Presenter of the German public broadcaster ZDF protests together with haters of Israel

Matondo Castlo – Photo: Screenshot youtube

As the presenter of the “KiKa Treehouse”, he is supposed to get hundreds of thousands of young children in the right mood for the night, teach them knowledge and values – but in his free time, Matondo Castlo (28) is currently taking part in an anti-Israel youth festival in Farkha (West Bank).

Particularly explosive: Castlo demonstrated against settlements in the West Bank as part of the festival on Tuesday – “out of solidarity”, as he said on Instagram. At his side: radical people throwing stones.

This is evidenced, among other things, by a photo of self-proclaimed communist Nicole Schöndorfer. She too travelled to the West Bank for the Farkha Festival and was there with Castlo, among others. One of her Instagram posts from the demo shows at least one of the men in front of her holding a stone behind his back. Other participants are masked.

According to the organisers, the festival also includes “volunteer work, political discussions, workshops on the Palestinian liberation struggle” and a “political tour” in the days before. The content: clearly anti-Israel.

This is shown in a report by festival participant Kerem Schamberger, which he published on the blog “kommunisten.de”. Schamberger is considered a sympathiser of the anti-Semitic BDS movement. On a visit to Nazareth, he reports on “kommunisten.de” that his group was “greeted by militant young people”: “When they introduce themselves, without exception they all say ‘I’m from Palestine’, even though Nazareth is in Israel, which they only refer to as the 48 area, i.e. the land that was occupied in 1948”.

A passage in which Israel’s right to exist is rejected completely blatantly – without Schamberger catching or classifying the statements. In addition, Schamberger refers to the wall between Israel and the West Bank in his text as an “apartheid wall”.

The apartheid accusation is common among enemies of Israel. Originally, it was used to describe the former system in South Africa: the state-organised discrimination and devaluation of people on the basis of their skin colour. Israel an apartheid state? A lie.

The fact is: Arab and Muslim Israelis are represented in all parts of society, including in the current government in Jerusalem, in the military, in the police, in the media, in professional sport and culture. In February, Chaled Kabub became the first Muslim to be a permanent member of the Israeli Supreme Court – unthinkable in an apartheid state.

Castlo is apparently not bothered by the content of the festival: Schamberger shared a selfie with him and other festival participants on his Twitter account. Castlo is smiling happily for the camera.

The Farkha Festival is organised by the Marxist “Palestinian People’s Party”, which has been inciting against Israel and glorifying terrorists for decades.

KiKa told the newspaper BILD that it would “carefully” examine the facts of the case. The accusations were taken seriously. The station knows Castlo as a “very committed person who is always oriented towards the well-being of children and who clearly positions himself against hate and violence in his work as a coach, musician and educator”.

The broadcaster continued: “KiKA is a service for all children that conveys democratic values, offers orientation and stands up for children’s and human rights.”

The KiKa presenter also conducts workshops for young people.

https://www.bild.de/politik/inland/politik-inland/kika-moderator-matondo-castlo-demonstriert-mit-israel-hassern-80903468.bild.html###wt_ref=https:/m.bild.de/

Italy: ‘Men’s Day’ at the heart of a sexist controversy

Suggestive banana contest: Not quite the tasteful spectacle. Screenshot from Facebook

The images are enough to make people react. Every year, the small village of Monteprato di Nimis, in northeastern Italy, organizes a “men’s party”. As its name suggests, this festivity turned out to be particularly male-orientated.

The “banana eating” contest for women disturbed many people in Italy, reported Courrier international.

For three years, the organizers have been planning a “banana eating” contest. It is a test judged by men in which only women participate. This curious celebration of manhood has shocked many people, who oppose it.

A petition to say “no to the 2022 banana eating contest” has already garnered 1 300 signatures. “It is not a nice and innocent discovery to fill the program of the festivities”, explained an Italian colleague to Courrier international. “The crux of the matter is: why should what is considered a male party, or men’s party, result in some form of oppression, denigration, or sexualization of women? This ordeal is none other than the result of a culture that is at the origin of an infinite number of forms of oppression.”

