws on writers like Julian Simon to argue that nations must welcome immigra-tion in their own best interest, as it enriches economically as well as culturally and spiritually. Church doctrine in the past has recognized that population in excess of resources can justify emigration. But it overlooks the corollary that excessive immigration can bring a similar imbalance to the receiving countries. Cornucopian economics, it seems, really applies only in Western industrial nations.
Changing priorities in Catholic social doctrine have also reinforced the view of immigration as a supra-national prerogative. The Church's heightened interest in social action to promote human rights to combat dehumanizing structures was both articulated in, and intensified by, the Vatican Councils of the 1960s. The U.S. Church's close exposure to Latin America conditioned its commitment to the 'prefer-ential option for the poor' proclaimed in the literature of liberation theology. Pope John Paul II has made the rights of migrants a major theme of his papacy.
This outlook readily fused with the Church's vision of its area of future growth as the Third World and its increasing identification with the anti-capitalist, anti-colonialist liberation movements in those nations. Also present is an unfolding sense of mission to address the unequal distribution of the world's wealth highlighted in the U.N.'s North-South dialogue. Open immigration into major industrial nations becomes a way of sharing wealth and balancing out past exploitation. For the U.S. 'Sanctuary' movement in the 1980s, acceptance of heavy flows of immigrants and asylum seekers was a form of national atonement for real or imagined U.S. foreign policy misdeeds and economic exploitation in Latin America.
Current Battles of the American Church Against Restriction
The Church's theology of immigration takes operational form in the continuing tactical struggles of the Church against immigration restriction. Here are some of the leading skirmishes in the American hierarchy's ongoing battle
* The Catholic Bishops opposed employer sanctions in the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act. In scattered areas and diverse ways Catholic religious groups have litigated unsuccessfully against sanctions as an interference with their freedom of religion. In a few cases, they have simply flouted the law. Church leaders backed a coalition of interest groups supporting the Kennedy-Hatch bill to repeal sanctions altogether. It is unclear whether that legislation will reappear in the Republican-controlled 104th Congress.
* Church leaders and organizations were major actors in the coalition of human rights, ethnic, legal and labor groups that in 1989 and 1990 designed and pushed through the 1990 law expanding legal immi-gration 35 percent and creating a new category for easier humanitarian admission 'Temporary protected status.' Failing to get a universal amnesty for illegal aliens in the 1986 law, Church forces and other human rights groups won a special provision for otherwise ineligible immediate relatives of legalized aliens to remain here. High on the Church's agenda now is a new amnesty for those entering since the 1982 cutoff date in the 1986 act who do not otherwise qualify.
* The Catholic Bishops' Conference consistently condemned Proposition 187. California's Catholic dioceses worked assiduously but unsuccessfully in the fall of 1994 to defeat the proposition with special mailings, appeals from the pulpit, media outreach and voter registration drives. Cardinal Mahony of Los Angeles once characterized support for the resolution as 'Grave social sin.' The Church remains a major actor among the groups fighting to block implemen-tation of Proposition 187 in the courts.
* At the Cairo Conference on Population and Development, Vatican representatives worked with migrant-sending states in an attempt to establish family reunification as a basic right in the final document of the conference. They were unsuccessful in overcoming the resistance of the U.S. and other migrant-receiving nations.
* Generally, the American Church is well represented in the ad hoc coalitions that have formed to fight the current wave of what they call 'anti-immigrant hysteria' and the drive for tighter controls of legal immigration, and for an end to abuse of asylum and of immigrant access to public assistance.
Recalcitrance among Lay Catholics A 'Shepherd/Flock' Gap
Polls consistently show that individual Catholic views on immigration are only modestly more supportive of generous immigration policies than those of non-Catholics. Some of the difference stems from the higher proportion of foreign born and Latinos among Catholics. But a solid majority of Catholic respondents in polls believe that immigration should go no higher or be reduced. This deviation from official Church doctrine resembles the profile of Catholic public opinion on birth control.
The vote on Proposition 187 indicated wide-spread resistance among the rank-and-file parishioners to the hierarchy's expansionist instincts on immigration. Overall, California Catholics, more than a third of them Hispanic, opposed 187 by 51% to 49%. But non-Hispanic white Catholics - two-thirds of all Catholic voters - favored it by 58% to 42%, roughly the measure's margin of victory statewide. The Los Angeles diocesan newspaper, The Tidings, saw in the results 'a Catholic electorate which increasingly seems to view the statements of its pastoral and moral leaders as having little credibility and urgency.'6
Many Catholic legislators necessarily share the pro-immigration instincts of the powerful ethnic constituencies in which they are rooted. Senator Edward Kennedy, tireless advocate of immigration expansion, particularly from Ireland, is an example. But there has been no shortage of Catholic legislators who have led or supported sound restrictionist efforts.
'The Los Angeles diocesan newspaper saw in the results [of the vote on Proposition 187] 'a Catholic electorate which increasingly seems to view the statements of its pastoral and moral leaders as having little credibility and urgency.''
Well-known was Senator Pat McCarran, a leading Catholic layman, who co-authored the 1952 McCarran-Walter act that preserved national origins quotas and restrictions on Asian immigration. Another, Peter Rodino of New Jersey, originated employer sanctions legislation in the early 1970s, and Ron Mazzoli of Kentucky, a devout Catholic, saw that concept through to enactment in 1986. Mazzoli also favored a far more limited amnesty than Church leaders sought.
Senator Pat Moynihan, as a White House staffer, orchestrated the 1970 Rockefeller Commission on Population Growth, which recommended, among other measures, a freeze on immigration. Currently Moynihan plays a more passive role on immigration issues, although he supports a counterfeit-resistant social security card.
Perhaps most representative within the Church of pluralist views on immigration and the importance of separating the secular and the sacred, was the performance of Father Theodore Hesburgh as chair of the 1979 Special Commission on Immigration and Refugee Policies. Under his leadership, the commission recommended employer sanctions and an immigration ceiling more than a third lower than the present one.
Outlook Continued Confusion Between God and Caesar
The attitudes of lay Catholics in the U.S. on population, environmental and reproductive issues have shifted inexorably away from those of the Vatican and the American hierarchy, shrugging off warnings from the pulpit against what the Church characterized as immoral or inhumane options on these issues. An insecure, impoverished and ethnic-based immigrant population at the turn of the century, American Catholics have achieved the wealth, education and self-confidence, in an increasingly crowded and environmentally threatened world, to define values for themselves.
Yet the Church's governing structure remains hierarchical, highly centralized and enduring. Changing attitudes in the pews are unlikely to profoundly influence the top leadership. The Church's name and organization clout are likely to remain indefinitely at the service of pro-natalism and immigration expansionism, with or without the assent of its millions of loyal contributors. This points up a fundamental irony in the Church's confusion of the realms of God and Caesar the Church hierarchy has power without responsibility - Caesar, not Rome, will be accountable and responsible for the social and environmental costs of disruptions flowing from mass immigration and rapid population growth. ;
NOTES
1 Los Angeles Times, October 9, 1993.
2 Welcoming the Stranger A Reflection on the Current Immigration Debate. Statement of William Cardinal Keebler, President of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops. Washington, November 17, 1994.
3 See 'The Scalabrinian Fathers Catholic Apostles to the World's Immigrants' by James S. Robb, in The Social Contract, Vol. V, No. 3, Spring 1995, p. 185-190.
4 'UN Declaration of Human Rights,' Articles 13 and 14, adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations on December 10, 1948.
5 Catholic Standard and Times, October 22, 1992.
6 Los Angeles Times, November 20, 1994.

