Rome’s bishops are masters of double-talk. Out of one side of their mouth come words that sound reasonable. But out of the other side, come words that expose them for the imposters they are. Their claim that governments have any say about how many migrants are imposed on them or the extraordinary cost that attends the imposition is just a fig leaf to cover Rome’s irredentist[2], nation-breaking immigration policies.
Regarding the “common good,” this is a bogus term that the Catholic Bishops love to throw around. According to John Robbins, “The common good…is the fiction by which the public authorities justify whatever they please to do.”[3] It’s also the fiction the Roman Church-State uses to play the game of, on the one hand, pretending to graciously concede that mere national governments can resist being overrun by the Pope’s migrant hordes, and on the other, giving lie to that claim.
As proof, consider the reaction of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) to the Trump Administration’s proposal to pull Temporary Protected Status (TPS) from Salvadorans. TPS is part of US immigration law and allows people from a foreign nation who are in the US to remain in the US past the time when their Visas expire if there is some extraordinary emergency in their home country. For example, there was a series of major earthquakes in El Salvador in 2001 that prompted the US to grant TPS to Salvadorans. In 2019, the Trump Administration – 18 years later! – decided that the “temporary” in TPS actually did mean “temporary” and announced that TPS would be ended for Salvadorans later that year.
Surely the Roman Catholic bishops would see the fairness in finally, after 18 years, requiring Salvadoran citizens to return to their home country. Right? Wrong. Rome’s immigration industrial complex kicked into high gear and openly started whining about the unfairness of it all.
According to an article in ChicagoCatholic[4], the newspaper of the Archdiocese of Chicago, the Salvadorans could be sent home because “TPS recipients should be allowed to stay because they have built families and are firmly rooted in the U.S. and local faith communities.” Never mind that the Trump Administration was requiring nothing of the Salvadorans other than what they had initially agreed to.
The effeminate USCCB called the Trump Administration’s decision “heartbreaking.”[5]
Oddly for an organization that claims to seek “the common good,” Rome has a long history of abusing those who come under its care. In a recent post on X, investigative journalist James O’Keefe reported that the illegal aliens being smuggled by one of Rome’s many subversive organizations on America’s southern border, Casa Alitas in Tuscon which is run by Catholic Community Services, “give them (migrants) services but don’t treat them well. They scare them.”[6] According to O’Keefe’s report, this was the witness of a taxi driver who works with the migrants regularly.
It’s not surprising that Rome has a long history of abusing those who come under its care. Rome is the system of Antichrist, and abuse is what one would expect of such a system. Examples abound of abuse by so-called Roman Catholic charities such as the Magdalen Laundries in Ireland, orphanages in the United States (and doubtless elsewhere), and even at Missionaries of Charity, the organization of the sainted Mother Teresa. The latter group is described as cult-like in an article in the Irish Times.[7]
This author cannot stress enough the role that the Roman Church-State has played in the ongoing illegal alien crisis unleashed on America by the Biden Regime. It has been my thesis that the spectacle of millions upon millions of illegal aliens pouring across our southern border, while federal officials do nothing, lie about what’s going on, and even openly facilitate the violation of our immigration laws, is simply the Jesuit-influenced Biden Regime carrying out the Vatican’s marching orders. Americans were warned time and time again by Christian writers in the 19th century about the dangers the Roman Catholic Church-State posed to our Republic, but nothing was done to effectively check the power of Rome. 21st-century Americans are now paying the price of that failure.
[1] Mark J. Seitz to Charles Schumer and Mitch McConnell. Washington, DC, 2/6/2024, https://www.usccb.org/resources/USCCB%20Letter%20on%20Senate%20Amendment%20to%20H.R.%20815.pdf, accessed 2/11/2024
[2] Irredentism is the practice of flooding a nation with foreigners and then using the foreign population to incorporate the territory into the sending nation. It’s a form of slow-motion conquest.
[3] John Robbins, Ecclesiastical Megalomania (The Trinity Foundation, 2021), Kindle, Chapter 2.
[4] “Catholic groups decry end of temporary protected status for Salvadorans,” by Rhina Guidos, Catholic New Service, January 8, 2018, https://www.chicagocatholic.com/u.s./-/article/2018/01/09/catholic-groups-decry-end-of-temporary-protected-status-for-salvadorans, accessed 2/11/2024.
[5] “Migration Chairman Deeply Disappointed by Termination of Temporary Protected Status for El Salvador; Calls for Congress to Find a Legislative Solution,” USCCB, 1/8/2028, http://www.usccb.org/news/2018/18-004.cfm, accessed 2/11/2024.
[6] Post on X by James O’Keefe, 2/7/2024, https://twitter.com/JamesOKeefeIII/status/1755350510230491524, accessed 2/11/2024.
[7] “Children tied to beds, nuns who flogged themselves, filthy homes: Was Mother Teresa a cult leader?” by Michelle Goldberg, 5/24/2021, The Irish Times, https://www.irishtimes.com/life-and-style/people/children-tied-to-beds-nuns-who-flogged-themselves-filthy-homes-was-mother-teresa-a-cult-leader-1.4573449, accessed 2/11/2024.
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