The organizers of the “men’s party”, insensitive to the petition, evoke a “sterile controversy”, ensuring that if men wish to participate in the banana eating contest, “we would not say no to them”. The tradition of this annual fair, 45 years old, dates back to after the First World War. At that time, the village of Monteprato had almost disappeared due to a lack of men.

https://freewestmedia.com/2022/08/06/italy-mens-day-at-the-heart-of-a-sexist-controversy/

Hopeful obituaries and the normalization of cannibalism

By Olivia Murray

For the political Left, human life is not sacred – it never has been and never will be. From their stance on abortion, to the very fact that murderous ideologies like communism and socialism find such popularity within their ranks, there are countless modern and historical examples lending credence to what should be hyperbole.

Just in the 20th Century alone, slowly but surely, we’ve seen despotic governments erode cultural morality through propaganda, with a targeted goal of diminishing the value of life. In 1930s Germany, a cartoon ran depicting a strong German worker with two handicapped men atop his shoulders – the words read, “You are bearing this too.” Another, displayed four sacks, each depicting the yearly public cost for school children with varying degrees of mental aptitude. The figure for a “normal” child was 125 RM (Reichsmark), while a blind or deaf child would cost twelve times as much. The marketing was simple: maintaining the “life unworthy of life” was an impediment to a better and more prosperous society.

Now, we’re seeing the same malignant cancer, spreading across American culture.

In a since-deleted tweet, Vox senior correspondent Ian Millhiser said:

Justice Samuel Alito, who died on XXXX, was not devoid of any positive traits. He was a skilled attorney and a highly effective advocate for conservative causes…Had he spent his career as a litigator, he would almost certainly be remembered as one of the Republican Party’s leading Supreme Court practitioners…The problem is that Justice Alito was, indeed, one of the Republican Party’s leading Supreme Court Advocates — but he embraced this role while he was a sitting justice.

Shamelessly, Millhiser authored the tweet after the attempted assassination of Justice Brett Kavanaugh, where suspect Nicholas Roske also wrote, “I could get at least one, which would change the votes for decades to come….”

Fantasizing about revolution through violent means is in the very marrow of leftists – it’s what their god, Karl Marx said when he wrote, “Of course, in the beginning, this [revolution] cannot be effected except by means of despotic inroads….” Marx acknowledged despotism, with all its cruelty and oppression, was the only way for a radical political upheaval.

Yet, it doesn’t end with unhinged Lefties on the loose, but rather the agitprop is even more insidious. Social media is rife with content with a central theme of “Eat the Rich.” One extremely disturbing and graphic video shows a young woman gnawing on what appears to be a barbecued dog, before she eventually kisses the dead animal on the nose. The caption reads “me when it’s time to eat the rich and I get Taylor Swift’s cat”. Talia Lavin, while writing for GQ even said:

It’s hard to get edgier than cannibalism, and no would-be Internet humorist worth their salt can resist the lure of a Bezos bulgogi.

According to a contemporary leftist like Lavin – she wrote a book on white supremacy and mocks the political prisoners from January 6th – cannibalism is not the complete and total breakdown in humanity, but rather it’s edgy; and the only comedians who are actually funny can’t resist an “Eat the Rich” joke.

American culture used to rest its foundation on Judeo-Christian virtues, with its values like the sanctity of life and the Golden Rule. But, as morality deteriorates, government as god fills the vacuum, and we’re left in freefall.

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2022/08/hopeful_obituaries_and_the_normalization_of_cannibalism.html

It’s a Mystery: Police Watchdog Claims It Can’t Find Out Why Cops Dropped Investigation Into ‘Asian’ Rape Gangs

The official police watchdog has claimed, after two years of investigation, that is has been unable to find out why Greater Manchester Police (GMP) dropped an inquiry into ‘Asian’ rape gangs that identified almost 100 suspects.