Catholic Solidarity at the New Hampshire Republican Debate

*Tonight's Debate was broadcast on ABC.com.


Gingrich started a spat about the Catholic Church being maligned by the current administration;
Romney followed up by mentioning that in Massachusetts Catholic Charities was impeded from arranging adoptions because of its fundamental beliefs;
Perry jumped on the bandwagon and criticized the Obama administration for stigmatizing Catholic Charities because of its principles of Marriage and Abortion.

Regarding this exchange:
The first respondent is a Catholic, the second one is a Mormon, and the third one who mentioned the Catholic religion is an Evangelical, yet, they all spoke with one voice, defending the Church of Rome.

As I watched and listened to these Republican Presidential Candidates it reminded me of this:


When Protestantism shall stretch her hand across the gulf to grasp the hand of the Roman power, when she shall reach over the abyss to clasp hands with spiritualism, when, under the influence of this threefold union, our country shall repudiate every principle of its Constitution as a Protestant and republican government and shall make provision for the propagation of papal falsehoods and delusions, then we may know that the time has come for the marvelous working of Satan and that the end is near.--5T 451 (1885).

EndrTimes: President Obama Signed the National Defense Author...

EndrTimes:

President Obama Signed the National Defense Authorization Act - Now What?

1/02/2012 @ 11:56AM

President Obama signs the National DefenseAuthorization Act after months of debate.


One thing I love about writing on technology is that it’s a subject always filled with hope and optimism. For every frightening use of technology by oppressive governments there’s a corresponding story about the use of that same technology to overcome oppression.

For every story of police abuse I’ve read, there’s another story about corruption and violence exposed by something as simple as a camera phone.

But can technology help us overcome truly pernicious legislation like the National Defense Authorization Act recently signed by the president?

The National Defense Authorization Act greatly expands the power and scope of the federal government to fight the War on Terror, including codifying into law the indefinite detention of terrorism suspects without trial. Under the new law the US military has the power to carry out domestic anti-terrorism operations on US soil.

“The fact that I support this bill as a whole does not mean I agree with everything in it,” the president said in a statement. “I have signed this bill despite having serious reservations with certain provisions that regulate the detention, interrogation and prosecution of suspected terrorists.”

Worse, the NDAA authorizes the military to detain even US citizens under the broad new anti-terrorism provisions provided in the bill, once again without trial.

There is some controversy on this point, in part because the law as written is entirely too vague. But whether or not the law will be used to indefinitely detain US citizens domestically, it is written to allow the detention of US citizens abroad as well as foreigners without trial.

