Thursday, 29 May 2025

$100ML FOR MAORI EDUCATION/VICTIMHOOD


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Nelson’s Deputy Mayor, Rohan O’Neill-Stevens




It pays to be Maori. To discover a whakapapa, carry a tokotoko, get a greenstone pendant round your neck, a tattoo on your chin and pronouns in the plural. And Marxist ideas. It's all getting Nelson's queer deputy-mayor Rohan O'Neill-Stevens noticed. 'They' think it's perfectly fine to walk all over the New Zealand flag on the floor at Nelson's once-prestigious Suter Gallery.



O'Neill-Stevens is the face of Kiwi socialism, a product of what passes as Kiwi education, captured by Marxism and promoting LGBTQ, social justice and climate change. Teaching that there's no such thing as universal truth or objective reality, turning New Zealand into yet another socialist state to be controlled by billionaire globalists in a New World Order. 



That programme has just been helped along by Piha Rescue sometime scriptwriter Erica Stanford, Education Minister and undercover commie (whom some Nats think should replace Christopher Luxon). She's announced $100 million for Maori education. What will increasing institutionalised racism do for race relations? For the Maori babies and children killed by their whanau? For improving Te Pati Maori's abysmal standard of Parliamentary representation for their once-proud people? 


$100 million. For increasing victimhood. 









In recent years, there's been a noticeable trend in New Zealand's political landscape. More and more people are identifying as Maori, including some who don't fit the traditional image.


Whether this marks a long-overdue recognition of whakapapa or a calculated political move depends on your perspective, but the pattern is hard to miss.

 

 

Robertson, Ardern and Hipkins - merged the Polytechs and created this chaos

Take Nelson’s Deputy Mayor, Rohan O’Neill-Stevens, for example. At just 24, he has attracted attention not only for his youth and rapid rise but also for his claim to Māori and European ancestry, with links to Ngāti Apakura. On the surface, it’s a respectful nod to his heritage. But it’s fair to ask whether his political trajectory would have looked the same without that aspect of his identity


O’Neill-Stevens appears Pākehā - like really Pākeha. That doesn’t mean he isn’t Māori, but it does raise questions in a time where identity plays a major role in how people are perceived, especially in politics and media.

 

The way media outlets frame his story shows just how powerful identity has become. One headline reads: Young tāne Māori puts his hand up to lead storm-battered Nelson Council, clearly highlighting his Māori roots. At the same time, woke platforms like The Spinoff focus on other aspects of who he is, with pieces like What it’s like to be a queer person in local politics.”


 

O'Neill-Stevens with Chloe Swarbrick who also thought walking over the flag was a Good Thing


 

O’Neill-Stevens himself has said that he returned to Nelson after studying, only to find little progress on key issues like housing and climate change. He said the situation “viscerally pissed [him] off” and that none of the existing candidates at the time inspired him or represented the communities he connects with.

 

It’s clear he’s passionate. But there’s also a finely tuned narrative at work here, one that speaks directly to younger, progressive voters. Today, political advantage often comes from ticking identity boxes. That reality should give us pause.

 

A Maori viewer at the Suter had the mahi to hang the flag up 

Destiny Church Nelson member, Ruth Tipu


 

This isn’t to say that O’Neill-Stevens lacks talent or belief in what he’s doing. But we should be cautious about how easily identity can become a kind of political currency. It’s worth asking whether people are being rewarded more for who they are perceived to be than for what they have actually done.

 

Heritage and whakapapa should be respected, not leveraged. If we reduce identity to a strategic label, we risk undermining the very people and histories we claim to support.

True representation matters. But when identity starts becoming the main qualification, we all lose something important.https://matuakahurangi.com/p/when-being-a-little-bit-maori-becomes






 An additional $60m of ring-fenced funding for Maori Medium and Kaupapa Maori Education property, which will deliver up to 50 new classrooms to support the network, providing access to immersion schooling for approximately an additional 1,100 konga.

 

First, tamariki Maori must thrive at home


 

The Government is delivering over $100 million in investment through Budget 2025 to ensure more tamariki Māori thrive at school.

 


“This Government is firmly committed to properly resourcing our bilingual education system and lifting achievement for Māori students. Our Budget 25 investment delivers on the commitments through our Māori Education Action Plan, which takes a practical approach to strengthening outcomes for ākonga Māori,” Education Minister Erica Stanford says.

 

This investment encompasses:


  • $10 million to launch a new Virtual Learning Network (VLN) for STEM education (Science, Engineering, Technology and Mathematics) subjects in Kaupapa Māori and Māori Medium education settings, addressing the shortage of qualified STEM teachers proficient in both subject matter and te reo Māori. This will fund 15 kaiako to deliver online STEM education to up to 5,577 Year 9-13 ākonga.