The Independent Office of Police Conduct (IOPC), which is supposed to invigilate law enforcement in England and Wales, launched an investigation into three Mancunian officers following the publication of a grooming gangs inquiry commissioned by city mayor Andy Burnham which — like other inquiries before it — found that council officials, social workers, and police officers had failed the mostly white victims of mostly Muslim, South Asian heritage grooming gang rapists, in part due to politically correct fears around the issue.

However, the watchdog has now discontinued its investigations into the trio, referred to them by GMP after the Burnham-ordered inquiry, and claimed it has been “unable to determine” why a police inquiry into grooming gangs, Operation Augusta, was shut down despite having identified 57 victims and 97 potential suspects.

“Despite significant efforts, we were unable to determine who took the final decision to close Operation Augusta in July 2005, nor the rationale for doing so,” the IOPC said of the inquiry, which was launched in 2004 after 15-year-old rape gang victim Victoria Agoglia, who reported being sexually abused and injected with heroin to the authorities but was not helped, died of an overdose.

Steve Noonan, Director of Major Investigations at the IOPC, said that his organisation had “gathered and reviewed a significant amount of evidence, which helped us understand some of the actions taken” but that, ultimately, they were “not able to locate evidence showing who took the decision to close Operation Augusta and, more importantly, why.”

The IOPC claimed that challenges they faced included “the passage of time; a lack of available records of meetings and decisions taken at that time; and the fact some former GMP-employed police witnesses were either unable or unwilling to engage with our investigation.”

While Members of Parliament (MPs) could conceivably launch their own inquiry into the scandal and command these “GMP-employed witnesses” to appear before them on pain of being found in Contempt of Parliament, the IOPC made no such suggestions — and MPs themselves seldom tackle the issue of grooming gangs, preferring to leave it to local government and local newspapers.

Indeed, Breitbart London contacted the then-five contenders to succeed Boris Johnson as Tory leader and Prime Minister in July after Labour councillors blocked a call from Tory councillors for an inquiry into grooming gangs in Oldham to ask if they would commission one, and not one of them responded.

Breitbart London also asked the IOPC if it had “ever found fault with or recommended sanctions against specific officers” following grooming gang inquiries after this latest investigation into GMP officers was dropped, but this inquiry has also been ignored.

Director Noonan did say that the IOPC had “identified several areas of potential learning for GMP to consider” in its official statement on its investigation being dropped, but a downgrade from the standard ‘lessons have been learned’ line following grooming gangs scandals to ‘lessons could be learned’ is likely to prove cold comfort to victims.

https://www.breitbart.com/europe/2022/08/06/its-a-mystery-police-watchdog-claims-it-cant-find-out-why-cops-dropped-investigation-into-asian-rape-gangs/

Monsanto and BlackRock are buying up Ukraine

Ukraine is being sold off. The mendacious Western struggle for the “soul of Ukraine” is actually for the monopolies, Monsanto, Vanguard and BlackRock – to pick the country apart.

The Ukrainian land reform law, which after 20 years was passed by the Ukrainian Verkhovna Rada in 2021, made it possible for international agricultural conglomerates – belonging to the western zone of influence – to buy up large amounts of Ukrainian soil. At the same time, ordinary people were led to believe that ultimately the opposite was true: The sponsors of the bill brazenly lied about the alleged protection of Ukrainian farmers and their fertile land.

The international players involved in getting the law passed are agribusiness and biotech giants Cargill, DuPont and Monsanto. Together, these US companies bought about 17 million hectares in eastern and southern Ukraine. These are the regions with by far the most fertile soil, not only within Ukraine but even in this world.

The Australian National Review recently provided an illustrative comparison: The 16,7 million hectares already make up the entire cultivated area of Italy. In short, the stakes are high.

