Pope Francis: Back to anti-modernism a la Pius IX?

Company Man

The Return of Catholic Anti-Modernism

Commentators are sure to make the false claim that Pope Francis has aligned the Church with modern science. They’ll say this because he endorses climate change. But that’s a superficial reading of Laudato Si.

In this encyclical, Francis expresses strikingly anti-scientific, anti-technological, and anti-progressive sentiments. In fact, this is perhaps the most anti-modern encyclical since the Syllabus of Errors, Pius IX’s haughty 1864 dismissal of the conceits of the modern era.

This is getting where the progressives live, believe me.

For the rest, go here.

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Woe is the world, says Pope Francis, it’s full of glasses half empty

Company Man

More from the remarkable Steven Malanga in an excellent short takedown of Pope F as in his gloom-filled encyclical.

The pope’s assuming of the apocalyptic tone of the environmentalist is, in the end, ironic. It is the Church’s gospel that offers us the true Apocalypse, which is a hopeful revelation of God’s coming and cause for joy among the good. Laudato Si, by contrast, is perhaps the least hopeful, most joyless document to come out of the Vatican in my lifetime.

via Brother Glum, Mother Earth by Steven Malanga, City Journal June 19, 2015.

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Pope Francis is from Argentina, something to keep in mind

Company Man

In his Brother Glum, Mother Earth in City Journal of June 19, Steven Malanga makes note of Pope Francis’s background:

Early on, Francis said that his papacy would be shaped by his experiences serving the poor of Argentina—a place where, as economic historian Pierpaolo Barbieri wrote in the Wall Street Journal, “Government takeovers [of private businesses] and crony capitalism are the enemy of genuine development.”

More than any recent pope, his vision has been shaped by this distorted view of how modern trade and commerce work. One result is that Laudato Si devolves into a long rant against consumerism that ignores the many benefits produced by human innovation through free markets.

Something to keep in mind whenever he addresses the ills of the world.

via Pope Francis is from Argentina, something to keep in mind.

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Short History: The Senator and Rep. Lilly at the Oak Park Library, mid-July, 2013, continued

Berkeley on the Prairie

Mid-July at the Library, continued:

Rep. Lilly had said she was confident in passage of same-sex-marriage legislation, which she said was “in [her] heart.”

A man identifying himself as a Certified Public Accountant followed the softball question about same-sex marriage with a hard ball question, addressing the senator: “If you do anything in Springfield in our very corrupt state, do something about corruption.” He specified “gerrymandering,” complained, “The way it’s set up, candidates know they will win,” continuing at length in this vein.

“Each of us is vulnerable in a primary,” replied the senator. If an opponent surfaced, he might have said. Lilly, appointed in 2010, had run unopposed in primary and general in 2012 and would do so again in 2014. The senator had run unopposed in the general election every year but one — he said nothing about this — since he was elected in 2002. He was…

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Where do all the shooters go, where do they go?

Not to NRA meetings, but to churches, schools and Fort Hood, where “law-abiding citizens are largely prohibited from possessing guns for self-defense,” whereas people a an NRA meeting “may be heavily and openly armed.”

As for Fort Hood and other stateside military bases, soldiers are “mandated to be unarmed.”

Nor to Walmart, where “law-abiding shoppers . . . can and frequently do carry guns to protect themselves and their families.”

Shooters know where the targets are easy.

Lex orandi, lex credendi never looked more threatening . . . Eco-salvation on its way

Company Man

Pope’s eco-manifesto looks like a game-changer in the US | Crux.

Today’s sermon, Friday of the Eleventh Week in Ordinary Time, day after promulgation of eco-manifesto by the reigning supreme pontiff:

You have heard it said (just heard it, in fact,  Matt 6.19-23),

“Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth,
where moth and decay destroy, and thieves break in and steal.
But store up treasures in heaven,
where neither moth nor decay destroys, nor thieves break in and steal.
For where your treasure is, there also will your heart be.

But I say unto you (now that Francis has spoken), the earth itself is a treasure . . .

(Transmission garbled for rest of message . . . )

Get ready, all ye churchgoers, there’s more to come . . .

Also this scenario, sure to eventuate:

Penitent: Forgive me, Father, I have sinned. It’s…

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Pope Francis a true believer — in politics

Mises Daily | Mises Institute.

Pope Francis’s Relentless Pessimism Fuels His Faith in Politics

JUNE 19, 2015

TAGS Global EconomyWorld History

Pope Francis’s new encyclical “On Care for Our Common Home” has been released to much acclaim from the mainstream media. One Germannews sourcedeclares “Papal encyclical could break climate change deadlock.” “Pope Francis’ views on climate change present a moral challenge to many 2016 GOP contenders,”declares US News and World Report. Not in many decades has a papal document been so easily used as a tool for political and electoral ax-grinding.

When the truth hurts — badly.

Sarah Bowman Miller knocks ’em dead in Virginia

Great niece. I know her grandmother well. Nice going, Sarah.

Extraordinary Teen Awards 2015

Sarah Bowman Miller

George Mason High School

Sarah Bowman Miller jumped in the water and discovered her calling at 13. That’s when she started teaching children with special needs to swim as a volunteer with Arlington’s Adapted Aquatics Program (AAP) at the Yorktown High School pool.  . . .

Love that girl.

Short History, continued: Mid-July at Library — taxing the rich, saving the Merc, same-sex marriage

Berkeley on the Prairie

Picking up on the town hall gathering at the Oak Park Library in mid-July: Having earnestly alleged that the state budget process was “really, really, really critical” and urged her listeners to have a look at the budget itself via “the new technology of today” on the state’s web site, State Rep. Lilly continued in an earnest, enthusiastic vein.

 

An audience member asked if a rise in property tax rates was to be expected. A “really, really good” question, she offered, adding that she herself had asked it in a legislative committee meeting in Springfield.

 

But really good question or not, she instead addressed the related but separate issue of allocating state funds for public schooling. “No way is education to be funded equitably across the state,” she said, meaning shouldn’t or won’t? The “equitably” called up the haves-vs.-have-not state funding of public schools? So “it won’t happen…

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