 

 

  • $4.5 million to develop comprehensive new te reo matatini and STEM curriculum resources and teacher supports for approximately 2,000 Year 9–13 learners in Kaupapa Māori and Māori Medium education. For the first time ever, students will be able to study Shakespeare, international literature, and iconic New Zealand works, including The Bone People entirely in te reo Māori.

 


  • $2.1 million to develop a new Māori Studies subject for Years 11–13, offering students to deepen their understanding of Māori cultural practices, narratives, knowledge, and language. This new learning area will be developed byMātauranga Māori experts and will support learners to grow their knowledge of Māori culture, narratives, philosophies, Mātauranga and language.


co-governance rampant

 

 

  • $14 million into training and support for up to 51,000 teachers/kaiako in Years 0-13 schools to learn te reo Māori and tikanga as appropriate benefiting over 560,000 students.

 

  • An additional $60m of ring-fenced funding for Māori Medium and Kaupapa Māori Education property, which will deliver up to 50 new classrooms to support the network, providing access to immersion schooling for approximately an additional 1,100 ākonga.

 

  • $4.8 million to appoint seven new curriculum advisors for Kaupapa Māori and Māori medium education to support kaiako in implementing the redesigned Te Marautanga o Aotearoa, including Rangaranga Reo ā-Tā, Poutama Pāngarau, and Hihira Weteoro, benefiting over 27,000 ākonga.

 

  • $4.1 million to support the sustainability and data capability of the Kohanga Reo Network.

 


3 year-old Catalya Pepene needed a proper family, not kohanga reo



  • $3.5 million to support WAI 3310 Waitangi Tribunal Education Services and Outcomes Kaupapa Inquiry.


 

“Each of these investments aim to drive student achievement for our tamariki Maōri so they thrive in the classroom. The Budget 2025 Māori education package delivered alongside investments support every child so they get the very best start and grow the New Zealand of the future”.



 

The Ascension of Christ by Garofalo



And Jesus came and spoke unto them saying, "All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth. Go therefore and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost: Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you: And lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world." Amen.
-Matthew 28

Tuesday, 27 May 2025

VIRTUAL CHURCH, VIRTUAL PAPACY - OR REALITY

 

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+Prevost and +Francis met for two hours every Saturday morning



"You're knackered." One glance at the official portrait of Pope Leo XIV was enough for one real Kiwi bloke. He was speaking to a practising Catholic, and by 'knackered' he didn't mean 'very tired'. He meant that the Catholic Church under +Leo, like a worn-out horse, is destined for the knackers' yard.


If you're lukewarm and of little faith, then when you read Austen Ivereigh, popesplainer par excellence and sycophantic biographer (twice) of Antipope Francis, on the subject of Pope Leo, you'll be tempted to agree that our Kiwi bloke might be right - as Ivereigh proved right about the St Gallen Mafia and the 2013 conclave. 

 

This post was intended to be relentlessly optimistic - for the sake of unity in Holy Mother Church, to put a positive spin on +Leo's words and actions. But as Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano states: "we cannot build for ourselves a virtual church with a virtual papacy that we love and serve in a consoling but unreal fiction ...

 

May looking at reality with supernatural eyes help us to recognise deceptions of the evil one, and push us to place all our hope in Christ, so He may help and protect His Church."


+Vigano points to Pope Leo's confirmation of the appointment of a notorious heretic to St Gallen; to that of a nun as Secretary to the Dicastery to Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, in line with the appointment of a Prefectress by Bergoglio; his repeated references to the heretical documents of Vatican II.


"Declarations on ecumenism and synodality and acceptance of climate fraud all place +Prevost in evident and disturbing continuity with his predecessor. A stole and mozetta won't change reality", says +Vigano.


 


Fr Canon Beat Grögli, Bishop Elect, St Gallen, Switzerland


 

Sr. Tiziana Merletti, Secretary, Dicastery for Consecrated Life



And so to Austen Ivereigh's piece in Commonweal Magazine, on the conclave and our new pope:

 

After burying Pope Francis, the cardinals chose another pope from the Americas to follow in his path, proving both that the “change of era” inaugurated by Francis is here to stay and that Latin America would still be a key source for the universal Church.

 

Leo XIV is from the south suburbs of Chicago, “the descendant of immigrants, who in turn chose to emigrate,” as he put it to the Holy See ambassadors on May 16. He was referring to the decades he spent as a missionary and bishop in Peru. This is why the first U.S.-born pope is also the second from South America. 

 

The quiet sixty-nine-year-old American, Robert Francis Prevost, friar of the Order of St. Augustine, slipped past the bookmakers and the pundits, quickly overtaking the Italian curial-establishment papabile, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, to be elected after only four ballots, on the afternoon of the second day of the conclave.