“Obama’s signing statement seems to suggest he already believe he has the authority to indefinitely detain Americans—he just never intends to use it,” Adam Serwer writes at Mother Jones. “Left unsaid, perhaps deliberately, is the distinction that has dominated the debate over the defense bill: the difference between detaining an American captured domestically or abroad. This is why ACLU Director Anthony Romero released a statement shortly after Obama’s
arguing the authority in the defense bill could “be used by this and future presidents to militarily detain people captured far from any battlefield.”

The NDAA Makes the Status Quo Worse

Glenn Greenwald makes a compelling case that the law gives the government truly frightening powers. He notes that section 1022 exempts US citizens from the requirement of military detention but still leaves the option open to the state.

“The only provision from which U.S. citizens are exempted here is the“requirement” of military detention,” Greenwald writes. “For foreign nationals accused of being members of Al Qaeda, military detention is mandatory; for U.S. citizens, it is optional.

This section does not exempt U.S citizens from the presidential power of military detention: only from the requirement of military detention.”

“The most important point on this issue is the same as underscored in the prior two points: the “compromise” reached by Congress includes language preserving the status quo,” he continues. “That’s because the Obama administration already argues that the original 2001 AUMF authorizes them to act against U.S. citizens (obviously, if they believe they have the power to target U.S. citizens for assassination, then they believe they have the power to detain U.S. citizens as enemy combatants). The proof that this bill does not expressly exempt U.S. citizens or those captured on U.S. soil is that amendments offered by Sen. Feinstein providing expressly for
those exemptions were rejected
. The “compromise” was to preserve the status quo by including the provision that the bill is not intended to alter it with regard to American citizens, but that’s because proponents of broad detention powers are confident that the status quo already permits such detention.”

In part the National Defense Authorization Act helps to preserve the status quo established a decade ago with the original provisions in the PATRIOT Act giving the government broad new powers in the so-called War on Terror. In part the bill expands those powers, codifying the use of indefinite detention of foreign nationals and possibly US citizens arrested abroad and at home. In part the bill expands the use of the US military on domestic soil, at once complicating anti-terrorism strategies at home and raising serious questions about the role of the military in law
enforcement.All these things should make Americans – and not just Americans – very nervous about the preservation of their civil liberties. That precarious balance between security and liberty is looking ever more tilted toward the former and away from the latter.


The History of Anti-Terrorism is Bad News for Civil Liberties

Just as troubling, these laws suggest that the legal apparatus available to us is insufficient to the task. While due process may work for any other criminal act, terrorism is unique and requires new and expanded powers that ignore the Constitution. These powers are necessary until “hostilities end” – as though terror itself can ever be extinguished.

In the 1970′s the British government began passing a series of anti-terrorism laws that did many of the same things the US government has done since 9/11. At the time, detention without charge was expanded to seven days. Various other powers of arrest and detention were written into law, and these provisions were expanded gradually through the 1980′s as the British government continued to wage its war against the Irish Republican Army.

Far from wiping these laws from the books when the IRA disarmed, many of these laws were simply reinforced by the 2001 Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act and the 2005 Prevention of Terrorism Act.

The problem with fighting a war on terror is that it’s in many ways a war on ideas. The IRA may have disbanded, but that didn’t stop terror from taking a new shape in the form of Al-Qaeda. Britain’s struggle against Irish dissidents may have been a good excuse for earlier anti-terror legislation, but Islamic radicalism is just as potent a threat.


You Can’t Wage a War on an Idea

In the United States the Cold War had barely ended before the threat of terrorism replaced it and, in some ways, became an even more urgent reason to expand government power at the expense of privacy and civil liberties. Unlike the Cold War, Americans have actually died in the War on Terror. Also unlike the Cold War, the enemy we face is not embodied in another country or people, but rather in a form.

Terrorism is a tactic, not a state. It is used to create overreaction in its targets. The initial reaction by the US government to the 9/11 attacks was understandable but wrong-headed. Over a decade after that national tragedy, the government is still overreacting. Each time we allow our fear to undermine our freedom we concede to the very terrorists we hope to defeat.

“The legislation could also give future presidents the authority to throw American citizens into prison for life without charges or a trial,” said Sen. Bernie Sanders in a statement. “This bill also contains misguided provisions that in the name of fighting terrorism essentially authorize the indefinite imprisonment of American citizens without charges.
While we must aggressively pursue international terrorists and all of those who would do us harm, we must do it in a way that protects the Constitution and the civil liberties which make us proud to be Americans.”


Technology, Social Media, and Grassroots Activism Online Can Help Combat Bad Legislation


Support for the National Defense Authorization Act is decidedly bipartisan.
Opponents like Senator Sanders (an independent who describes himself as a socialist) and Rand Paul (a Republican and a libertarian) also come from both sides of the aisle.
The same people tend to be opponents of other civil-liberty-quashing bills like the Stop Online Piracy Act and the Protect IP Act, two bills being debated in congress which would give the government and the industry sponsors of the bills broad new powers over the internet and freedom of speech online.

To me, this underscores the need to look beyond politics as usual.
Technology is changing the way institutions, governments, and individuals interact. The symmetry of power is shifting and governments and non-state actors alike are scrambling to keep up. Sometimes this creates real security threats.
Hacking outfits like Anonymous present a real challenge to governments and corporations. At times these groups may act honorably, attempting to expose corruption. At times they may act without such noble intentions. Either way there is no denying that security is an issue going forward and that the overreaction of governments to a myriad security risks poses its own set of problems and challenges.

