
Guest essay by Eric Worrall
The answer is sort of.
…
I was curious to know if the Pope saw the crisis and the economic devastation it is wreaking as a chance for an ecological conversion, for reassessing priorities and lifestyles. I asked him concretely whether it was possible that we might see in the future an economy that – to use his words – was more “human” and less “liquid”.
Pope Francis: There is an expression in Spanish: “God always forgives, we forgive sometimes, but nature never forgives.” We did not respond to the partial catastrophes. Who now speaks of the fires in Australia, or remembers that 18 months ago a boat could cross the North Pole because the glaciers had all melted? Who speaks now of the floods? I don’t know if these are the revenge of nature, but they are certainly nature’s response.
We have a selective memory. I want to dwell on this point. I was amazed at the seventieth anniversary commemoration of the Normandy landings, which was attended by people at the highest levels of culture and politics. It was one big celebration. It’s true that it marked the beginning of the end of dictatorship, but no one seemed to recall the 10,000 boys who remained on that beach.
When I went to Redipuglia for the centenary of the First World War I saw a lovely monument and names on a stone, but that was it. I cried, thinking of Benedict XV’s phrase inutile strage (“senseless massacre”), and the same happened to me at Anzio on All Souls’ Day, thinking of all the North American soldiers buried there, each of whom had a family, and how any of them might have been me.
At this time in Europe when we are beginning to hear populist speeches and witness political decisions of this selective kind it’s all too easy to remember Hitler’s speeches in 1933, which were not so different from some of the speeches of a few European politicians now.
What comes to mind is another verse of Virgil’s: [forsan et haec olim] meminisse iubavit[“perhaps one day it will be good to remember these things too”]. We need to recover our memory because memory will come to our aid. This is not humanity’s first plague; the others have become mere anecdotes. We need to remember our roots, our tradition which is packed full of memories. In the Spiritual Exercises of St Ignatius, the First Week, as well as the “Contemplation to Attain Love” in the Fourth Week, are completely taken up with remembering. It’s a conversion through remembrance.
This crisis is affecting us all, rich and poor alike, and putting a spotlight on hypocrisy. I am worried by the hypocrisy of certain political personalities who speak of facing up to the crisis, of the problem of hunger in the world, but who in the meantime manufacture weapons. This is a time to be converted from this kind of functional hypocrisy. It’s a time for integrity. Either we are coherent with our beliefs or we lose everything.
You ask me about conversion. Every crisis contains both danger and opportunity: the opportunity to move out from the danger. Today I believe we have to slow down our rate of production and consumption (Laudato Si’, 191) and to learn to understand and contemplate the natural world. We need to reconnect with our real surroundings. This is the opportunity for conversion.
Yes, I see early signs of an economy that is less liquid, more human. But let us not lose our memory once all this is past, let us not file it away and go back to where we were. This is the time to take the decisive step, to move from using and misusing nature to contemplating it. We have lost the contemplative dimension; we have to get it back at this time.
And speaking of contemplation, I’d like to dwell on one point. This is the moment to see the poor. Jesus says we will have the poor with us always, and it’s true. They are a reality we cannot deny. But the poor are hidden, because poverty is bashful. In Rome recently, in the midst of the quarantine, a policeman said to a man: “You can’t be on the street, go home.” The response was: “I have no home. I live in the street.” To discover such a large number of people who are on the margins … And we don’t see them, because poverty is bashful. They are there but we don’t see them: they have become part of the landscape; they are things.
St Teresa of Calcutta saw them, and had the courage to embark on a journey of conversion. To “see” the poor means to restore their humanity. They are not things, not garbage; they are people. We can’t settle for a welfare policy such as we have for rescued animals. We often treat the poor like rescued animals. We can’t settle for a partial welfare policy.