 

As they emerged from the conclave, the cardinals were delighted, as if they had stumbled on a pearl of great price. They spoke of the atmosphere inside: the lighthearted peace in the Sistine Chapel, the sense of fraternity and unity back at the Santa Marta. They remarked on the freedom from the pressures and distractions of the internet that allowed them to settle prayerfully on the one man among them whom they believe God had chosen.

 

They described how moving it had been to watch Prevost as his name was read out, over and over. Joseph Tobin, cardinal archbishop of Newark, who knows the new pope well—having been head of the Redemptorists in Rome when Prevost was there as the prior general of the Augustinians—said he “took a look at Bob” and saw that “he had his head in his hands.


Tobin is notorious  for his sodomitic sympathies.



Joseph Cardinal Tobin 


At that moment, Tobin prayed for Prevost, “because I couldn’t imagine what happens to a human being when you face something like that.” Yet once Prevost was elected—and on this the cardinals are unanimous—he was remarkably calm, wholly at peace. Over the next few days, Rome was struck by how effortlessly Prevost became Leo. 

 

What convinced the 133 cardinals, it turned out, had not been a great speech, but rather the way Prevost carried himself: he was humble, direct, synodal, and pastoral. Prevost would be a pope in the tradition of Francis, yet different in ways the cardinals regarded as necessary.

 

They sought three particular qualities in the next pope. First, they wanted someone with experience of the universality of today’s Church, someone familiar with its breadth and complexity. Second, they were looking for someone who could bring the peace of Christ to the divisions within the Church and in the world at large. Third, they needed someone who could govern firmly but also in a more collegial manner than Francis did. The more they got to know Prevost, the more he emerged as the one who fit that profile. 

 

 

Greeting Bola Ahmed Tinubu, President of Nigeria where priests are murdered regularly


 

The young cardinal who heads the Filipino bishops’ conference, Pablo Virgilio David, said it was the pope as pontifex maximus, or “supreme bridge-builder,” that became a key topic for the cardinals in the ten days of private meetings prior to the conclave.

 

"Bob the (Bridge-) Builder".  


He said Leo’s brief address from the loggia of St. Peter’s after his election was virtually a summary of their discussions. Peace was his theme, the disarming peace of Christ.

Remember that the angels at Bethlehem sang of "Peace on Earth to men of good will". Good will meaning God's will, meaning men who do God's will. In God's Church. 

 

Leo called for “a Church that builds bridges and encourages dialogue…a synodal Church.” 

 

The next day, at Mass with the cardinals in the Sistine Chapel, Leo dwelt on the great responsibility entrusted to Peter, his mission to bear witness in a world that often mocks or despises Christian faith. Back in 2013, Prevost thought he would escape being made a bishop; ten years later, he hadn’t wanted to leave behind his diocese in Peru when Francis asked him to head the Dicastery for Bishops in Rome.

 

But in the end, he saw the move to Rome as “a new opportunity to live a dimension of my life, which simply was always answering ‘Yes’ when asked to do a service,” he told Vatican News at that time. “With this spirit, I ended my mission in Peru, after eight and a half years as a bishop and almost twenty years as a missionary, to begin a new one in Rome.” 

 

And now, when Cardinal Parolin asked Cardinal Prevost if he accepted his election as pope, he gave another, even more radical “Yes.” In his homily the next day, Pope Leo described Peter being led in chains to Rome, “the place of his imminent sacrifice,” and said anyone in the Church who exercises a ministry of authority would recognize that journey. He, too, was being called now “to disappear so that Christ may remain, to make oneself small so that He may be known and glorified (cf. John 3:30).” 

 

Did he ever sense that Francis had prepared his path? After his arrival in Rome in 2023 to head the Dicastery for Bishops (he had been a member since 2020), Prevost and Francis used to meet for two hours every Saturday morning in the Casa Santa Marta, where Francis lived. They discussed, of course, nominations for bishops, but also their vision of the Church.

 

Prevost was one of Francis’s trusted negotiators with the German bishops over demands that arose from their controversial “Synodal Way” process. Francis came to rely on him more and more. He trusted Prevost’s decision-making and admired his way of working—the way he was able to reconcile different sides. Arthur Roche, the English cardinal who heads the Dicastery for Divine Worship, told me that Prevost was without doubt Francis’s “closest collaborator” in the Vatican during the past two years. 

 

Arthur Roche, persecutor of the Traditional Latin Mass. 


 

Francis congratulating the new Cardinal Arthur Roche - who says the TLM was abrogated by Pope Paul VI 




The time they spent together each week was deeply formative for Prevost, who was struck by Francis’s extraordinary capacity for discernment, as well as his radical commitment to God’s mercy.


A radical, selective commitment. He had no mercy for the Usus Antiquior - the Mass that sustained the Church and nourished her saints for over two millennia - or for TLM adherents.

 

One morning, when the two were discussing clerical sex abuse, the pope said he wanted to show Prevost something. Francis left the room and returned with a picture from a Gothic cathedral in France which showed Judas taking his own life while Jesus cradled him in his arms. Was it really possible, Francis asked him, for God’s mercy to reach the worst of sinners?