I’ve writtenin the past that people concerned with civil liberties should begin to walk away from the old left-right dichotomy entirely and focus on electing civil libertarians to congress whether these are members of the left like Russ Feingold or of the right like Rand Paul. Of course, both Paul and Feingold will fall short of the ideal civil libertarian when it comes down to it, but both are a far cry better than 90% of their colleagues.

We have few options available to us at this point. The NDAA may be challenged in the courts, and this will almost certainly happen if the president (or a future president) actually makes use of the powers related to US citizens. Even then, however, the courts could come down on either side. The Supreme Court is not exactly filled to the brim with civil libertarians.

Until that time, however, we can try to abandon politics-as-usual and focus on electing oliticians who care more about curtailing government excess than expanding government power endlessly in our never-ending War on Terror. And we can use technology, social media, and other tools at our disposal to act outside of politics altogether to work to create alternate institutions and
communities.

Look at what Reddit has done with its boycott of GoDaddy.com – now the online community is planning to unseat a congressman (or two or three) over the SOPA/PIPA legislation. The power of online activism is only just emerging. Technology may only be a tool, but I think we’ll discover that it’s a powerful one.

Source

EndrTimes: A Pennsylvanian's Guide to the Rick Santorum You Don't Know

EndrTimes: A Pennsylvanian's Guide to the Rick Santorum You Don't Know

Santorum has frequently insisted that his political values are guided by his religious values, and that John F. Kennedy's famous 1960 speech describing a separation between the two had done "much harm" in America. But despite inviting such scrutiny, there's been little discussion of Santorum's ties to ultra-conservative movements within the Roman Catholic Church. Santorum's comments about JFK were made in Rome in 2002 when he spoke at a 100th birthday event for Jose Maria Escrivade Balaguer, founder of the secretive group within the church known as Opus Dei. Although Santorum says he is not a member of Opus Dei -- which has been criticized by some for alleged cult-like qualities and ties to ultra-conservative regimes around the world -- he did receive written permission to attend the ultra-conservative St. Catherine of Siena Church in Great Falls, Va., where Mass is still conducted in Latin and a long-time priest and many parishioners are members of Opus Dei, mingling with political conservatives like Supreme Court Justices Antonin Scalia and former FBI director Louis Freeh.

Dennis Priebe Victory Over Sin- How.

Who's Behind The Military Detention Act?

Expect the unexpected: The Assassination of Ron Paul

A global homosexual agenda

Public
Advocate Banner


President Obama has once again proven himself to be the most radical supporter of Homosexual Agenda ever to hold the Oval Office.

Just recently, his White House announced that homosexual "rights" will be a crucial element in America’s foreign policy.

That’s right, I said foreign.

The United States will now punish any country around the world that refuses to give homosexuals special “rights.”

Obama even said that he will use American tax dollars to buy international compliance.

I couldn’t believe it when I first read it.

The Radical Homosexual Lobby has seen their agenda stopped time and again at home by the pro-Family movement.

Their champion, Barack Obama, has realized that you and I can make it very difficult for him to pass the radical Homosexual Agenda here at home, so now he is using this vile alternative.

With Hillary Clinton and the State Department leading the charge, this administration will force their radical agenda on the rest of the world.

They will use American clout.

They will use American resources and personnel.

And they will use money taken right out of the pockets of family-loving, hard-working Americans to bribe foreign governments into giving in to the Homosexual Agenda.

You see, all over the world people recognize the importance of family, real marriage and community standards of morality.

And the radical homosexuals can’t stand it.
So they have decided that if they can’t win here, they will attack everywhere else.

And the worst part is that since this is a State Department operation, Congress and the American people will never get the chance to say no to the president.

So you and I will just have to be even more pro-active in fighting back.

Hillary Clinton recently told the world that the United States supports the perverted lifestyles of homosexuals and apologized for our traditional values.

And now she wants to use her department to "re-train" foreign governments.

It’s a sad fact, but Public Advocate is the only group that is willing to speak out nation-wide against these disgusting developments.

But I pledge to you right now that I will not rest until the Obama Administration agrees to stop this horrific international agenda.

And I know I can always count on you to stand by my side in this fight.  Thank you in advance for your support.

For the Family,


Eugene Delgaudio
President, Public Advocate of the United States

H2O to HHO water power car in Japan

Japanese Company Invents Water Fueled Car - YouTube4.mp4

Founding Fathers: Were They Really Christians?

This is a response to questions and comments posed in defense of the "founding fathers" by one of my listeners who will remain anonymous. The source of some of my information, particularly as related to Jesuit Priest, John Carroll, the first Archbishop of the Colonies, is the book entitled, "The Ark and the Dove" by J. Moss Ives if you wish to check out the veracity of my assertions. I also rely upon the information contained in the scholarly video production of Chris Pinto (Adullum Films) entitled, "The Hidden Faith of the Founding Fathers" available at: http://www.adullamfilms.com/.  If you wish to rebut, please cite sources.