Of the companies mentioned, Cargill is still officially owned by the founding family, but this means nothing in terms of international exploitation practices. Oxfam has provided evidence of how Cargill aggressively and illegally appropriated vast tracts of land in Colombia from 2010 to 2012.

Focus on Odessa

Just last year, just as Ukraine’s infamous land reform was being passed,  Cargill announced that it had become the majority owner of the deep-water port terminal called Neptune in the Pivdenny Port – formerly Yuzhnoye – in the Odessa region on the Black Sea.

In its own press release, the President of Cargill’s Agriculture and Supply Chain business in Europe, Philippa Purser, further explained: “Investing in Neptuneallows Cargill to better leverage its operations to feed a growing population by shipping grain to areas around the world where it’s needed most.”

Among other things, this supremacy in the food chain is what is currently at stake in the showdown in this region. But this is just one of many Western investment projects that would be completely lost if Russia succeeded in its denazification and demilitarization, in this case in the Odessa region. Especially if referendums are held afterwards, which would undoubtedly result in independence from the Kiev regime.

Land ownership is not only decided by referendums, wars or military operations, but also by sneaky under-the-table sales. The clique of oligarchs that make up the Kiev regime relegated the latter to the fast lane in good time.

Although the company Monsanto was bought by the German pharmaceutical giant Bayer AG for 66 billion US dollars in 2018, it still exists today as a highly active subsidiary. Prior to the sale, when Monsanto was valued at $49,1 billion as of 2015, the much-maligned Vanguard Group owned 7,1 percent of the stock, which was valued at $3,61 billion.

The Vanguard Group, on the other hand, has risen to become the second largest investment company in the world in recent years – with asset manager BlackRock in first place. BlackRock also has huge stakes in the agribusinesses mentioned above. In the case of DuPont, BlackRock is the second-largest shareholder with 4,33 percent – i.e. 22 021 770 shares. The Vanguard Group has even more – it takes first place with 7,66 percent through 38 962 143 shares.

NATO acting as a policeman for corporate interests?

Behind each of these international exploiting companies there are completely different, mostly even more powerful companies that figure as motivated shareholders, but are also networked with the much-cited “military-industrial complex” of the United States of America. In this network, of course, NATO has been acting as the clumsy, executive tool. But in the economic-legal processes of property transfer of land, as described here, need to be operated with a little more finesse. The deceptive camouflage of these corporate raiders is called “participation in the free, global market”.

Basically, BlackRock and the Vanguard Group also symbolize an embodiment of Wall Street and its interests. Their enormous influence has placed them in their very own, exclusive category of companies. For example, the two are by far the largest shareholders in Wall Street’s 10 most powerful banks – including Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, Citigroup, and JPMorgan Chase.

Conflict creates bargains

As with the exploitation methods described by insider Roger Perkins in his 2005 book Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, this process in Ukraine is very similar. The indispensable main ingredients for such historical “land takeovers” are an artificial and corrupt, new elite who create the legal conditions on site to handle everything in a “legal and unchallengeable” way for their western masters.

Since the beginning of 2014 at the latest, there have been plenty of these actors in Kiev. While the Western media outlets complain that Ukraine’s “independence and democracy” is hanging by a thread, the economy and land prices by extension have been in free fall. This is, of course, by design. By inviting a war, corporate investors have made sure that more bargains at rock-bottom prices will be available.

This kind of mockery of the Ukrainian people still apparently knows no bounds.

Western financial monopolies, which have already become absurdly powerful, are in fact using Ukrainian soldiers to defend their new properties. The ordinary Ukrainian probably still believes he is defending his own country against a supposedly irrational aggressor from the north-east, but their country actually already belongs to corporations.

However, should Russia’s special military operation succeed and large parts of eastern Ukraine become liberated from Western influence, land ownership will certainly be reviewed.

