It is understandable that many Catholics feel offended and
scandalized by the statements made by the President of the United States
regarding Leo,
even if one certainly cannot claim that Jorge Bergoglio refrained
during his “reign” from launching attacks and provocations against
Donald Trump. Moreover, the latter’s intervention is contextualized by
the statements orchestrated against him this week on the CBS, propaganda program 60 Minutes by
three utterly corrupt cardinals: Cupich, McElroy, and Tobin, three
prelates who are notoriously ultra-Bergoglian and ultra-progressive,
part of the network of the serial abuser Theodore McCarrick,
inextricably linked to the radical “woke” Left, and key electors and
closest collaborators of Robert Prevost.
When asked by journalists about Donald Trump’s post, Leo replied:
“I am not afraid of the Trump administration, nor of boldly proclaiming
the message of the Gospel, which is what I believe I am called to do,
and what the Church is called to do.” These
words, apparently indisputable coming from Prevost, can however shift
sharply in meaning depending on how they are interpreted. They may
simply mean, “I have no fear of civil power,” thereby
asserting the superiority of the Catholic Church’s spiritual authority
over any earthly authority.
Or, in a diametrically opposite sense, they
may mean, “I have no fear of this administration” – implying
that, in other instances, he deems it legitimate to feel fear and to
refrain from “boldly proclaiming the message of the Gospel.” And
immediately, one is reminded of how often we have seen the Vatican
“fear” other administrations, both in Washington – especially
when the interference of Hillary Clinton and John Podesta went so far as
to block in the Vatican banking transactions via the SWIFT network –
and in Beijing, where the Holy See is officially involved with the
communist dictatorship, through a secret Agreement, not to
“forcefully proclaim the message of the Gospel,” rubber-stamping the
episcopal appointments of the Chinese Patriotic Association without them
being deemed a schismatic act, unlike the Consecrations at Ecône.
In numerous other instances, Prevost, and before him Bergoglio, have
seen fit to remain silent of their own accord, perhaps because their
acquiescence, if not outright enthusiastic cooperation, was precisely
what the Powers That Be expected from the Conciliar and Synodal Church.
Indeed, no sooner had the Trump Administration cut off the stream of
funds that USAID was channeling to the USCCB and various bodies of the
American Catholic Church to facilitate immigration, than an open war
erupted on the part of all those cardinals and bishops whom Clinton,
Obama, and Biden had, until that moment, showered with money.
During
those years of plenty, Bergoglio and the entire American Episcopate took
great care not to disrupt their idyll with the White House, thanks, in
part, to the good offices of then-Cardinal McCarrick, and paid scant
heed to the pro-abortion, LGBTQ+, and gender-related policies promoted
by “Catholic” Democrats. The mere suggestion of excommunicating
“pro-choice” politicians was deemed an intolerable intrusion by a
Hierarchy that had itself made it abundantly clear it had no intention
whatsoever of taking such a step.
Thus, a single phrase, extrapolated from its context – “I am not afraid of the Trump administration, nor of boldly proclaiming the message of the Gospel” –
might appear entirely unobjectionable. Yet, when viewed within a
broader, more coherent framework, it leaves one utterly perplexed, for
it directly contradicts the very words Leo uttered on that same
occasion: “We are not politicians. (…) I do not believe that the
message of the Gospel should be instrumentalized, as some are currently
doing.” And while there are undoubtedly those who instrumentalize “the message of the Gospel” through
the pseudo-messianic delusions typical of American televangelists,
there are also most certainly those the within the Vatican who do not
hesitate to instrumentalize that very same Gospel to lend a veneer of
legitimacy and morality to the agenda of ethnic replacement and the
Islamization of the West: an agenda doggedly pursued by the globalist
elite through the Agenda 2030. This is an Agenda that Trump
detests entirely, but which the Holy See, Leo, the USCCB, and a host of
pseudo-Catholic charities have elevated to the status of a new globalist
totem within their own synodal program.
Nor should we forget the
doctrinal ratification that Bergoglio bestowed upon the pandemic farce
and mass vaccination, just as he did for climate fraud and “sustainable
development goals” with his pseudo-encyclical Laudato Si, or the
blessing that Prevost imparted to a block of ice specially shipped from
Antarctica during a truly cringeworthy ceremony at Castel Gandolfo.
Despite his insistence that he is not a politician, Leo had no qualms
about granting a private audience on April 9 to David Axelrod, Barack
Obama’s chief strategist and former senior adviser at the White House.
One question is more than legitimate: Did Axelrod perhaps come to the
Vatican to dictate a specific political strategy to Leo, much as Hillary
Clinton and John Podesta had previously interfered to pressure Benedict
XVI into abdicating and then facilitate the election of Bergoglio?
The paradox is made manifest by Trump himself: “Leo should get his
act together as Pope, use Common Sense, stop catering to the Radical
left, and focus on being a Great Pope, not a politician. It’s hurting
him very badly and, more importantly, it’s hurting the Catholic Church!” Which is absolutely true, more so than President Trump could possibly imagine.