XXXX,

I've learned that Jesuit priest John Carroll wrote a letter to the Pope advising him to not assert his "authority" in the Colonies because the majority Protestant Colonists were in no mood to tolerate any interference from any foreign potentate, including him or the King of England. John Carroll advised the Pope to stay quietly in the background and let American Roman Catholics govern their own church through their own bishops. Otherwise, the Protestants who were at war against the Protestant British Crown would turn on the Colonial Catholics and wipe them out and America would be forever lost to the Pope's control. He advised the Pope that the only way Catholicism could survive in America is for him to bide his time until the American Roman Catholic Church could grow into a controlling power and overthrow Protestantism and destroy the Constitutional Protestant liberties and impose RCC Canon Law. This was a matter of dire expedience for the survival of Catholicism in America, a necessary but temporary concession. So the Papacy backed off and appointed Jesuit John Carroll the first Archbishop in America. And because of this exercise of prudential restraint, American Catholicism has accomplished its goal of clandestinely overthrowing Protestantism without exciting Protestant aggression and Roman Catholic suppression. To answer your question specifically, YES, they DID give Protestants 400 years of FREEDOMS in order to survive to fight another day! That day is today! Their patience and prudence lulled the Protestants to sleep and their ecumenical movement took care of the rest. Now we have a full blown Papist government and the Protestants are still clueless except for a very diligent few.

And no, I don't believe at all the textbook whitewash about the "founding fathers." While I do not believe they all knew they were serving the Papacy's strategic long term interests, most of them were serving the Papacy's interests unwittingly because they were Freemasons blindly obeying their Jesuit controlled Lodge Masters. Most of them believed that they were achieving religious liberty for all, when in fact religious liberty was aimed at ensuring religious liberty for Catholics and throwing off the Protestant Church of England who would surely have kicked out the Jesuits and suppressed Catholicism in the Colonies just as they had suppressed Catholicism and expelled the Jesuits in England. I believe that most rank and file Freemasons had no idea of the secret aims of their Jesuitized/Jacobite Freemasonic hierarchy. Had they known, many of them might have left the Lodge and betrayed their Jesuit controlled Jacobite Masters and might have stopped the Revolution. I am also cognizant of the fact that Freemasonry is Luciferianism and they too needed Constitutional guarantees of religious liberty to protect the Lodge from religious persecution and suppression by Protestants, which is exactly what needs to happen right now! Sure, Protestants benefited by Constitutional religious liberty. But they outnumbered all others and religious liberty for Protestants would never have become an issue until Romanism could take advantage such as they have now.

Scottish Rite Freemasonry is Jacobinism. The Jacobites led 3 civil wars in England to overthrow the Protestant British Crown and return England over to the Pope. They lost every war and became fugitives and sought refuge in Scotland and elsewhere. Having lost 3 attempts against Protestant England, they shifted gears and fled English pursuit and came to America and focused their efforts on the Colonies. Their goal was to foment a revolution to separate the Colonies from Protestant English rule and then to use this country to conquer Protestant British rule and make both the US and Britain Catholic. Some researchers refer to the Revolutionary War as the 4th Jacobite rebellion and it was the Scottish Jacobites who became American Scottish Rite Freemasonry. These were the ones who fomented the Revolutionary War and the Tea Party and signed our founding documents. They were also cooperating with Jesuit controlled British Freemasons in the British Parliament to pass the Stamp Act and the Quebec Act and all the other "intolerable Acts" which incited the Protestant Colonists against their own British Protestant government. I believe as these researchers do that Freemasonry accomplished Catholic control of America today by fomenting the Revolutionary War and clandestinely and incrementally achieving the Vatican NWO agenda right here in our midst without our notice.

My history books in school had nothing but good to say about these so called "founding fathers". But I no longer believe that tripe. The lion's share of them were Freemasons. I know what Freemasonry is really all about now because I've read their books myself and I respectfully disagree with Eric Phelps. At minimum, the Lodge Masters during the Colonial period were "Illuminized" (Jesuitized) and were knowingly working for Rome and only pretended to be "Christians" and all about Liberty to get the majority Protestants to cooperate with their Revolution. I see these Scottish Rite Freemasonic "founders" as no less culpable and no less dangerous and no less deceptive than their secret Jesuit Masters. And Chris Pinto's video, "The Hidden Faith of the Founding Fathers" makes more sense to me than anything I read in my high school history books. Chris Pinto personally examined the personal private writings of these "founders" and has discovered that they only pretended to be "Christians" in order to accomplish their greater Luciferian aims for this country. And we are about to suffer the results of their accomplishments. And I no longer participate in their Independence Day celebrations nor do I value their Declaration of Independence. They achieved independence for Catholics and Luciferians and Jesuits and only temporary independence for Protestants. All they did was liberate the Catholics and the Jesuits and gave them the right that they were denied in Protestant England, to practice their Luciferian cult and to take over this country and to take away my Protestant liberties and to burn me at the stake or stretch me on the rack or starve me to death in a concentration camp just for being Protestant. And the signing into law of the Pope's NDAA by CFR slave boy Barack Obama is proof of their secret but true intent in fomenting the Revolution, the Counter Reformation! It was all a part of the Jesuit-led Counter-Reformation pursuant to the decrees of the Counter-Reformation Council of Trent. And that's not all. Most of the ecumenical Protestant power preachers in this country today are Scottish Rite Jacobite Jesuit controlled Freemasons 33rd degree and they are the ones who brought Rome's ecumenism into our churches. Now even the Church of England is ecumenical and can barely be distinguished from Catholicism.