That is what BlackRock, Vanguard Group, Blackstone and their investors are worried about since there is a risk of losing huge investments in Ukraine which has since been transformed from by far the most fertile arable land on earth into a monocultural, carcinogenic GMO plantation.

https://freewestmedia.com/2022/08/06/monsanto-and-blackrock-are-buying-up-ukraine/

Israeli COVID Vaccine Director Who was Physically Injured by Pfizer Vaccine — Is Locked Out of Twitter After Suggesting Link Between Monkeypox Outbreak and mRNA Vaccines

“I will go to jihad, join Daesh” – 13-year-old arrested in Nice, France

[…]
On June 19, the city police get a disturbing call. The caller asserts that he is holding his wife captive and holding her at gunpoint. He announced that he would kill her if “no ransom is paid”. The deployment begins.

The men of the Raid are put on alert. Several teams of national police go to Rue Marceau, to the address given by the “hostage-taker”, but find nothing. In the days that followed, the hostage-taker repeated his calls. It is not possible to locate him because he uses several telephone numbers. He calls the police in Arabic: “I will go to jihad”, or “I will join Daesh and blow up everything”.

This time he mentions a name. Not his own, but that of a former friend of his: a minor. The latter’s mother decided to file a complaint, which allowed further investigations to be initiated. The investigation led to the identification of a 13-year-old youth. He was taken into police custody. Nice-Matin

https://www.fdesouche.com/2022/08/05/je-vais-faire-le-djihad-rejoindre-daesh-lance-t-il-aux-forces-de-lordre-en-arabe-un-ado-de-13-ans-interpelle-a-nice/

Francis: The First Anti-Pope in Centuries?

It is well known that orthodox minded Catholics have felt considerable consternation with Jorge Mario Bergoglio, known to the world as Pope Francis. On issue after issue, year after year, Catholics have had no shortage of occasions to feel perplexed, alarmed, and alienated – justifiably so.

There’s been his positioning on the issue of remarriage and Holy Communion, for example, or his punitive attacks on the traditional liturgy.  Even if non-Catholics may be indifferent to those matters, anyone of good will would also be troubled by his oblivious stance vis-à-vis Islam, his kowtowing to the Chinese Communist Party, his subservience to the globalists (whose “new world order” he condones), and so forth.

Let’s also not forget about his accommodation of priestly pederasty during his Argentinian days and, as Pope, his calculating association with and elevation of prelates known for their own similarly egregious deviancy. It is baffling that he gets little to no bad press about this. Our society’s overlords, normally keen to seize upon any occasion to attack Christianity, have rather curiously refrained from pouncing on his – the Pope’s! – record on this front; that they turn a blind eye to this giant bulls-eye is worth pondering. Evidently this Pope is off limits. After all, Bergoglio is their man – not the “Vicar of Christ”, a title he himself has tellingly shelved.

But cataloguing all his misdeeds and deviations from the deposit of faith, and from common sense and common decency, is not my aim here. My intent is to briefly mention a couple of reservations circulating about the legitimacy of Francis’ papacy – and to share a firm conclusion I unexpectedly and belatedly reached about Bergoglio.

Many Catholics have wondered: is Francis a heretic? Several well-respected scholars and religious have formally claimed so.  If any Pope were indeed an explicit heretic, he would automatically forfeit the Papacy, and place himself outside the Christian fold.  I have some views on the subject, but I wish to explicitly distinguish the question of heresy with the conclusion I have reached about Bergoglio – because it does not depend on any particular issue, or any of his statements or actions.

There is also the matter of the St. Gallen Mafia, a group of high-ranking cardinals vehemently opposed to Benedict XVI, named for the town in Switzerland where they regularly met. According to a recent autobiography by the late Belgian Cardinal Daneels, one of its members, they maneuvered in advance to install Bergoglio. Such manipulative scheming, if true, would automatically invalidate the outcome of the conclave.