I’m going to dare to offer some advice. This is the time to go to the underground. I’m thinking of Dostoyevsky’s short novel, Notes from the Underground. The employees of that prison hospital had become so inured they treated their poor prisoners like things. And seeing the way they treated one who had just died, the one on the bed alongside tells them: “Enough! He too had a mother!” We need to tell ourselves this often: that poor person had a mother who raised him lovingly. Later in life we don’t know what happened. But it helps to think of that love he once received through his mother’s hope.
We disempower the poor. We don’t give them the right to dream of their mothers. They don’t know what affection is; many live on drugs. And to see them can help us to discover the piety, the pietas, which points towards God and towards our neighbour.
Go down into the underground, and pass from the hyper-virtual, fleshless world to the suffering flesh of the poor. This is the conversion we have to undergo. And if we don’t start there, there will be no conversion.
I’m thinking at this time of the saints who live next door. They are heroes: doctors, volunteers, religious sisters, priests, shop workers – all performing their duty so that society can continue functioning. How many doctors and nurses have died! How many religious sisters have died! All serving … What comes to my mind is something said by the tailor, in my view one of the characters with greatest integrity in The Betrothed. He says: “The Lord does not leave his miracles half-finished.” If we become aware of this miracle of the next-door saints, if we can follow their tracks, the miracle will end well, for the good of all. God doesn’t leave things halfway. We are the ones who do that.
What we are living now is a place of metanoia (conversion), and we have the chance to begin. So let’s not let it slip from us, and let’s move ahead.
…
Read more: https://www.thetablet.co.uk/features/2/17845/pope-francis-says-pandemic-can-be-a-place-of-conversion-
.His holiness ideas for degrowth would devastate the poor. Modern prosperity gives us choices. Many of us might give to charities, because we can afford to give, but that generosity would dry up real quick if our own families didn’t have enough to eat.
Forced degrowth would remove those choices, we would all be limited to the choices poor people face. All except a very few.
The past has no answers for the poor. For most of human history the poor lived harsh lives and died young, their bodies broken by endless toil.
Today some poor people still slip through the net, but most, at least in wealthy countries, most poor people receive a level of care and help unimaginable even a hundred years ago.
It is in the future we will find a solution for poverty, by building on the successes of today.
Imagine a future of automation and unlimited consumption, where nobody goes hungry or is alone, unless they want some privacy. A future overflowing with enough wealth to satisfy the needs of everyone. A future of achievement and mastery over nature, of leisure and contemplation or excitement and joy, where disease and hunger and perhaps even old age are things of the past.
This is a future worth building.
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Has there ever been a more dishonest pope in modern times? If so, who was he?
I like to think of him as The Poop.
Apparently this pope has never heard of physics, for that is the basis of “nature’s response”, nothing more and nothing less!
This pope is a dope.
Pardon me but WTF is an honest pope?
The real problem is he actually believes he is being honest, he is simply totally clueless.
“…Who now speaks of the fires in Australia, or remembers that 18 months ago a boat could cross the North Pole because the glaciers had all melted? …”
Anyone who spouts this nonsense is way beyond clueless.
Chris
That’s a stupid response and deserves to be mocked as stupid.
There have been plenty of great popes. Unfortunately, we don’t have one right now.
“The real problem is he actually believes he is being honest, he is simply totally clueless.”
I agree. He really does believe what he is saying. And his thoughts really are clueless. He, like many socialists, is living in a dreamworld. He can emote, but he can’t think straight. Like most leftists.
The man was supposedly a revolutionary Catholic, one of the types some of my Marxist (now Warmunist) associates praised for bringing an end to the capitalist beast. To have heard these avowed Marxists, trotskyites and Maoists praise this fellow for all of the good he is doing is quite a shock, given their avowed atheist positions and recitation that religion is the opiate. They don’t respect his religion but his power to persuade. Remember this is the fellow that handed the church to the CPC to manage. And these are the people who tell you that this time, this time, with socialism we will get it right.
T E I agree with what you say. Like anyone well known, actors, actresses, ex princes and their wives, Greta, politicians in high places of power. I’d say the current pope fits in well with these sorts of people. The thing is, all of these people people have the power and the money to do real good in the world. Sadly it’s more about how they are perceived in what they do. They speak with great self importance but very little knowledge. They are the kings and queens of virtue signalling, yet have little understanding of the real situation.