While the Democratic administrations have repeatedly and improperly
interfered in the governance of the Church of Rome, untimely and
inappropriate interventions by the Vatican regarding Washington have
hardly been lacking either. And while nobody was surprised by the
invective of the Jesuit from Buenos Aires, who labeled Trump
“unchristian” for declaring his intention to repatriate hordes of
illegal immigrants, the pronouncements of the Augustinian from Chicago
regarding immigration, and more recently concerning the war, have
certainly left observers bewildered: “God blesses no conflict. Anyone
who is a disciple of Christ, the Prince of Peace, never sides with
those who yesterday wielded the sword and today drop bombs,” Leo said. Surely he could have elaborated, as Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger did in 2003: “Given
the new weapons that make possible a destruction extending far beyond
groups of combatants, today we must ask ourselves whether it is still
licit to admit the very existence of a just war.” Or, better yet, Leo could have recalled the words of Pius XII: “A
people threatened by, or already the victim of, unjust aggression, if
it wishes to act in a Christian manner, cannot remain in a state of
passive indifference; moreover, the solidarity of the family of nations
forbids others from behaving as mere spectators, adopting an attitude of
impassive neutrality.” (Pius XII, Radio Message for Christmas, 24 December 1948)

But Prevost – and herein lies the true problem – does not speak with the voice of the Church: his words of condemnation against any war whatsoever ultimately
serve to legitimize even unjust wars, thereby depriving the victim of
aggression of the right to self-defense, given that even a defensive war
would be deemed unjust.
This error is akin to asserting that all religions are equivalent, that moral precepts must be adapted to contingent circumstances (see Amoris Lætitia and Fiducia Supplicans),
or that capital punishment is contrary to the Gospel. For in these
instances, too, the one who ought to serve as a point of reference in
discerning Good from Evil betrays his own mandate by granting equal
rights to error and to Truth, rather than assuming his moral
responsibility to condemn the former and defend the latter.
Of course, if Leo ever dared to speak with the authoritative voice of
the Catholic Church, he would find himself opposed not only by the
pacifist Left (in whose ranks Prevost has served since the 1980s, joining the Young Augustinians movement(The resonance with the Young Turks movement, of clear Masonic aspiration (albeit perhaps unintentional), will not escape notice.), or Augustinians for Peace which
was sponsored by the Italian Communist Party), but also by the
“theo-con” Right, with which quite a few Catholic conservatives are
dangerously aligned.
The tolerance that the Conciliar Hierarchy
currently enjoys is, in fact, conditional upon its acceptance and
promotion not only of the globalist agenda of the UN, the World Economic
Forum in Davos, and the Council for Inclusive Capitalism With the Vatican founded
by Bergoglio in collaboration with Lynn Forester de Rothschild, but
also of the liberal agenda of the Anglo-Zionist lobby.
In other words,
it depends on two supranational powers operating on seemingly opposing
fronts yet pursuing a common objective: the establishment of a New World
Order, in which, regardless of which side ultimately prevails in the
conflict, the sole victim of persecution will invariably be Catholicism –
specifically, that Traditional Catholicism which Rome is striving by
every means to destroy or subsume by “conciliarizing” and “synodalizing”
it.
According to Trump’s admonition, “Leo should get his act together as Pope (…) and focus on being a Great Pope, not a Politician.” Indeed,
the election of an American “pope” from Chicago, steeped in heretical
doctrines acquired during his years of ministry in Latin America,
devoted to the cult of Pachamama, and ideologically aligned – by his own
admission – with the worst progressivism of the infamous Cardinals
Bernardin and Cupich, appears to have been deliberately orchestrated to
serve as a counterweight to the President of the United States.
If his
role was intended to be – as has indeed become evident in recent months –
that of continuing the conciliar and synodal revolution, it comes as no
surprise that Bergoglio meticulously paved the way for his
ecclesiastical ascent, ensuring that he would succeed him and not undo
the twelve years of systematic dismantling of the Catholic edifice and
total subservience to the globalist establishment carried out by the
Argentine Jesuit.
In the face of these concrete demonstrations of
continuity between Bergoglio and Prevost, the silence of the sparse,
moderately conservative minority within the College of Cardinals
confirms their complicity and inadequacy.
The unanimous chorus of the mainstream media and the neo-papists
serves as proof that Leo is not speaking as a pope but rather as a
standard-bearer for anti-Trumpism, so to speak. This is because the
accolades come from figures – both within and outside the ecclesial body
– who possess nothing of the Catholic spirit, and who would be the very
first to crucify Prevost were he to dare express even the slightest
doubt regarding the untouchable “dogms”s of the radical Left.
Furthermore, this defense of Prevost is motivated precisely by the fact
that the “pope” has chosen to play the politician, thereby demonstrating
a partisanship that discredits both the Papacy and the Catholic Church
in the eyes of the world. For this reason, Leo truly ought to “get his act together as Pope” –
a task that is, however, exceedingly difficult for someone like him,
who was chosen precisely because his support for the globalist agenda
would be not merely coerced, but spontaneous and convinced; and because
Leo is being kept under close watch by the emissaries of those Powers
who have absolutely no intention of relinquishing the positions they
have secured within the Catholic Church, now that they stand so
tantalizingly close to the finish line.
When Our Lord Jesus Christ is recognized as King of the Nations, no
Antichrist will dare to claim the title of Messiah. And when He is
recognized as King and High Priest within the Church, no Vicar of His
will dare to subvert His teaching or demolish His Church. If this is
happening today, before our very eyes, it is because we are living in
eschatological times in which Our Lord has been dethroned from His
Divine Kingship by the Nations, and from His Eternal Priesthood by His
own Ministers.
Therefore, in judging present events, let us not allow
ourselves to be beguiled by abstract speculations, nor let us attempt to
alter reality to suit our own illusions. Let us view all that is
unfolding through a supernatural lens, for this is the only way to
preserve, amidst our present tribulations, that peace of soul which the
world neither knows how to give, nor can give (Jn 14:27).
+ Carlo Maria Viganò, Archbishop
former Apostolic Nuncio to the United States of America
Viterbo, 17 April MMXXVI
S.cti Aniceti Papæ et Martyris