Thursday, May 18, 2023
The Taylor Marshall Presidential Bid Is Ridiculous
Anne Barnhardt had several things to say about his decision and I have to agree. This is a publicity stunt. He will get a book out of it but I think he's also going to lose fans. Have you noticed that other than The Pillar most of Catholic media land has been silent about Marshall's announcement? They aren't mocking him but they aren't cheering him on either. That silence means that even his buddies know that this is not a serious campaign.
Tuesday, May 02, 2023
Random thoughts on a Tuesday morning.
- I don't care for Taylor Marshall but I have to give him and Jesse Romero their due. They are, to my knowledge the only people who addressed the Satanic convention that happened last week-end in Boston. Everyone else maintained silence on the affair. I feel sorry for the poor housekeeping staff at the Marriot (I don't want to hear anymore nonsense about the owners being devout Christians), who had to clean up afterwards because you know darn well, that grotesqueries beyond what decent people should ever have to see took place in those hotel rooms.
- Last week Rocky and I visited the Canons of New Jerusalem in West Virginia for Mass. As soon as Father began praying I was deeply moved and felt at home. This was the first traditional Mass that my husband and I have been able to attend since Cardinal Gregory and Bishop Burbidge reduced the TLM parishes.
- My allergies have been brutal this year. Yesterday I woke up with a headache, a scratchy throat and a stomach ache from my sinuses draining. I think I woke up two or three times from nausea and pain alone. Extra strength Tylenol and Spam fried rice made me feel better. Boy, I wish it would rain and clear out this pollen for a few days.
- Okay, this scared me.
- Ireland is going to get it good and hard and will fully deserve it.
Friday, April 07, 2023
Holy Week up to Easter Vigil
- Something was off about Palm Sunday Mass this year. There was no procession and Father must blessed the palms without his mic on or before Mass. The palms were brought out late and if you didn't grab a one right before Mass you didn't get one unless you were obviously disabled and the ushers brought it to you. The palms were also taken away after Mass and Rocky had to go to the usher's sacristy to get our. Father's homily, and the music were excellent. A lot of the regulars were not there and Rocky estimated it was about 100 less people than normal.
We went to the Spy Wednesday Mass and Tenabrae service at our old parish
And whilst they were eating, he said: Amen I say to you, that one of you is about to betray me. 22 And they being very much troubled, began every one to say: Is it I, Lord? 23 But he answering, said: He that dippeth his hand with me in the dish, he shall betray me. 24 The Son of man indeed goeth, as it is written of him: but woe to that man by whom the Son of man shall be betrayed: it were better for him, if that man had not been born. 25 And Judas that betrayed him, answering, said: Is it I, Rabbi? He saith to him: Thou hast said it.In this illustration of the Last Supper by Brother Max Schmalzl we see Judas clutching his bag of silver. I wonder if Brother Max was thinking of this passage from Matthew when he created this artwork. Notice the arrogance and disrespect of Judas's posture. Everyone else is in an attitude of worship, kneeling or standing but Judas looks like a bored guest. He called the Lord "Rabbi," something the Apostles hadn't done for nearly three years. Peter and the others said "Lord," "Master" and referred to Him as the Christ. Judas, says Rabbi, as if Our Lord were just any rabbi in any synagogue.- Mass of the Lord's Supper was wonderful. Fr. said the Novus Ordo as well as it can be done. I was impressed by the parishioners. Everyone was decently dressed. The parents paid attention to their children and the large church was so packed late comers had to stand. Father's homily was excellent. Rocky said he learned some things he hadn't thought of before. We wanted to do the seven church pilgrimage but Rocky was very tired and we needed to go home.
- Easter Vigil was okay...mostly. Bishop Burbidge preached a nice, inoffensive homily. The music was fine. The decorations were not as nice as in previous years and the crowd was again, noticeably smaller than last year.
Saturday, April 01, 2023
Rules for Catholic Twitter (Works for other sites too)
- Do not go on any form of social media if you are easily hurt by other people's opinions.
- Do not ask for advice and become offended when people give it.
- Don't offer marital or child rearing advice unless you are committed to calling the shot as you see it and don't really care what people think.
- Do not show your children's photos.
- Do not show photos of the outside of your home or the road near your home. It's really easy to find you that way. Practice OPSEC and use your common sense.
- Do not use your real name unless you are a public figure. Normal people with jobs could end up fired or with an unhinged madman at the doorstep at 3 in the morning. See Rule 4.
- If you use your real name or have made it easy to for complete strangers to figure out who you are don't shame your children and adult relatives by sharing their personal business.
- Do not strip your loved ones of their dignity by showing the world photos of them in a helpless, sick and dying state then ask for privacy or be offended by the nasty and crazy comments you get.
- Do not talk about how simple, poor and humble your life is while showing photos of your trip to Europe on "pilgrimage," and be shocked if you get blowback. Look, we all know you didn't bilocate to Europe. The passport, tickets, food and lodgings and in country transport cost big money. Some people will attack you because they are jealous, and shame on them but others will see you as a hypocrite and might call you out.
- Do not keep posting about how much you hate whatever site you are on and how evil everyone is. Just leave.
- Don't say shocking things just for views and then get all righteous when someone becomes alarmed and calls either the cops or CPS.
- Do remember that everybody has an opinion and while a lot of them are better left unsaid, except for blasphemy and unrepentant admission or approval of certain sins, they have a right to them just as you have a right to yours.
- Don't let what's happening on Twitter or any site turn you into a nut---please! If you feel yourself becoming obsessed turn the computer off. Go be with your family. Attend to the duties of your state in life and consider leaving the site for good.
