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Antipope Francis, of unhappy memory, once referred to gay men as "frociaggine", a term considered a highly offensive slur. Clerical and lay eyebrows were raised, shock was registered but apparently what 'the pope' says, goes, and Francis stayed - to wreak further havoc on the Body of Christ.
Now, when Monsignor Marco Agostini, a pillar of the Church and advocate for the Latin Mass, is set up by a gay, progressive 'Catholic' blogger alleging that +Agostini had complained about gay cardinals and bishops in Rome dominating the curia, he's instantly dismissed by Francis' protege, 'Pope Leo XIV' - just ahead of Leo's much-vaunted consistory. The whispered insult, caught on a hot mike, was “culattoni” (faggots).
If indeed +Agostini said such a thing, he was only speaking the truth: it's widely believed that 80% of priests and bishops in the conciliar Curia are of the sodomitic persuasion. His sacking is ridiculous and reeks of a put-up job: for his adherence to the Latin Mass, +Agostini was a marked man. It's abhorrent and intolerable - especially so, one imagines, to straight clerics like +Agostini who are inevitably tarred with the rainbow brush. Even more intolerably, it's the sodomites in the Leonine church who are praised and promoted while good priests are done down.
Then insult is added to injury to Christ's Mystical Body by sodomites who venemously claim heterosexual clerics like +Agostini are actually closeted gays. Could ordinary lay people and straight priests and bishops now come to the defence of their crucified Lord and Master, Jesus Christ? Please?
A senior Vatican ceremonies official has been removed from his post after an Italian blog published an ambiguous audio excerpt in which the priest allegedly called some Vatican clergymen “faggots.”
On January 1, Monsignor Marco Agostini, an Italian priest who had served for more than 16 years as a pontifical master of ceremonies, was removed from his role in Vatican City following the publication by the Italian blog Silere Non Possum of an audio clip, extracted from a Vatican News video, in which a whispered phrase attributed to Agostini was presented as referring to cardinals. No official explanation for his removal has been issued by the Holy See.
The phrase “[Sono] culattoni, tutti insieme” (“they are faggots, all together”) can be heard toward the end of the contested clip, allegedly referring to cardinals present at the ceremony.
The controversy originated with an article published by Silere Non Possum. The article embedded a short audio excerpt taken from a publicly available Vatican News video of a liturgical celebration. In the clip, an indistinct voice is heard near an open microphone, uttering disparaging remarks about someone’s homosexuality, although it is not clear whether the comment was in fact directed at the cardinals present.
The audio was not accompanied by technical verification, contextual clarification, or independent confirmation of the identity of the speaker. The video itself, produced and broadcast by Vatican News, did not identify the source of the whispered words, nor did it provide visual evidence linking the phrase to Agostini. Nevertheless, the blog article explicitly associated the uttering of the words with him.
Shortly after the circulation of the article, the original Vatican News video on YouTube was edited. The initial segment containing the ambient audio was apparently removed, and the video now begins directly with the liturgical formula “Surgant omnes,” pronounced aloud by Agostini at the Pope’s entrance.
Vatican dismissals of this kind are typically handled without public statements, but the timing of the decision drew attention among Vatican watchers. InfoVaticana raised the possibility that the removal was linked to the publication of the audio clip, while noting that no formal connection has been confirmed by Vatican authorities.
Marco Felipe Perfetti, founder and owner of the Italian blog Silere Non Possum, has previously published content addressing homosexuality in the Catholic Church. For example, in an episode of his podcast Pensieri e Parole titled “Chiesa e omosessualità” (“Church and homosexuality”) released on April 27, 2022, Perfetti stated that he regretted that the Church’s position on homosexuality had “unfortunately” not changed under Pope Francis.
Agostini has not released public statements in response to the accusations or to his removal until today. Furthermore, according to a source LifeSiteNews consulted on the matter who is very close to the Vatican, there are serious doubts as to whether the voice in the recording actually belongs to Agostini.
“Agostini comes from the Secretariat of State, where he still holds a position. His dismissal as Master of Ceremonies, however, coincides with the natural expiration of the latest in a series of five‑year mandates, which had already taken place in October or November 2025. It is therefore difficult to see a necessary connection between the audio clip and the termination of his liturgical service,” the internal source stated.
Agostini was ordained a priest in Italy and spent his adult life in ecclesiastical service. On June 13, 2009, during the pontificate of Benedict XVI, he was appointed Pontifical Master of Ceremonies, a role that placed him at the centre of papal liturgies and official celebrations. In that capacity, he served under Popes Benedict XVI, Francis, and Leo XIV, overseeing canonizations, consistories, apostolic journeys, and major liturgical events.