 

Telling this story in a talk to a Chicago-area parish in August of last year, Prevost described how Francis “struggles to express and live that dimension of the Gospel.” It was this focus that had led people to misunderstand or criticize the pope. Francis was convinced, Prevost said, that in a world full of mutual condemnation, “we need people, especially ministers, who can live and offer people the mercy, forgiveness, and healing of God.”


But selectively, of course. Who said "The quality of mercy is not strained"?

 

In early February, with his bronchitis worsening, Francis raised Prevost’s status within the College of Cardinals to bishop. It was done so discreetly that it went mostly unnoticed even by the Vatican press corps. Yet only a handful of others at the conclave were cardinal bishops, among them the two whom the media had dubbed the “frontrunner” papabili—Cardinals Parolin and Tagle.


 Both modernists (heretics) of the first water.

Was Francis sending a little posthumous hint that that list needed expanding? 


A posthumous hint, while he was still alive? 


The bond between Bergoglio and Prevost goes back to the first decade of the new millennium, when the American was based in Rome as prior general of the Augustinians. He spent half of each year of his twelve-year term visiting the three thousand Augustinian friars and their parishes and works across the world, extraordinary preparation for a pope of the global era, bringing him into contact with the Church in Africa, Asia, and the Near East, as well as in the Americas.

 

He was often in Argentina, where the Augustinians have a vicariate with five parishes, five schools, and a formation house; and there he sat down with the famous Jesuit archbishop of Buenos Aires. The two men had a lot in common: both had been given major responsibilities in their religious orders from an early age. 

 

Prevost recounts that, on his last visit with Archbishop Bergoglio, the two had a disagreement. Bergoglio wanted one of Prevost’s friars for some project or other in his archdiocese. Prevost said no; he had other work in mind for him. The archbishop was very unhappy about this, Prevost later learned, and so when Bergoglio was elected pope in March 2013, Prevost—who was coming to the end of his term as prior general—joked with his brother Augustinians that he could relax: this new pope would never make him a bishop. But when Francis met Prevost again in August, after celebrating Mass for the opening of the Augustinians’ general chapter, the pope effusively thanked him for his help with resolving a problem in Rome.

 

“You can relax for now,” he said, thus hinting that he would soon be coming for him. The following year, when Prevost was back in Chicago, Francis made him apostolic administrator of Chiclayo, and a year later its bishop, an appointment for which Prevost needed Peruvian nationality.

 

Chiclayo is in Lambayeque, a region of northern Peru near Chulucanas and Trujillo, where Prevost missioned in his thirties and forties. There, he had been a formator of friars, a diocesan canon lawyer, and a parish priest. The 1.2 million-strong Diocese of Chiclayo needed a makeover: for more than thirty years, it had been run by Spanish Opus Dei bishops.

 

For the next decade, Prevost would give it new direction, making it a diocese that modelled the ecclesiology of the Second Vatican Council. Francis had “masterfully and concretely set forth” that ecclesiology in his 2013 teaching Evangelii gaudium, as Leo XIV reminded his fellow cardinals on May 10. 

 

In that address, delivered two days after his election, Leo highlighted six “fundamental points” from Evangelii gaudium, which amount to a program for his pontificate. The first was the “primacy of Christ in proclamation.” (As he put it in a 2023 interview: “This comes first: to communicate the beauty of the faith, the beauty and joy of knowing Jesus. It means that we ourselves are living it and sharing this experience.”) The second was the “missionary conversion” of the whole Christian community,


"Christian community"? What about the Gentiles, as it were - all the other, false, religions?

 

... to enable others to encounter Christ in acts of mercy. The third, “growth in collegiality and synodality,” meant co-responsibility for the life and mission of the Church. (Synodality, he told people in Chiclayo, was a way for the Church to be closer to the people.) The fourth, “attention to the sensus fidei,” meant taking seriously the people of God as a believing, discerning subject, valuing their traditions and culture. 

 

The fifth, “loving care for the least and the rejected,” was the Church’s option for the poor,


Not forgetting the spiritually poor, one hopes

 

... expressed in attention and concrete acts. The sixth and final point, “courageous and trusting dialogue with the contemporary world,” meant a Church that confronts contemporary challenges rather than offering a refuge from them. 


But what is the point of "dialogue" which doesn't lead to change (which the Church cannot do, in principle?

 

Anecdotes and photos from the pope’s time as bishop of Chiclayo reveal a pastor in the classic Latin American mold: approachable, informal, hands-on, close to the people. Chiclayanos fondly remember his affability and attentiveness as he engaged with civic authorities, mobilized funds, and created pastoral programs for prisoners, migrants, and flood victims.


He turned up with oxygen tanks for makeshift treatment centers during Covid, and distributed food to flooded villages after Cyclone Yaku struck in early 2023.


