Rights of migrants come first, says Pope Francis

Spoken like a true celibate, with neither wife nor children nor anything else to lose but his own life. It’s (a) bold of him, to say the least, if not (b) irresponsible. Easily ignored at any rate.

Vatican City • Pope Francis on Monday urged countries to greatly improve their welcome to migrants and stop collective expulsions, saying migrants’ dignity and right to protection trumps national security concerns.
……………….
Ignoring critics who say his calls are unrealistic and naive, Francis insisted in the new message that border guards must be trained to protect migrants and that each new arrival, regardless of legal status, must be guaranteed access to basic services beyond health care.

What a guy.

On somewhat related point, in Austin Ivereigh’s bio of him, Francis is said have a “natural affinity” with the Peronism of his youth, which was an extreme rightist-leftist, take yr pick, embracing of gummint running everything, including the church. Explains a lot.

It’s a sloppily written book, by the way, a challenge to the reader in any passages requiring detailed description, but clear as a bell when he has praise to heap on Pope F.

It pains an all-in-for-Pope Francis author to lay into converts, but he does it anyway

. . . shedding copious crocodilian tears in the process:

The dog days of August are a time to smuggle in the kind of article you’ve been meaning to write but putting off because of all the trouble it’s going to bring you. But still, I hesitate even now to write about convert neurosis, and how it conditions critiques of Pope Francis.

For one, I don’t want to be seen to be sniffy and condescending towards people who become Catholic, which is how Dr. Stephen Bullivant, writing in First Things, said he felt about a comment in Michael Sean Winters’s blogpost. “I am so tired of converts telling us that the pope is not Catholic,” complained the sage of the National Catholic Reporter [Winters].

This slave to conscience and duty is none other than Austen Ivereigh, a cradle Catholic (and proud of it!) whose book about Francis has the title The Great Reformer: Francis and the Making of a Radical Pope.

I hate to be a plot-revealer, but you will find this book a full-scale explanation of and apologia for Francis; so enter its pages with eyes open wide, prepared for some overwriting of the first journalistic order and (in its favor) also some good reporting.

For Crux in this piece, however, he lets his inner tiger take over, while dripping honey from his maw (sample of overwriting here, sorry, I get vivid myself now and then), naming names and getting down to the papal-critic converts’ problem, namely that they are nuts — not certifiably or irretrievably but clinically so, in Ivereigh’s humble opinion.

In a sort of revenge on interlopers, he unloads:

Now it is quite possible that elegant [papal-critic] commentators such as Ross Douthat [NY Times] and  Matthew [Schmitz’s] boss Rusty Reno (both former Episcopalians [First Things]), or, at the rougher end, writers such as Carl Orlson [sic – it’s Olson]  (ex-Protestant fundamentalist) and John Henry Westen [LifeSite] (ex-atheist), or indeed ex-Anglicans in my own patch such as Daniel Hitchens of the Catholic Herald and Edward Pentin of the National Catholic Register in Rome, are all correct in their readings. [Really? Raise your hands, all you who think Ivereigh means this.]

But it is a lot more likely [say, 100% more likely] that their baggage [as converts from whatever] has distorted their hermeneutic, [method of interpretation, as of the Bible] and they are suffering from convert neurosis. [The worst kind!]

And if you think Ivereigh is just tossing words around (he’s not a tosser!), think again.

A neurosis is a pathological or extreme reaction to something that simply doesn’t correspond to reality. A war-scarred victim, for example, might react to a friendly cop’s question by throwing herself on the ground and covering her ears. You understand why she does it, but it’s neurotic.

It pains Ivereigh to say this, but have a heart. He’s a liberal newsie-commentator, BBC and all that; and that’s a mold it’s hard to break out of. Meanwhile, talk-show style or not, let the show go on.

Meanwhile also, consider this point-by-point rebutting of Ivereigh the convert-slayer, at one hotbed of papal criticism, One Peter Five — “What if We Were All Cradle Catholics, Mr. Ivereigh?”

What if?

Southern Poverty lawlessness . . .

John R Lott Jr

August 20 at 5:35pm ·

It is very sad to see that Apple Computer is helping the Southern Poverty Law Center raise money. The SPLC is seen by some as itself a hate group.
http://www.dailywire.com/…/7-things-you-need-know-about-sou…
The SPLC actually claims that Charles Murray engages in “racists pseudoscience.”
https://www.splcenter.org/…/extre…/individual/charles-murray

I endorse that message by JR Lott Jr.

Triple shootings last night in one West Side Chi neighborhood in 20 minutes

Two of them. Hours later residents are heard debating causes of Chicago violence.

The men began debating what could be the cause of so much violence. [One] argued generations of blacks being exploited could be attributed to what is going on in some Chicago communities.

I think the writer might want that 2nd sentence back, or does she realize she said what happened long ago for a long time is the result of what’s happening now?

Another “argued for more economic and educational opportunities.”

“We need jobs, jobs, jobs,” he said. “We can’t see the American Dream. We need some way to make an economic breakthrough.”

This fellow makes a bit more sense, to be sure, and it’s good in any case that the reporter caught this bit of byplay in a beleaguered neighborhood.

Trump stumbles, establishment attacks

And then what happens?

For better or for worse, and to the repeated horror of the Bushes, McCains, and Romneys, Trump isn’t playing nice. And for every moderate or casual Trump-leaner he may lose by fighting, he could easily be gaining the more fervent support from his base.

After the absolutely zany mass turning-on him when he accurately described a situation, supporters reel perhaps but then ask two questions: 1. Who else is there to counter the mass foolishness, so vigorously encouraged the most of the mass media? And 2. He has the battling style that’s needed, and most of the mass media is not to be trusted.

That’s been my reaction.

Dems vs. Dems in federal court about fixing election. Who knew?

Not editors and reporters, much less subscribers and online lurkers to or on our highest-circulation, probity, and professionalism of our major outlets.

The mainstream media is conspicuously ignoring a newsworthy class-action lawsuit accusing the Democratic National Committee (DNC) and the Florida congresswoman—Debbie Wasserman Schultz—who chaired it of fraud for skewing the party’s primaries to benefit Hillary Clinton.

The drama is playing out in a south Florida federal court where 150 Democratic voters and donors are also accusing their party and Wasserman Schultz of breach of fiduciary duty, negligence, unjust enrichment, and negligent misrepresentation for secretly helping Clinton get the presidential nomination over Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders.

Look, it’s not the kind of story that interests them. Man bites dog? So what?