Indeed, the Lucifer worshiping Pope HATED the Constitution. But John Carroll was right and the Pope knew it and he did as John Carroll advised him and he kept his mouth shut so that the American Catholic Cult could rise to controlling power and hand this country over to him without a fight. 400 years was a small concession given the longevity of the Roman Catholic Cult. And especially since the Papacy was able to use the USA in the meantime to conquer the rest of the world in preparation for the Pope's global reign from Jerusalem.

The layout and architecture of the entire city of Washington D.C. and our money and even the Presidential Seal bears unmistakeable witness to the overwhelming Jacobite/Scottish Rite Freemasonic/Jesuit influence in the formation of our Federal government. The overwhelming majority of the signers were Jacobite Freemasons. They worship Lucifer just as their Supreme Jacobite Master, the Pope of Rome, the Biblical Antichrist.

Your mileage may vary.

Tom

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Waking up to what we Are, and What we can Be

Thoughts on this Week’s Latest Panic

 
By Kevin D. Annett

When our adversary loses his liberties, it’s called justice. When we lose ours, it’s called dictatorship.  - Ammon Henacy
I’ve been advised by people apparently in the know that America officially became a police state this past week, with the passing of President Obama’s National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).
Meanwhile, across the waters, friends in Ireland have just denounced in righteous indignation the convening of “secret courts” of the Roman Catholic Church to investigate itself for raping children, and silence in-house stool pigeons in the process.
Well now, that’s all a big surprise.
I guess the outraged internet commentators who tremble and bemoan the repercussions of the NDAA have never heard about that great liberator Abraham Lincoln’s “emergency measure” laws during the U.S. civil war, whereby he shut down opposition newspapers, jailed dissenters without trial or habeas corpus, and ran the country like a one man fief.
And what’s so new about there being one law for us, and another for child-killing priests? Secret church courts? Yeah, I’ve been there.
I often think that the degree of our moral outrage at injustice is directly proportional to the degree of our own ignorance and naivety about the kind of culture we live in, and loyally maintain: one that has been built on and thrives upon the crushing oppression of all sorts of people by both church and state, here at home and abroad.
The only problem these days, it seems, is that such an iron hand is now starting to descend on the lives of certain privileged, bourgeois, dare I say “white” folks: a fact that’s supposed to get us all concerned. I mean, we can’t have our rights violated now, can we?
I’ve seen friends killed by cops, thrown from their homes, blacklisted into suicide and legally robbed of everything by official agents of law and order. Most of these people were dark skinned, or poor, or simply alone. And all during their torture, nobody complained about how their fate marked the commencing of totalitarianism in our midst.
Ah, but those were just isolated individuals, you might reply. These new police state laws affect everybody. Well listen up, dummy: how did you think those laws we now face were able to come about, except by what was happening first to all of my friends, while you all stood by and looked the other way? They were the trial runs, the test cases. And now it’s your turn.
If not poetic justice, you could call it historical inevitability.
I helped make this present sorry mess happen, too, of course. I was only shaken out of some of my own complicity when I experienced the big boot of church tyrants who tried and sentenced me to public execution in a secret ecclesiastical court that no law could touch. The Attorney General for British Columbia even said so, in a letter to me: “The internal disciplinary processes of the United Church are outside the jurisdiction of this department (read: the law)”. I told the world about that particular tyranny, and nobody cared, starting with the B.C. Civil Liberties Association and every lawyer in sight.
I don’t carry much of a grudge anymore about all that cruelty, regardless of how it destroyed my life, because it opened my eyes. It put me on a higher and necessary path and purpose. So I counsel all of today’s chicken littles who see the sky crashing down on their little world at the hands of that evil Mr. Obama to realize that Big Brother is actually giving all of you a rare gift, and an opportunity: to know how the rest of us live.
Be that as it may, another advantage of all this unusual honesty by the state in so openly declaring its monstrous nature is that it puts more and more of us in the same boat. Our ranks are swelling with some very pissed off people. Like any naked act of terror, the NDAA and other such assaults is creating a new generation of freedom fighters where once resided mere bubble headed techno serfs. So I thank Obama, really, for his efforts at sharpening the minds and the love of liberty in so many erstwhile complicit Americans.
As for his counterparts in the hierarchy of that even more ancient tyranny called Roman Catholicism, all those pathetic priestly turds are the best thing that’s happened for secular humanism and free thinking since the days of Martin Luther. I hear that some of the Irish are so outraged at these secret church courts that they’re planning on invading their sessions and trashing them, and putting the child-raping priests on trial in common law courts of their own making.
And being Irish, you can bet your brogans they’ll do it, too.
Man, I love tyranny. I love repressive laws. They’re the whip that awakens a slumbering humanity, and forces us to know what matters, and what we must do.
One of the guys that made the American Revolution and its Republic, and whose words would undoubtedly qualify him for arrest and secret trial by the present U.S. government, was good old Thomas Paine. Battling exactly the same tyranny that grips America today, and facing the same odds as we do, Tom Paine exhorted the stumbling and weary veterans at Valley Forge with these words, born of misery and oppression:
These are the times that try men’s souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of his country; but he that stands now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph. What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly …
And …
An army of principles can penetrate where an army of soldiers cannot. For such is the irresistible nature of truth, that all it asks, and all it wants is the liberty of appearing. I love the man who can smile in trouble, who can gather strength from distress, and grow brave by reflection. ‘Tis the business of little minds to shrink, but he whose heart is firm, and whose conscience approves his conduct, will pursue his principles unto death. So if there must be trouble, let it be in my day, that my child may have peace.
Now is the time, friends. Take strength from the blows, walk not in fear, especially of one another, and stand as one now, in our great company of ancestors who were not those of timid disposition.
Are we not ready?
.....................................