Both these issues do appear to be massive red flags but even they may be cast aside, because there is a more germane consideration – one that led me to believe, with moral certainty, that Bergoglio is not really the pope.   

He is an anti-pope because Benedict XVI did not validly renounce the Papal office as required by Canon Law – the most recent 1983 version of which he himself helped craft.  Therefore there should never have been a conclave following his surprising February 11, 2013 announcement known as the Declaratio. This would be the case even if someone other than Bergoglio had been chosen, and even if Bergoglio hadn’t done and said all the things he’s done and said.

That is my conclusion. Here is how I got there.

When trying to make sense of Bergoglio’s ambiguous or problematic positions, I was inclined – like many others – to give him the benefit of the doubt; to focus instead on crediting things he expressed that were consistent with the deposit of faith that any Pope is entrusted to guard and pass on; to allow things to sort themselves out over time. 

So I didn’t concern myself with any questions about the legitimacy of the Bergoglian pontificate itself. It never crossed my mind.

As time went by, I heard some chatter here and there about how Bergoglio might actually be an anti-Pope, but still never really gave it any thought.  After all, I told myself, aren’t there people out there who say that John Paul II wasn’t really the Pope either? That the Holy See has been vacant since 1958?  Wouldn’t it be too dicey to try to navigate that whole minefield?

Other thoughts came to mind: there is so much on the internet, so how can one be sure what is reliable and what is not? And if Bergoglio is an anti-Pope, why hasn’t anyone within the hierarchy been sounding the alarm?

And if I were to engage the issue, wouldn’t I be “schismatic” – at least potentially; that was obviously an uncomfortable thought, but one I came to deem as overly deferential and ultimately evasive.  (I suspect a noble but fallible impulse towards loyalty may in part account for why Catholic outlets have tended to steer clear of this matter). After all, if looking into this is somehow un-Catholic, how did previous anti-Popes ever get identified? 

So one day I said to myself: I am going to look into it. I am going to read what people who claim Bergoglio is an anti-Pope have to say – and evaluate their arguments.  Not their personality or writing style, nor their position within “society” or the Church, but the thrust of their arguments. I wouldn’t have to commit.  I could just sit with it all for a while.  And so that’s what I did. 

First off, I was a bit surprised to learn that immediately after Benedict XVI’s Declaratio (within days), prominent Latinists, canonists, philosophers, theologians and journalists were pointing out significant errors in the Latin text Benedict XVI had delivered. Do such errors always nullify a juridical act? Possibly not. But let’s just say it raised eyebrows even at that time.

Most significantly, though, I was struck by the simplicity and persuasiveness of the contention that, from an objective point of view, Benedict XVI’s Declaratio does not adequately constitute a valid Papal renunciation as stipulated by canon law. If the relevant canonical requirements are not satisfied in the communicated act of renunciation, no other circumstance (e.g. “everyone now accepts Bergoglio as the Pope), event (e.g. a conclave), or rationalization, whenever expounded, can validate it. At its core, it really is that simple. 

It is indeed noteworthy (and mortifying) that no one affiliated with the subsequent conclave called for an investigation into this matter at the time.  That would have been prudent and indeed necessary, precisely because non-compliance with canonical norms voids such juridical, ecclesiastical acts.

After all, if the consequential shortcomings or ambiguities of Benedict XVI’s Declaratio had been publically enumerated in a transparent effort to clarify his objective, Benedict XVI could have easily responded by issuing a simple, unambiguous renunciation of the Papacy, free of error, which would meet the requirements of canon law.  But that never happened.

While several canons pertain to our awkward, canonically impossible “two pope” situation, the most central is canon 332§2 – which explicitly details what is required for a valid Papal renunciation. It reads:

If it happens that the Roman Pontiff resigns his office, it is required for validity that the resignation is made freely and properly manifested but not that it is accepted by anyone.