Did he denounce the vaccination campaign - Francis' "act of love"? Of course not.

 

His homilies—short, joyful, and clarifying—focused on the primary proclamation of the gospel message and the transforming impact of God’s grace. Often, they would return to the significance of community, of becoming the pueblo that God’s love calls us to be. 


However it seems, as the Pentecostal churches continue to make inroads into Catholicism in South America, where the true religion is losing ground, that his homilies weren't so very  transforming.

 

But he is remembered most for his outstanding capacity to convene, to hold people together and rearrange the decks without earning enemies. He brought firm new direction to his diocese in Peru, yet without rejecting what he had inherited. He won over the Opus Dei priests, engaged movements, and reached out to conservatives and charismatics.

 

From the start, he brought people together in synodal assemblies to agree on pastoral priorities and created an institute to form lay leaders.


Lay leaders - what a RED FLAG! In the Catholic Church it is priests who are ordained to be leaders, not lay people who are merely appointed.

 

“After ten years of his work, lay people are really well-trained and are positioned,” his successor in Chiclayo, Bishop Edinson Farfán Córdova (also an Augustinian), told me. The content of the summer courses designed to train hundreds of laypeople was drawn, says Bishop Farfán, from the social magisterium of Francis: not just Evangelii gaudium, but also Laudato si’ and Fratelli tutti


By now, we're groaning. 

In 2018, Prevost was elected vice president of the Peruvian bishops’ conference. The Church was at that time still dealing with the fallout from revelations of abuse and corruption at the heart of the Sodalitium Christianae Vitae (SCV), a right-wing Peruvian movement founded in the 1970s to combat liberation theology.

 

The SCV enjoyed strong support from wealthy Peruvians and from the Vatican under Pope John Paul II, and over the years, many bishops would become entangled with the movement, especially José Antonio Eguren, the archbishop of Piura—the diocese neighboring Chiclayo. 

 

Mitad monjes, mitad soldados (“Half Monks, Half Soldiers”)



The bond between Bergoglio and Prevost goes back to the first decade of the new millennium.

The publication of Mitad monjes, mitad soldados (“Half Monks, Half Soldiers”), a devastating 2015 exposé by former “sodálite” Pedro Salinas and journalist Paola Ugaz, led the SCV’s powerful allies to wage legal warfare on the authors in Peru’s corrupt, sclerotic courts. The other effect of the book was to unleash a wave of previously untold abuse stories, stories of people effectively kept as prisoners for years and humiliated by the power games of the SCV’s inner circle.

 

As new victims continued to step forward, Paola Ugaz, overwhelmed, reached out to the Church for help. The bishops’ conference was unable to act collectively: Archbishop Eguren was involved in suing Salinas and Ugaz, while the conference’s president, Héctor Cabrejos, was reluctant to make trouble. 

 

Prevost, together with the Jesuit cardinal Pedro Barreto and the apostolic nuncio Nicola Girasoli, acted on their own account, publicly declaring their support for the writers and finding ways over the next two years to help the victims. “Robert became the one who individually reached out to the really broken victims,” recalls Ugaz. “He became the bridge between them and the Sodalicio,” she told me in Rome after the conclave, describing how he would meet with Sodalicio leaders to secure financial and medical assistance for the victims.

 

Ugaz describes Prevost as levelheaded, patient, and tenacious. “Robert’s not the guy who will grab a match and set light to the building. He’ll look for ways to help, to make things happen,” she says. They are friends to this day. In Rome for Pope Francis’s funeral, Ugaz brought chocolates and an Alpaca stole for her friend. She ended up giving them to him once he was pope.

 

In 2020, the Sodalicio stepped up their campaign against the journalists, using death threats and false claims that they were involved in money laundering. Girasoli and Bishop Prevost believed the only way to protect Ugaz was to arrange a meeting with Francis. But because of Covid, this did not happen until 2022, when Ugaz and Salinas persuaded Francis to send his crack Vatican investigators Archbishop Charles Scicluna and Msgr. Jordi Bertomeu. Their report not only confirmed the journalists’ claims but uncovered much more, including a money-laundering scandal that involved diocesan cemeteries. 

 

After Prevost moved to Rome to head the Dicastery for Bishops, he was closely involved in the measures that led to the SCV’s suppression. In 2024 Francis expelled the Sodalicio founder, Luis Figari, and forced out Archbishop Eguren. He then expelled Eguren and nine other founders. Not long after Eguren fell, Prevost began to be accused of abuse coverup in media close to the SCV.

 

The reports alleged that he had failed to deal properly with a case in Chiclayo. The diocese denied the claims, pointing out that Prevost had followed guidelines precisely. Meanwhile, Ugaz and Salinas began receiving death threats. They came to the Vatican last October, where Prevost saw them more than once.