Read the truth of genocide in Canada and globally at:
www.itccs.org
www.hiddennolonger.com
www.hiddenfromhistory.org


Kevin can be reached at hiddenfromhistory1@gmail.com or kevin_annett@hotmail.com  - and phone messages can be left for him at 250-591-4573 (Canada).



Hal Mayer Mega-Storm! ·January 01, 2012

Impeach-Obama Banner over-flies Rose Parade 2012

Ron Paul and caucus vote corruption

Ron Paul is not intended to win. Ron Paul was picked to run by the Jesuits/Knights of Malta-run CFR only in order to reveal to the Papacy just how much potential opposition there might be here in America against the Pope's New World Order. The scamming will continue. The Knights of Malta-controlled mainstream media will continue to marginalize him. The Papacy will NEVER allow Ron Paul to be President!!! If by all attempts to marginalize RP in the press and to scam the votes Ron Paul becomes president, he will be "JFK'd" by the Papacy just as was the Kennedy boys. Ron Paul has the same stated goals as Kennedy. Kennedy, although Catholic, went after the Jesuit's Fed Res. Kennedy went after the CIA (Catholics In Action). Kennedy tried to restore "sound money" and to cut out the Jesuit bankers. Kennedy tried to stop the Holy Roman Crusade against the Buddhists in Vietnam just as R. Paul wants to stop the Holy Roman Crusade against the Muslims. Kennedy wanted to stop meddling in Israel's business. So does Ron Paul. Kennedy and Bobby went to war against the Pope's Mafia. Kennedy targeted every major Papal institution in this country, including all his secret societies. Ron Paul even wants to stop the Roman Catholic Mexican Invaders from flooding into this country. Rome won't risk a Ron Paul Presidency. And RP, if elected, has no more hope of survival than did the Kennedy boys. If Ron Paul miraculously hurdles all the obstacles that Rome's boys have put in his way and becomes President and actually does what he pledges to do, the Pope's boys will take him out just as they did the Kennedy boys at high noon with cameras rolling in the full view of the world and nobody will go to jail.

The Papacy is NEVER going to allow the possibility of a New Protestant Reformation to arise in this now Ecumenical Catholic country. Few Ron Paul supporters comprehend that what Ron Paul really represents to the Vatican is an end to the Counter-Reformation and an off throwing of the chains with which Rome has enslaved us all. Out of a Ron Paul Presidency could very well arise a realization of just how Rome has enslaved this country. Out of that would surely arise a NEW Protestant Reformation that could topple the entire New World Order of the Pope. If that happened, Rome would summon all the militaries of the world against us, China, Russia, and the entire Muslim world. The Vatican has all her bases covered.

I reiterate: The ONLY reason the Jesuit/Knight of Malta-run CFR picked Ron Paul to run is so that the Vatican could accurately gauge the potential resistance in this country against the Pope's New World Order. He was picked to be an "also ran" merely for data collection purposes. Alex Jones doesn't comprehend this. And even if he did, he wouldn't dare talk about it or he would lose at least 25% of his listeners and the Catholics of this country would launch a demonization campaign to get him off the air just like they have done to me. And together with the 25% Roman Catholic population is added the majority Ecu-Maniacal Evanjellybellies who now love the Pope too, AJ would be TOAST. AJ won't risk it. I do every day and every night.

Listen to Inquisition Update M-F on www.firstamendmentradio.com at 10AM Central, 11AM Eastern.

Peace in Jesus, the TRUE Messiah!

Tom Friess
Inquisition Update
www.inquisitionupdate.org


I just wanted everyone to know there is a site reported by AJ and Ron Paul’s brother Wayne called www.transparentvote.net to help stop Paul from getting scammed in these caucus votes.

Ron Paul May Have Just Secretly Won Iowa

Ron Paul May Have Just Secretly Won Iowa

Ron Paul may have officially come in third in tonight’s Iowa caucuses, but if his organizational strategy went off as planned, it is possible that the Texas Congressman is actually the real winner of the state’s Republican nominating contest.

Senior advisors for Paul’s coalitions team told Business Insider this week that the campaign’s organizational strategy was focused not only on getting as many votes as they can, but in making sure that their volunteers stuck around after the voting to make sure that they were nominated as delegates to the county’s Republican convention — the first step towards being appointed as a delegate to the Republican National Convention.