The main problem is that the Roman Pontiff Benedict XVI did not renounce the office itself – munus in Latin – but rather a set of functions or ministry (ministerium in Latin) that one may exercise by virtue of holding a specific office in the first place. The Latin text of the Declaratio, it must be emphasized, is the binding version. Whether or not his Declaratio was composed and delivered with cavalier imprecision (which seems unlikely given its consequential nature, his record of erudition, and aversion to sloppiness), parsing it is more than warranted.

At the very least, his use of one Latin word over the other for the object he was renouncing can yield various interpretations. Where interpretation is possible and clarification is needed, there is doubt; where there is doubt, there cannot be the clear and proper manifestation of the juridical act in question. Ergo, we have an invalid Papal renunciation.  

Some have claimed that the Latin terms munus and ministerium are close enough if not interchangeable, so that the meaning is clear: Benedict XVI basically intended to stop being the Pope. This is sharply contested; my understanding is that canon law decisively distinguishes between these two terms; that nowhere does the term ministerium correspond to the dignity, charge or office denoted by the term munus; and that the proper, precise meaning of words must inform our understanding of ecclesiastical law and related juridical acts.  

This is not necessarily to say that the specific word munus must be included in a valid papal renunciation, only that something unambiguously synonymous with office/munus must be renounced, such as the Papacy, charge, Roman Pontiff, sovereign title, or Pontificate. The term ministerium simply does not signify an ontological equivalence with the sovereign dignity of the Papacy itself; renouncing it, therefore, does not mean Benedict XVI stops being the pope.

There are other common objections to the view that Bergoglio is an anti-Pope, such as the claim that Benedict XVI has stated, ex post facto, that Francis is the Pope.  My understanding is that he has never done that.  What he has done is vaguely say that “the Pope is one” – without ever specifying who is that one.  Meanwhile he still dresses and blesses as befits the Pope alone, while still residing in the Vatican; all while he has never plainly said Bergoglio is the one and only pope. Curious, don’t you think?

Another typical objection goes like this: distress over the fact that Bergoglio routinely flouts traditional Catholic belief, orthopraxis and metaphysical reality has led some Catholics to manufacture a convoluted hypothesis about Benedict XVI’s Declaratio so that everything Bergoglio has ever done will have no standing whatsoever. In other words, they have invented a pretext to dispatch with someone they deem to be an errant pope.

But that too evades the central issue: how does what Benedict XVI’s Declaratio actually says comport with binding canon law?

It’s not as though those skeptical of Bergoglio’s legitimacy are unaware of the historical fact that there have been valid but corrupt Popes on occasion. Waywardness is not evidence of invalidity, which can only be found in the failure to abide by the decrees of canon law.   

High caliber intellects whose work I respect are among those who dismiss the thesis that Benedict XVI remains the pope. Perhaps there is something I haven’t accounted for, but to date I haven’t found any adequate rebuttal to the specific claim that Benedict XVI did not fulfill what is required by canon law for a valid renunciation of the Papal office.

There has also arisen a rift of sorts among those who are rightly convinced Bergoglio is an anti-pope.  In one camp are those who feel that Benedict XVI made a “substantial error” in his Declaratio, because he aimed to retain a portion of the Papacy yet also incorporate a successor pope to take over the practical, day to day administrative and governing functions of the universal Church.

In other words, he mistakenly thought he could bifurcate or otherwise expand the Papacy – transform it from a Divinely instituted charge given individually to St. Peter and all his individual successors to a similarly authoritative but more collegial unifying entity.

The relevant canon for this view is 188, which reads:

A resignation made out of grave fear that is inflicted unjustly or out of malice, substantial error, or simony is invalid by the law itself.

Whether or not Benedict XVI audaciously intended to introduce an unprecedented and inadmissible wrinkle into the nature of the Papacy, it may also be said that the failure to heed the distinction between resigning the office itself and ministries or activities emanating from said office constitutes an invalidating substantial error.