Most of them are famous for being famous, in reality important only to themselves.
Man’s a frigging idiot….
Pope Pius XII
Hmmm, tricky, but I think most of the previous popes going back several centuries, just hard to pick a single individual really.
“A future of achievement and mastery over nature,”
If you believe Man can master Nature, aren’t you guilty of the same hubris as the warmists believing that hurricanes, droughts, fires, heatwaves etc. etc. can be eliminated or reduced by lowering levels of C02?
All civilisation is an effort to bend nature to our will. Bug spray is an effort to master annoying insects. Clothes protect us from weather. Warm houses provide security and safety. I‘m suggesting we build on these achievements.
Man does not control what Nature does – when we apply our minds correctly, we make her rampages ineffective.
Wot?
At this point I could take nothing that the author wrote seriously any longer.
I didn’t know there were glaciers at the North Pole. I suppose there weren’t any glaciers there 18 month ago. What about sea ice? What about 6 months ago?
” . . . because the glaciers had all melted.”
NORTH AMERICA
Well, Canada counts more than 150 glaciers, including those in vast Nunavut, but most of the easiest-to-visit are located in the well-touristed Canadian Rockies, like Jasper National Park‘s Athabasca Glacier. [The Athabasca Glacier’s] accessibility makes it the most-visited glacier in North America. There are walking tours, as well as snow coaches.
In the U.S. Lower 48, Glacier National Park in Montana has more than 700 miles of trails through valleys that were carved by its original 150 glaciers . . . two dozen remain today.
Alaska‘s ice is in better shape. There’s Portage Glacier in the mountains overlooking Anchorage’s bedroom community of Girdwood, and 27-mile-long Matanuska, just a two-hour drive from Alaska’s main city on the Glenn Highway . . . Down towards the capital, the 1,500-sq-mile Juneau Icefield is the parent field of Mendenhall Glacier, just to the north of the city on Glacier Highway.
And then there’s Greenland. It’s got its own ice sheet, but many of the glaciers flowing out of it are far from human settlement and prohibitively expensive to visit. The best option may be Narsarsuaq, just a few hours’ walk from the town of the same name in southern Greenland. Six-hour guided treks on the glacier itself can be arranged.
EUROPE
Glaciers are common in many countries in Europe, but most are found in these three:
Switzerland: The Great Aletsch Glacier is the largest in the Alps and part of the Jungfrau-Aletsch Protected Area, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Norway: Jostedal National Park surrounds the glacier of Jostedal, the largest in continental Europe. . . . Other popular glaciers include Vestre Svartisen in the country’s north, known for it’s dark blue hues and which ends just 20 feet above sea level, and Folgefonna, the third-largest glacier in Norway.
Iceland: Just two hours from Reykjavik, Sólheimajökull is a popular destination for tours. . . . A full 8% of Iceland is covered by the massive Vatnajökull, Europe’s largest glacier.
ASIA
. . . the majority of glaciers in India, Pakistan, China, Tibet, Nepal, Tajikistan, Mongolia, Bhutan, and Indonesia require some determination to reach.
In the Indian state of Uttarakhand, there’s Gangotri Glacier, principal source of the Ganges River . . .
Neighboring Pakistan has . . . Batura Glacier, which at more than 35 miles in length is one of the longest glaciers outside of the Arctic and Antarctic . . . Baltoro Glacier is the one at the foot of K2.
Nepal has high-mountain glaciers . . . Thirty percent of visitors to Nepal come for the Annapurna Circuit, which brings you to within sight of several glaciers. . . . The Rongbuk Glacier in the Tibetan Himalayas is traversed by hikers and climbers to gain access to Everest’s Advanced Base Camp . . .