 

He arranged for them to meet Francis, who promised he would act decisively against the Sodalicio, telling Ugaz: “Pecadores sí, corruptos no” (“One thing are sinners; another thing are the corrupt”). In January this year, in one of his final acts, Francis signed a decree closing down the SCV, which took effect in April, shortly before he died. 


 

Pope Leo XIV's coat of arms 

 

At the conclave, the right-wing Spanish group InfoVaticana recirculated the claims against Prevost—claims rejected by the diocese of Chiclayo and by the Doctrine of the Dicastey of Faith in Rome—to try to prevent his election. A day before the conclave, InfoVaticana described him as a “defeated candidate…frustrated because his aspirations to the papacy had crumbled.” The quote has not worn well. 

 

In his meeting with the press on May 12, Pope Leo’s speech defended freedom of expression and raised his voice on behalf of journalists imprisoned for speaking the truth. Later, as he greeted representatives of the press, he received Ugaz’s stole and posed for a photo with her. “If it wasn’t for Francis and Leo, we would be in jail,” she said. “That’s no joke.”

 

Because Leo knew Francis so well and worked with him so closely, he has had time not just to learn from him, but to consider what needs to change. On May 10, after addressing the cardinals, he asked them to spend time in silence, then meet in small groups before reconvening with him for an open-floor discussion about priorities.

 

Leo will be more collegial in his governance than Francis. He will seek buy-in from the Curia to press through Francis’s structural reforms, which, toward the end of his pontificate, often fell short of being implemented.

 

Leo has already used the freedoms Francis won to make his own decisions about how to dress and where to live. He is much younger than Benedict and Francis were when they were elected; he uses X and WhatsApp; he speaks fluent American English. But he has made clear that he will continue to build the synodal Church of which Francis dreamed, while likely reformulating some of the themes of Francis’s pontificate in more Augustinian terms.

 

He will teach us how to build a celestial city alongside the earthly city governed by the libido dominandi of the technocratic paradigm, AI, nationalism, and war.

 

Knowing that the world will not listen to a divided Church, he asked at his inauguration Mass that we pray for a united Church, a sign of unity and communion, which becomes a leaven for a reconciled world. As he told the journalists, quoting St. Augustine: “We are the times: Such as we are, such are the times.”Austen Ivereigh is the British author of two biographies of Pope Francis, and a book written in collaboration with him. His most recent book is First Belong to God: On Retreat with Pope Francis (Loyola Press). Bridge Builder | Commonweal Magazine



 

St Bede the Venerable, Priest and Doctor of the Church 


 

"May He Who is the Way, the Truth and the Life be our guide in a rebellious world doomed to perdition, lies and death"-Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano

Sunday, 25 May 2025

NOT SAFE, EFFECTIVE. OR A VAX. JAIL - NOW


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Nothing: absolutely nothing in human history compares with the devastation of the COVID-19 plandemic for physical, mental, psychological and spiritual harm. Billions bowed down before the gods of profit and globalism and were gulled into accepting a poisonous vaccine designed to damage or end their life, ironically because they desperately wanted to evade death. 


But Pandora's Vaccine Box has been forced open. In the US, Trump's administration has torpedoed annual Covid shots for the young and healthy, Biden is accused of systemic corruption by hiding vaccine data, causing an explosion of myocarditis in young men and Pfizer and Moderna must improve on warnings of heart damage. But in New Zealand the Coalition carries on jabbing regardless ... 


The jabbed-to-the-eyeballs crowd will soon be demanding retribution: lawsuits for myocarditis, SV49 etc from the Faucis, the Gateses and Ashley Bloomfields - even perhaps from the Vatican's Bergoglio administration, for its complicity in the global COVID scam. But true justice demands deterrence, and punishment that fits the crime.Accountability, jail sentences, even the death penalty have to happen. NOW.







COVID Vaccine “Safe and Effective” Narrative Collapses on Camera

 

The “safe and effective” narrative collapsed on camera during Senator Ron Johnson’s explosive Senate hearing on COVID-19 vaccine injuries Wednesday afternoon.

 


Senator Ron Johnson brought the receipts, exposing how the Biden administration DELIBERATELY hid vaccine harms from the public.


 

Then Dr. James Thorp (OB-GYN) revealed miscarriage data so disturbing, it left the room silent.

 

This is the Senate hearing they never wanted you to see. I turned three hours of footage into a five-minute read.

 

Senator Ron Johnson opened the hearing with a bombshell: the Biden administration knew about deadly heart risks tied to the COVID shots, and deliberately kept it from the public.

 

Johnson released newly subpoenaed records exposing a detailed timeline of what officials knew and when. While Pfizer and Moderna received insider updates, doctors and citizens who raised concerns were silenced.

 

In February 2021, Israeli health officials warned the CDC of “large reports of myocarditis, particularly in young people” following Pfizer injections, just two and a half months after the vaccine received emergency use authorization.