In another camp are those who contend that Benedict XVI did not erroneously attempt to pluralize the papacy, but rather that he specifically and intentionally did not renounce the munus because he intended to remain Pope.  So why such a tack? 

He did this because he felt he could no longer properly function as Pope on account of pervasive opposition from within the Church itself. He was essentially impeded from governing in accordance with his charge in the manner he saw fit.  (Canon 412 delineates the criteria of an impeded See).

By stepping aside the way he did, he judged his unworthy, subversive adversaries would likely jump at the chance to seize power; their nefarious ways would eventually be exposed, thereby hastening a much-needed purification of the Church.

Talk about intrigue! I can appreciate how anyone considering this possibility for the first time might be incredulous. But this is not a movie or a novel; if only the widespread, hostile infiltration of the Church – the rot even at its highest levels – were fictional.

One shudders to ponder the depravity stacked against Benedict XVI, who explicitly mentioned his “fear of the wolves” upon first assuming the Papacy.  So his maneuver may have been a purposeful act of inspiration born out of desperation.

Both of the above interpretations, sincerely held by their proponents, are products of intensive investigation; both are reasonable suppositions, plausible enough at least at first hearing that they cannot simply be dismissed.

In one sense, both explanations cannot be right because they offer conflicting analyses of Benedict XVI’s motivation for doing what he did – a highly important question that awaits an answer in due time. And yet both are correct in what matters most: whatever his motivation or intention, Benedict XVI did not renounce the Papacy in accordance with Canon Law, and therefore Bergoglio is an anti-Pope and everything he has done carries no weight whatsoever because he has never held the Papal munus.

The implications are massive going forward – and not just for Catholics. If the situation is not rectified, the next conclave (regardless of who dies first) would be invalidly constituted, so we’d have another anti-Pope, succeeded by yet additional anti-Popes – who, like Bergoglio, would not likely supply much forceful, indispensable moral and spiritual resistance to the various inhumane agendas menacing our horizon.

Though initially a bit reluctant to look into this matter, I found myself at peace with my conclusion. Sure, it is a distressing, grave situation.  But it also provided an interpretive key to so many other things unfolding all around us – primarily the lockdowns. The unprecedented closure of churches.  The “Pope” canceled Easter! A pope never does that.

I just so happened to reach my conclusion about Bergoglio around the end of 2019 – a few short months before the corona operation kicked off in March 2020 for those two weeks going on two and a half years now.

The realization that something was radically off within the Church itself, while obviously troubling, aided me, in a way I can’t adequately describe, when churches closed. It also helped me perceive and brace for the torrent of lies, corruption and oppression that propelled and perpetuated the harms ushered in by a manufactured “pandemic”.

History provides a further measure of peace: two contemporary saints, both Dominicans, had opposing views about who was the legitimate Pope over 600 years ago. It turns out that St. Catherine of Siena was right all along, and for decades the great St. Vincent Ferrer was aligned with an anti-pope.  He did not know this, of course. He had been deceived – by a Cardinal who also went on to become an anti-Pope for a time. But once he realized the truth, he promptly shifted his loyalty. This provides proof – and hope today – that people of faith and good will can live holy, productive lives even if they happen to be holding differing views.

There hasn’t been an anti-Pope in centuries, so it’s not as if this matter is on most people’s radar.  People are in so many in different places spiritually and intellectually, with different dispositions, dealing with the pressures of daily life.  A bit of time is needed to absorb all this. 

Yet it is right and just for Catholics to grapple with the evidence that Bergolio is an anti-Pope. The facts and the arguments are out there, and the case is rather airtight – foolproof, in my humble estimation.  This is not an arbitrary or agenda-driven personal judgment but the outcome of a sincere reading and dutiful application of the pertinent Canon law, which alone dictates the verdict.

https://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/2022/08/francis-first-anti-pope-centuries-frontpagemagcom/