China makes things a bit easier. Hailuogou National Glacier Forest Park is located in Sichuan Province, less than 200 miles from Chengdu. It’s the largest such park in China, with trails to the Hailuogou Glacier, . . . and the Grand Glacier Cascade, where glacial ice drops towards the forest below.
Whew! All of the above info on glaciers extracted from https://matadornetwork.com/trips/where-to-find-glaciers-in-the-northern-hemisphere/
And all along I thought il Papa had some competent science advisors. Maybe not . . . or maybe he just chooses not to listen to them, or to do some Web searching on his own.
Anyway, facts still matter.
yeah that got a WTF !? when I read it. I was convinced it was going to be Guardian article but I guess they are probably holding masterclasses in climate BS by now, in league with other publishers.
Why 18 mo ago? What about 6mo is “because all the glaciers had melted” what happened last summer, did all the “glaciers” grow back again last year?
“A boat ” OMG, it’s worse than I thought.
I only read it to laugh at the predictable stupidity.
Otters are fish, dontcha know..?
Some have clearly not come out of the Medieval Dim Period and probably never will.
The blame in this case I’d guess lies in some relating of an interview where a romance-language glace-something, meant to mean ice (like e.g. sea ice) sadly was interpreted as “glaciers” in English :-]
Yes, I figured there must be something lost in translation with that one. No one could be that stupid …… or could they?
No translation, the interview was conducted in English so wrong use of words maybe.
OK I found it also in Spanish and he says “glaciers” “glaciares”… and that is Vatican news so it should close the debate…
Oh yes they could! I work with some of them!
I considered that, too, until I looked up the translations. From English to Spanish: ship and boat both translate to Barco, so I’ll give him that one. However, glacier translates to glacier, and sea ice translates to be ice. He missed that one completely.
Yes my Pope is an embarrassment.
On this Good Friday I would love him to stick to the Christian religion instead of the pagan cult of global warming.
Of course the real tragedy is he takes advice from Marxists, Malthusians, and fake scientists like Schellenhuber, Sachs and an Ill school drop out from Scandinavia.
Mind you the leading question from that English interrogator above would be difficult with a yes or no.
Even so, the ice didn’t all melt.
I suspect what he MEANT to say was that a boat was able to traverse the NW Passage because the level of sea ICE was low. Or that an ice-boat was able to reach the North Pole (except it wasn’t).
Maybe the boat had skis on it?
I am curious what language the interview was conducted in. I did not see that info in the original article. I am hardly a supporter of Pope Francis, but this particular error could easily be poor translation.
“Cross the North Pole because all the glaciers have melted.” ??
Would not the Pontiff be referring to pack ice?
Sigh.
Ignorance of the facts erodes one’s credibility faster than a melting berg.
It’s Her Choice.
Does he represent Catholics? I don’t think this is congruent with their beliefs. There are so-called “secular” sects who believe that humans are Gaia’s “burden”, and planned parenthood, planned parent, and planned population, that is excess deaths, are Her Choice.
The Pope appears to be woefully ill-informed. Make me wonder who’s in the drivers seat. And I must have missed the report about the boat sailing over the north pole. Damn!!
“We disempower the poor. We don’t give them the right to dream of their mothers. They don’t know what affection is; many live on drugs.”
Ok, let’s rise taxes, rollback our prosperity and finally drive the “poor” to extinction. Make energy a luxury good and let winters do the rest. Sounds like a plan ?
Hey Santo Capitano, tell us, how can we afford to take care of the poor if we are all poor? Like flying on empty, enjoy the comfortable silence as long as there’s altitude to spare and then suddenly…
The poor aren’t on drugs because they are “disempowered” (whetever the hell that means).
It’s just the opposite. The druggie poor have the freedom and power to screw themselves, and they do.
Junkies exist in all society altitudes. However for those already on the ground, there’s only one way. Seven feet under.
Thew went full bore hysteria on tobacco. Alternative smokes and pills products skyrocketed.
Result, enjoying a cappuccino with a cigarette is almost nowhere possible while the biggest income for restaurants is the always overpriced booze.