 

By April, the CDC was already reviewing myocarditis data from Israel and the Department of Defense. But instead of alerting the public, they stayed quiet.


By the end of that month, VAERS had recorded 2,926 deaths, nearly half of which occurred within three days of injection. “Somebody ought to be looking at it,” Johnson said.

 

In May, the CDC considered issuing a formal health alert—but scrapped it. They replaced it with watered-down guidance that removed a key warning for doctors to restrict physical activity in myocarditis patients.

 

Francis Collins, then director of the NIH, brushed it all off. “Senator, people die,” he told Johnson.

 

In just six months, the toll was staggering: 384,270 reports of adverse events, 4,812 deaths, and 1,736 of those occurred within just 48 hours of injection.

https://twitter.com/i/status/1925257764252918239

 

 


 

Dr. Peter McCullough then took the floor and upended the narrative that vaccine-induced myocarditis is “rare.”

 

Before COVID, McCullough had seen just two myocarditis cases in his entire career. After the rollout, everything changed.

He says he’s now “examined thousands of patients with this problem.”

 

There’s 1,065 papers in the peer-reviewed literature on COVID vaccine myocarditis,” he explained, pointing to a 2021 case published in the New England Journal of Medicine. A 42-year-old man developed vaccine-induced myocarditis. “The infection is ruled out,” McCullough said. “It’s the vaccine.” Three days after his Moderna shot, the man was dead.

 

McCullough cited a shocking case from Korea—a young man who died within eight hours of hospitalization after a Pfizer shot. His heart had been, in McCullough’s words, “fried with inflammation.”

 

Then came a case from Connecticut: two teenage boys, 16 and 17, died in their sleep just days after Pfizer. Their parents found them unresponsive.

 

“These cases… should have gotten everyone’s attention,” McCullough said. “We should never have someone die after taking a vaccine that’s directly caused to the vaccine.”

 

Alabama-based physician Dr. Jordan Vaughn followed up with a chilling estimate—up to 15 million Americans may be suffering from long COVID or COVID vaccine injuries.

 

He now treats teenagers who can’t stand up and previously healthy adults who are suffering strokes with no clear cause.

 

According to Vaughn, the spike protein’s S1 subunit is far from harmless. “It triggers inflammation, it disrupts endothelial barriers, it induces fibrin resistant to breakdown, and it promotes a lot of amyloid aggregates,” he said.

 

These effects impair oxygen delivery, damage blood vessels, and trigger a wave of symptoms—racing heart, brain fog, shortness of breath, and post-exertional crashes.

 

In his clinic, Vaughn uses immunofluorescent microscopy to detect the spike protein’s damage, showing up in patients who were once thriving.

 

He warned that the mRNA injections led to uncontrolled spike protein production, which spread throughout the body, reaching the heart, brain, ovaries, and testes.

https://twitter.com/i/status/1925269152475795824

 



 

 

Regulators claimed the vaccine stayed in the arm. That was a lie. A Yale study now shows some people are still producing spike protein more than 700 days after their last injection.

 

We didn’t just inject people. We turned them into spike protein factories.


OB-GYN Dr. James Thorp delivered one of the most haunting moments of the hearing.

He said the COVID shots “MIRRORED” the effects of chemical abortion drugs—and the government knew what it was doing.

 

Dr. Thorp pointed to the now-infamous Shimabukuro study published in the New England Journal of Medicine, which claimed a 12.6% miscarriage rate following COVID vaccination.

 

But when you isolate the data for women vaccinated in the first trimester, the miscarriage rate rises to 82%, Dr. Thorp said. This 82% claim remains a topic of debate within the scientific community.

 

If true, “This figure mirrors the effects of chemical abort drugs,” Dr. Thorp lamented.

https://twitter.com/i/status/1925343525660401833

 

He added, “Recently, animal studies revealed the mRNA COVID vaccine causes the destruction of 60 PERCENT of the ovarian reserve in rats.”

 

If that effect translates to humans, it could be a catastrophic blow to fertility and the future of entire generations.

 

Dr. Thorp said pregnant women were deliberately targeted, and their unborn children paid the price.

 

“This must stop now,” he said.

 

Attorney Aaron Siri then delivered a little-known history lesson on vaccine liability.

 

“For every product on the market, you can SUE the manufacturer for harm,” Siri said. “There’s only ONE product in America you CANNOT sue the manufacturer to claim it could have been made safer—and that’s VACCINES.”

 

He explained how the 1986 National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act gave pharmaceutical companies sweeping immunity, not just for three vaccines, but for every new childhood shot added to the CDC schedule.

 

The result? A schedule that exploded from 3 shots to 29 in the first year of life, with zero accountability.