Throughout his tenure, Agostini remained largely unknown to the general public and was regarded within Vatican circles as a discreet and technically reliable official. His continued service across three pontificates has been cited by observers as evidence of institutional confidence in his work.
In recent years, Agostini became known among certain Catholic circles for celebrating Mass according to the traditional Roman rite, including in the crypt of St. Peter’s Basilica, and for participating in events associated with traditional liturgical practice, as for example in Covadonga, Spain. Agostini has always celebrated in the Vatican with the explicit permission of Pope Francis.https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/papal-mc-removed-after-audio-clip-allegedly-captures-him-using-slur-against-cardinals/
For Anthony Stine's inimitable treatment of this topic watch:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bmCc3opVABQ |
| Marco Felipe Perfetti, founder and director of Silere Non Possum |
Everything starts with something that, under normal conditions, would not have gone beyond an anecdote. In a public event broadcast by the official signal of Vatican News, an ambient microphone picks up a confusing phrase.
It’s not known who is speaking, nor who it refers to, nor if it has any relevance. It could be a private joke, a technician’s comment, or a loose phrase without much importance. Nothing that, by itself, justifies a scandal.
And yet, the scandal erupts. Not after an investigation, but almost immediately. As if someone was waiting for exactly that. Here the first reasonable suspicion appears: either someone deliberately miked Agostini, or someone asked to be especially attentive to the ambient microphones located near his position.
It’s not a conspiracy theory; it’s simple logic. The audio is not discovered by chance a week later: it is detected at the moment and even the author of some whispers is identified, was someone waiting for the opportunity?
Perfetti has earned the trust of a specific circle in the curia And at that point, it’s best to make it clear from the beginning: the center of this story is not the audio, but those who activate the young Marco Felipe Perfetti, founder and director of Silere Non Possum, a recently created media outlet for ecclesial information.
Perfetti is a 29-year-old who studied law in Bologna but has ended up inclined toward journalism. He sports a sparsely populated but meticulously trimmed beard and a rainbow bracelet.
He is a militant defender on social networks of the LGBT agenda (inside and outside the Church), he defends gay marches and campaigns by labeling other Vaticanists as homophobes on social media, he proudly wears his symbols, and he is someone who in recent times has woven surprisingly good relationships with certain cardinals and curial positions. There are conditions that continue to be an advantage for accessing certain circles in Rome. Coincidences of life: exactly the same environments that Agostini discomforts.
When the audio appears, Perfetti does not hesitate, does not verify, and does not ask. He loads the message. He publishes it. And he pushes it upward. In hours, what was background noise becomes ammunition.
The result is fulminating: Agostini, with sixteen years of impeccable service and having passed through three pontificates, is removed without qualms. Not for clear evidence, but for an interested interpretation of a confusing audio. Mercy zero. Prudence zero. Maximum haste. And it is here where many begin to raise an eyebrow: was this really so serious as to act this way, or was it simply the expected moment to settle scores?
Then comes the most revealing part. Perfetti and Silere Non Possum launch themselves on social networks to indiscriminately label traditionalists as closeted, repressed, or frustrated homosexuals, even using a supposed anonymous interview from a cardinal friend of Perfetti for that purpose. It is a reaction as exaggerated as it is childish, as noisy as it is revealing.
There is mockery, finger-pointing, and personal disqualification. It is the oldest trick in the world among homosexuals who—by position or function—feel questioned: I may be gay, but you are too and you repress it.
Besides being petty, the strategy is ridiculous. That a defender of the LGBT agenda at the helm of a «Catholic» media outlet attempts to discredit the traditional sector of the Church by calling it homosexual demonstrates more nervousness than strength.
Let’s recap, so anyone can understand: an ambiguous audio appears; someone was waiting; that someone activates a media outlet run by a young rainbow activist and turns it into a scandal; the uncomfortable priest falls in hours; and then the narrative is finished off with a campaign of generalized insults.
There are too many well-aligned coincidences to be innocent. When the sequence is so clean, so fast, and so convenient, chance is usually the preferred alibi for those who don’t want to explain the method.
But there is something that neither Perfetti nor his allies can control: the reaction of the faithful. They can control microphones, media, and offices. They can have the official Church. But they do not have the trust of ordinary people, who perfectly distinguish between justice and settling scores. The times are changing. They retain the structure; but the living Church—the one that prays, thinks, and is not fooled by crude campaigns—is not with them.https://infovaticana.com/it/2026/01/02/perfetti-il-vaticanista-arcobaleno-dietro-lattacco-ad-agostini/
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