Makes me wonder…
Social progress acts as a smoothing function that increases the spread, emphasizing the outliers and perturbations.
The only people who think the outcomes shown in these charts are ideal, are the 1%.
And a noisy indoctrinated minority who clamour first the system to screw them
https://www.vox.com/2018/7/29/17627134/income-inequality-chart
I get it 😉
Markx = Marxist = Another useful Idiot.
Your income inequality meme is another attempt to sow social strife for income redistribution. It has never worked and it never will. It violates the incentives that people have to generate economic vitality and increase choice in a free market of suppliers and consumers. Without a free market the system stagnates, and eventually everyone is poor, except those that get to do the redistributing. They always manage to do well. While the working people of the country cower in fear of violent gangs, and scramble for basic necessities of life.
Hugo Chavez’s daughter is rumored to have a personal fortune of $4billion.
How did she earn it?
Buy providing goods and services to the public, that they chose in a free market of goods and services????
NOT!!!
Flight Level, not all will be poor. Not so long ago, all wealth went to the Catholic Church, the small people offered to the church to get salvation and protection. There is a lot of good in the catholic religion, but misuse for the sake of power and greed is often following suit.
This pope hate free trade and want’s a socialist world order in agreement with the UN and the the top ranking Climate Activists.
The pope should not take the name of St Teresa of Calcutta in vane. Teresa was a true and honest hero, who simply just wanted to help and not dictate any totalitarian policy.
Unfortunately, the present Pope Francis is a Socialist idiot.
“Socialist idiot”
isn’t it redundant ?
He’s a socialist, he’s an idiot(but I repeat myself)
The pope is a full blown marxist. He needs to be locked up in a rubber room.
Hahaha the last paragraph sums up the progressive socialist liberal mindset..
That can never be achieved because we’re HUMANS.. And Man 🚹 wants to RULE over another man
The Chinese government got to him…damn!
Yes, he’s batty.
Agreed, especially this which I see in various forms in China Daily or RT type media:
“…hypocrisy of certain political personalities who speak of facing up to the crisis, of the problem of hunger in the world, but who in the meantime manufacture weapons. ”
The West, especially the US, is always at fault for causing wars, poverty and manufacturing weapons and China and Russia are the ones bringing peace and equality to the world.
And here is Mao says about how to bring peace to the world: “Every Communist must grasp the truth, “Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun.” Our principle is that the Party commands the gun, and the gun must never be allowed to command the Party. Yet, having guns, we can create Party organizations, as witness the powerful Party organizations which the Eighth Route Army has created in northern China. We can also create cadres, create schools, create culture, create mass movements. Everything in Yenan has been created by having guns. All things grow out of the barrel of a gun. According to the Marxist theory of the state, the army is the chief component of state power. Whoever wants to seize and retain state power must have a strong army. Some people ridicule us as advocates of the “omnipotence of war”. Yes, we are advocates of the omnipotence of revolutionary war; that is good, not bad, it is Marxist. The guns of the Russian Communist Party created socialism. We shall create a democratic republic. Experience in the class struggle in the era of imperialism teaches us that it is only by the power of the gun that the working class and the labouring masses can defeat the armed bourgeoisie and landlords; in this sense we may say that only with guns can the whole world be transformed. We are advocates of the abolition of war, we do not want war; but war can only be abolished through war, and in order to get rid of the gun it is necessary to take up the gun.”
We are about to see what reduced production and consumption means in horrific economic collapse with very heavy human toll besides the virus. Be careful making any teaching moments out of that, especially any outdated ones.
hear the news about cats.. they get the virus too, with all the woes ,included..
they ignore climate change .. ditto ferrets .
Yes I’ve heard this too. https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-00984-8
As we (human) created God he must be somebody who ,????
Damn, the Chinese government go to him…
Hey, if the Pope wants to see the poor he can come to my town. The homeless are everywhere. Pooping here, peeing there.
No homeless in Vatican City?