 

“They don’t have the financial incentive to make them safer,” Siri said. “In fact, they have the disincentive.”

https://twitter.com/i/status/1925344315485954233

 

 

COVID shots “MIRRORED” the effects of chemical abortion drugs


 

Senator Ron Johnson confronted Hawaii Gov. Josh Green, who was defending the COVID jabs at the hearing.

I could fill this room with photos of people who are DEAD because of the COVID injection,” Johnson said. “I could fill the room,” he reiterated.

 

He made the comment after calling out how the vaccine-injured are still being ignored, gaslit, and denied care.

 

Johnson pointed to VAERS data showing 38,607 reported deaths after the shot, 9,228 of them within two days.

 

Multiply that by a conservative underreporting factor of 10, and the death toll climbs to over 386,000.

https://twitter.com/i/status/1925344804340473932

 

Vaccine-injured call for justice

 

 

Dr. Peter McCullough delivered one of the most powerful moments of the hearing.

 

Senator Blumenthal had previously claimed the COVID vaccines “saved three million lives.”

 

Dr. McCullough quickly dismantled that false narrative. He delivered a three-part reality check on what actually brought COVID deaths down:

1. Natural immunity did the heavy lifting.

2. Early treatment kept people out of hospitals.

3. The virus mutated into a milder form.

“The vaccine cannot be falsely credited with saving millions of lives,” McCullough said.

 

“We can’t allow false drug advertising to be put up on a poster behind one of our public servants. We cannot accept that.”

https://twitter.com/i/status/1925345042014904626

 

 



 

Sen. Ron Johnson delivered another crushing blow to the “safe and effective” narrative—this time with a devastating chart that exposed that lie.

 

The chart showed that one of the biggest spikes in COVID cases and deaths occurred AFTER the vaccine rollout began in December 2020.

 

By mid-2021, over half the U.S. was “fully vaccinated.” But instead of improving, the numbers got worse.

 

If the vaccine had worked, cases and deaths would have dropped. They didn’t—and this chart makes that impossible to ignore.

https://twitter.com/i/status/1925345273804652953

 

 




Sensing the narrative was slipping, Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-Connecticut) scrambled to defend public health officials.

He became visibly agitated at the suggestion that vaccine risks had been covered up.

“I may be sounding a little bit like a lawyer, not a physician, but purposeful concealment, intentional hiding, is essentially undocumented by the evidence released by this report itself,” Blumenthal said.

 

He brushed off the myocarditis concerns as “rare” and insisted that officials like Rochelle Walensky took “multiple steps” to warn the public.

 

So his message quietly shifted from “safe and effective” to “We did our best with what we knew at the time,” a clear sign that the vaccine narrative is running out of ground to stand on.

https://twitter.com/i/status/1925345498958889186 

 



 

Vaccine-injured physician Dr. Joel Wallskog captured the pain of the vaccine-injured better than anyone.

 

“If I could describe one word that I think all, if not most, vaccine-injured will say… it’s ABANDONMENT.”

 

He explained how people like him have been attacked from both sides.

 

“The right says we’re stupid… the left calls us anti-vaxxers, which is one of the most ignorant things to say.”

 

He reminded the room that he was injured because he got vaccinated.

 

Dr. Wallskog and vaccine-injured associate Brianne Dressen met multiple times with FDA vaccine chief Dr. Peter Marks over two years.

 

“We have been placated, we have been blown off,” he said. “He thanks us, he says he’ll get back to us… he never does.”

 

Dr. Wallskog added that the idea that federal agencies are trying to help is “the farthest from the truth.”

https://twitter.com/i/status/1925345713841426768

 

 

 

A perfectly healthy baby with a perfect immune system jabbed full of vaccines that drug manufactures are not held liable for if it injures or kills that child



Dr. McCullough closed the hearing with a final truth bomb.

 

“You’ve asked for us to cite evidence,” Dr. McCullough began.

 

He pointed to three papers by Nathaniel Mead, a former National Institutes of Health writer sitting in the audience. Together, they contain nearly 1,000 references—and they all reach the same conclusion:

 

“The risks of COVID-19 vaccination far outweigh any theoretical benefits.”

 

Dr. McCullough then dismantled the narrative pushed by Gov. Josh Green and Sen. Richard Blumenthal, calling their claims that the vaccines saved lives and reduced the severity of disease as nothing more than “wishful thinking.”

 

“I don’t want America to be fooled by this hearing today thinking that the vaccines saved lives—because they didn’t,” Dr. McCullough said.

 

The COVID vaccine narrative they sold to the public is collapsing right before our eyes.

Watch the full Senate hearing and see what your so-called “trusted health officials” were hiding all along. Click here to watch.COVID Vaccine “Safe and Effective” Narrative Collapses on Camera





Antoine Coypel, “Almighty God the Father,” detail, Palace of Versailles chapel




"I came forth from the Father and am come into the world; again I leave the world and I go to the Father"
- Gospel, Fifth Sunday after Easter