That’s because Iowa’s Republican caucuses are actually non-binding — it’s technically just a straw poll. The only thing that will get Paul’s — or any other candidate’s — Iowa supporters to Tampa this year is if they stuck around and volunteered, or were elected, as delegates.

Continue Reading on www.businessinsider.com

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Surprise! Iowa delegates not chosen until June | American Vision News

Surprise! Iowa delegates not chosen until June | American Vision News
IowaCaucus2012


by Joel McDurmon

Perhaps the biggest surprise for most viewers of the Iowa caucuses last night is what they really finally settled: nothing. Believe it or not, Iowa’s actual National Republican Convention delegates are not chosen until two more conventions down the line, the last of which does not take place until June.

According to several sources, the caucuses held last night with great pomp and hype across the nation actually amount to little more than a premature opinion poll. ABC News reports,

Despite Iowa’s sizable hype, no national delegates will be directly at stake Jan. 3. In presidential voting, the Iowa GOP caucuses are essentially a statewide straw poll. . . .

The Iowa caucuses will award no delegates to any candidate, and they follow a complicated delegate-selection process. But the Iowa caucuses are significant for two reasons: timing and tradition.

Vote tallies reported all night on the news are just the “straw poll” part:

The presidential vote comes first. Candidates or their representatives – sometimes well-known figures from out of state, sometimes local supporters – will be given about two minutes each to deliver speeches. After that, caucuses will hand out “ballots,” most often blank slips of paper on which voters write a candidate’s name.

Voters will drop their ballots in boxes, or just hand them in; different precincts use different rules, affording different degrees of secrecy. Votes will be tallied, and the caucus chair will announce the winner at that precinct.

But the multi-month-long delegate selection process only begins after this popular poll and is separate from it.

Next, the delegate selection process begins, and here’s where Iowa’s system gets complicated. Precinct caucuses will elect delegates to March 10 county conventions, which in turn will elect (from their pools of delegate-attendees) delegates to congressional-district conventions and the June 16 state GOP convention, which will in turn elect Iowa’s delegates to the Republican National Convention.

Most importantly, perhaps, “Votes for county-convention delegates aren’t too competitive on caucus night, and more attention is paid to national-delegate selection at the later convention votes” (my emphasis).

NBC adds that “most people don’t even participate”—only about 17 percent of registered voters in 2008, and that was a year when both parties hold conventions.

This is why what was hyped last night as it is every four years is not quite so important, as Mike Huckabee found out in 2008. Indeed, the vaunted importance of Iowa as the path to the White House does not have deep historical foundations:

The caucus has a mixed history when it comes to choosing the eventual nominee of both the Republican and Democratic parties. Five Democratic winners – Jimmy Carter, Walter Mondale, Al Gore, John Kerry and Barack Obama – along with three Republican winners – Gerald Ford, Bob Dole and George W. Bush – have parlayed their Iowa victories into Democratic and Republican presidential nominations since 1972.

Iowa will eventually elect delegates to the Republican Convention, but only a tiny percentage of the total—28 out of 2,286, which is 1.2%. And even these are “unbound” delegates, which means they can change their allegiance when they get Tampa in August.

So why does Iowa fight to maintain its caucuses as “first in the nation” when it determines nothing? In politics, always follow the money:

It’s estimated that in 2008 more than $51 million was spent in the state on ads, headquarter rentals, hotels, food, transportation, etc. The candidates have spent more than $2.4 million and counting on ads alone in this election cycle.

In conclusion, Iowans would like to thank you for staying up all night.

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In Search Of A True Conservative Champion

Public Advocate Banner


The fight is on.

The race to find out who will be the Republican nominee for the 2012 presidential election is reaching its first major hurdle, the first of the Republican primaries.

Tonight, voters in Iowa will decide who they want to represent the conservative agenda in 2012, and the Family Movement is playing a crucial role in that decision.

You see, you and I have the responsibility to make sure every pro-Family American knows where their candidate stands on the issues.

And this is especially important with the nation in search of a true conservative champion.

It seems these days that you and I can’t trust any politician to defend family values or even the sanctity of marriage!  Not even those who loudly proclaim their dedication to these principles.

The current presidential field has me very worried with well-funded contenders (and charlatans) like Newt Gingrich and Rick Perry.

It was only a few weeks ago that Newt Gingrich was the front runner for the Republican ticket...a man who has thrown away not just one marriage, but two.

He has even refused to return Public Advocate’s Official 2012 Presidential Survey!

His deadline of December 19th, 2011 came and passed.

But then Public Advocate's supporters poured pressure on the Gingrich campaign.

And now, he has fallen well out of front runner status.

Mainstream Americans turned on Newt Gingrich after learning all about his personal and political track record on Family and Morality issues.

Thanks to your efforts and the efforts of thousands of other pro-Family warriors, we showed the establishment that Public Advocate and the Family are a force to be reckoned with.

But the fight is only just beginning.  We have to stay alert for the next presidential threat to the Family.

You and I have to make sure that whoever the presidential nominee is, that they do not forget the majority of Americans expect them to defend the Family.

Together, you and I can win this fight.

For the Family,


Eugene Delgaudio
President, Public Advocate of the United States