I took one of them into my house last week … virus scare and all. He started smoking dope the first day (said he would stop, but when I came home from work the house stunk of it); he had to go to Fred Meyer specifically, rather than the cheaper store … I realized later that it was because there was a liquor store next door to Freddys, and he sneeked/brought back a half gallon of vodka; turned the heat up to 85 degrees and opened the window in his room (gotta have fresh air at night ya know…); repeatedly bath water all over the bathroom floor.
Almost all of them burn their bridges and can’t/won’t see past tomorrow. Most destitute poor are poor for specific reasons that are of their doing. It ain’t just circumstance.
I put him a motel room after a week of that shit. Told him he would be good for two weeks if he didn’t smoke in the room and if he would keep it clean (it was pretty bad on Monday … I need to go over there right now and check again).
I’ll pay for a plane trip to Vatican City if the Pope will house him for the same week that I did.
That was a good thing you did Don. We do such things in the hope that we can make a difference. That is only possible if the person you are trying to help is of the same mindset, of course if he was he wouldn’t be in the position he’s in.
Likely he thinks that whatever you have simply landed in your lap. If he hasn’t even had a job for some time he would have no concept of saving for anything. You’ve got it and he doesn’t. Gratitude isn’t always forthcoming and sometimes just the fact that you’ve got it makes him feel like he deserves what you’ve got. Even without having to work for it. Circles.
Addiction is insidious, perceived as a place to hide from unspeakable hurt. The addiction becomes the life of the addicted. They are out of it so much that they don’t even realise that they are not living life at all. Many of these people will never live a normal life, and you are right, most of them got themselves into that situation.
Makes me mad when virtue signallers complain about the poor and the destitute and how they shouldn’t have to live like that. They don’t have a clue, if they did they would understand that it’s just not that straightforward.
He does not care about the poor.
I say, that’s rather unfair, I’m quite sure he toasts (with the finest of wines) to their sacrifice every night within his walled (isn’t that racist?) city with it’s guards armed to the teeth.
I doff my cap to the man. Speaking of which when are we going to have a female Pope?
Why is that city walled by the way?
The Vatican walls, like other walls of Rome, were built to defend the seat of Christianity from the Celtic-British barbarians (originating from northern Europe), from the Svevi barbarians (original people of central Europe), from the Goti barbarians (people originating in Sweden), from the Longobardi barbarians (original people of Germany), from the Unni barbarians (people originating in southern Russia), from the Visigoti barbarians (people originating from the Scandinavian peninsula), from the Ostrogoti barbarians (people contiguous to the Goti), from the Normanni barbarians (original people of the current Denmark), from the Vandali barbarians (people from Eastern Europe), from the Saraceni barbarians (people from the Middle East muslim), from the Lanzichenecchi soldiers (soldiers from present Germany), etc … I now the walls of Rome and Vatican they can’t stop the new barbarians (French ultras, English hooligans, German hooligans, …). The world changes but barbarians always remain.
How barbaric!
If the Pope is saying that a vibrant economy destroys our humanity or diminishes our ability to care for the poor I have to disagree with him. Surely there are many examples of compassionless greed and inhumane treatment to be found in every strata of society. It is not things that we should guard against but the love of things. He seems to imply that the economy that avails itself of creation for sustenance causes us to treat the poor as things, even invisible things we can not see let alone have compassion for but that malady is not caused by an economy but the lack of will to see and help. A good economy allows those with vision to help the poor.
Now, Bill Nye, Aljeerza Gore (hundreds of millionaire), Bill (millionaire) McGibben, Pope Paul, Barack Obama (multi-multi-millionaire), and 16 year old Greta Thunberg (millionaire); and then their are billionaire environmental groups like Sierra Club, Nature Conservancy, EDF, NRDC, Rockefeller Foundation, Bloomberg Philanthropies, Pew Foundation, Heinz Foundation, Penn Foundation, Mellon Foundation, all of which are billionaire organizations investing in “Clean Green Machine” activities.
After this free 60-day trial of Davos Man’s wetdream, their schemes are going to have ZERO takers. I mean, ZERO. BTW, as a bonus we’re also finding out just how unreliable “models” of practically any chaotic system really are. CAGW agitprop’s going to be very difficult to sell; henceforth they’ll hype the “NEXT Pandemic!”
Whether “the Pope is Catholic” is now an open question. He sounds like he’s praying to a sentient, female Earth like a pagan Druid at Stonehenge. Not a good look for genuinely devout Catholics.
does a bear shit in the woods?
bears shit wherever they are at the time … wherever it is convenient.
Is the Pope catholic?
Stephen you are spot on! Nothing good has come out of wind and solar renewables, they have pulled no one out of poverty, in fact they are destroying industry. Can you imagine the good that could have been done with the money that has gone into promoting and building this industry. The warmists have turned it into an ‘investment’ opportunity. More like an opportunity for them to make more money!
What makes any actor or sportsman ‘worth’ millions of dollars per event? And why is it that when they do amass this wealth, they think that somehow what they have to say is more important than anyone else?
The pope says:
“18 months ago a boat could cross the North Pole because the glaciers had all melted.”
Is he referring to the ships that had to be rescued by ice-breakers?
what I was going to copy n comment too
what boat ??
and theyre not glaciers but pack ice etc
holy see corona count is now8
“There is an expression in Spanish: God always forgives, we forgive sometimes, but nature never forgives.”
Yes Your Holiness
I hear
And I obey
https://tambonthongchai.com/2020/03/15/noaas-ark/
Do I understand correctly that Mother Nature is Devil’s creation?
Who remembers that 18 months ago a boat could cross the North Pole? I don’t . Link, please.
I loved your link (post) chaamjamal, very clever.
The idea that we should actually reconnect with nature is valid. City dwellers are willing to support stupid policies because they have zero connection with nature. If more of the population was deeply connected to nature, a lot fewer people would believe in CAGW.
“remembers that 18 months ago a boat could cross the North Pole because the glaciers had all melted?
…
We have a selective memory.”
He has a selective imagination. There is not a single boat of ANY size that has crossed the North Pole and even those trying to go around the ice pack there have had problems. Such as the yacht that had to anchor for WEEKS until the net supposedly ice-free section could be navigated.
So he lied. Bald-faced and looking us straight in the face, he lied.
The pope is an imbecile. There must be a very good reason why the US and Russia are embarking on a multiple ice breaker building program!
“Jesus says we will have the poor with us always, and it’s true”
And that’s the ONLY biblical statement he makes. Lots of quotes from others and references to things of the world but nothing at all fro the bible or Jesus.
This is the pope brought onto the stage to destroy the Catholic Church – just look with open eyes at all he is doing and has done and see there is almost nothing to build the Church and the Catholic faith and everything to undermine and compromise it.
I am not at all Religious nor even Catholic, but it is clear they have a traitor at their helm.
“This is the pope brought onto the stage to destroy the Catholic Church”
My guess is that the church saw / sees the 3rd world as its future core, and brought in a pope who would cater to the desire of its 3rd-world prelates for cash from the Green Money fund by being a climate change activist.
The Pope is the epitome of a useful idiot except I believe he knows what he’s doing. He’s been promised that in the New World Order/One World Government he and the Catholic religion will have relevance and power. Unfortunately he hasn’t read the Communist Manifesto or recognized history.
And this is exactly the final temptation of Jesus: “Bow down before me [Satan] and I will give you all this [the kingdoms of the world]”
The pope gets a lot of things wrong. Eric Worrall points out some of them. I’ll add, re manufacturing weapons: Si vis pacem, para bellum – If you want peace, prepare for war – Flavius Vegetius Renatus c.400AD.
This person is a sad case:
1. He Looked the other way when people were being disappeared.
2. His hospitals were telling unwed mothers their children had died and then adopted them out for cash.
3. Looked the other way for pederasts.
4. Promoted a notorious pederast to a higher office in Chile.
I could go on.