- Don't get mad if someone comments negatively about your immodest photos. You needed attention. You got it.
- Pray more.
Sunday, March 12, 2023
75 days
In his homily our parochial vicar criticized the people who haven't come back to Mass after the shut downs. He implied that they were lazy sinners. He was right to an extent but didn't our bishops go right along with the shutdowns? With a few exceptions the only priests I saw doing outside Masses were SSPX. Most of the Faithful including the weak, the foolish, and the isolated were set adrift. For 75 days we couldn't even go unmasked into an empty church for private prayer without being threatened with arrest by the parish priest or a parish staffer. I've read many heartbreaking stories of people who wrote about how they begged their parish priest to come give a loved one Last Rites during the shutdown and were rejected. We were all told that watching Mass on TV, Facebook or You Tube was good enough and those who mourned the loss of the Mass were called neurotic and selfish.
Even when the civil authorities allowed us to return to Mass, depending on where you lived, the restrooms were closed. Think of all the adults who need to visit the restroom before or after Mass because of age-related or some chronic physical condition. All these people had to choose between staying away from their parish or risk soiling themselves in public. Even porta-pottys were locked. How about an apology for abandoning the flock? That YouTube Mass didn't cut it. Frankly, as I sat in the pew and heard Father, I was pissed.
Wednesday, February 15, 2023
You aren't going to lose your TLM because somebody is grieving about losing theirs
This week I read a Tweet by a nice woman saying that the TLM will be cancelled in her parish. People rushed to accuse her of lying. People outside the diocese actually had the nerve to write that she apparently didn't hear what she heard her priest announce. Others rushed in to say that no, Bishop Barron, of World on Fire fame had actually given her an upgrade by inviting the SSPX to take over a church/chapel in another part of the diocese roughly two hours away. "See," they cackled. "Bishop Barron isn't cancelling anything!" How is losing the TLM in your parish that you've been attending and having to go elsewhere not cancellation?
The most disgusting part of this pitiful episode has got to be the self righteous Pharisees braying, "You bad Trads complain and will make the saintly bishop so mad he'll take the TLM away from all us! Thank God we're glad Trads and not stupid and ugly sinners like you!"
That's like saying to an abuse victim to hush and not cry so much or they'll provoke the abuser to beat them some more. If your bishop is so thin-skinned, petty and evil that he crushes people because a handful irritate him then I hate to break it to you but you don't have a good and holy bishop. You don't even have a bread and butter bishop who's mostly decent even if he is a company man. You have a martinet, a cruel step-father and someone who ought not be a bishop.
I've always believed that the diocesan TLM was doomed and would not last much longer than Pope Benedict XVI's life. That doom has nothing to do with a grouchy Trad in Dubuque talking on Twitter, Facebook or Blogger. You aren't going to lose your TLM because somebody openly grieved about losing theirs. You are going to lose it because Pope Francis and all his boys hate Tradition. If you can't offer sympathy to a person who is sad because they can't go to Mass anymore then for the love of God, at least don't pile on with the abuse.
Saturday, February 11, 2023
Random thoughts on a Saturday Afternoon.
- St. Peter, pray for us
- Shortsighted people dismiss the importance of the Chinese balloon because China and most of our "allies" already spies on us everyday but spying wasn't the point. By sending a balloon to violate the US airspace the Chinese conducted a humifaction ritual and they got away with it.
- The bishop's Lenten Appeal starts next week. Rocky and I may find another parish to go to so we don't have to sit through the always uncomfortable speech that will take the place of the homily.
- I don't excuse Kari Lake for losing her Faith but not being able to even go into a church during Covid didn't help.
- Pope Benedict XVI's posthumous book was such a disappointment that nobody is talking about it. If the Italian nick-name for Pope Paul VI was "The Sad One," then surely poor Benedict's should be something like, "The Pitiful".
- Have you ever noticed how many NBA or NFL players went to Catholic high schools? Most don't seem to have taken the Faith from their school years but their athletic skills were what the school wanted them for and they made money for the school. If your kid's school is financially sound because it's an athletic powerhouse but the kids don't go to Mass regularly and they don't even have a school chapel then what are you paying for?
- Did you see that hideous , blasphemous jacket Damar Hamlin had on at the Super Bowl? He's not a nice guy.
Sunday, February 05, 2023
No quick answers in the Neumayr tragedy
When I first read that George Neumayr was dead I thought it was a stupid joke but then messages from various sources confirmed the news. It is said that he died of malaria, which seems odd to many people. In every photo he Tweeted from Cote d'Ivoire he was either chomping a cigar or looking like a happy tourist posing with the locals. He didn't appear feverish or in pain at all. On the other hand, he did complain of an episode of food poisoning. It is possible that the nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea that can come with malaria or Yellow Fever was mistaken for sickness from eating food that had been poorly cooked or kept in unsanitary conditions. Tap water is potable in Cote d'Ivoire but the State Department advises that you stick to bottled water and realize that the ice cubes in your drink at the restaurant or bar probably came from the tap.
Nobody has commented on what George Neumayr's general health was like but some men, even ones who don't look robust, have the mental and physical constitution of bulls. It takes something catastrophic to make them drop or even admit to being sick. Years ago, my Uncle Junior got walking pneumonia and would have died if other relatives hadn't nagged him into seeing his doctor, who called an ambulance. Until he was unconscious my uncle was insisting that he just had a cold and was not really sick. I can see Neumayr refusing to accept being sick, especially while on a business and pleasure trip until it overwhelmed him. Multiple people have written eloquently about the tragic loss of this much loved and admired Catholic author and reporter. There is passionate speculation about his enemies in various chanceries and the circumstances surrounding his death and there may never be a satisfactory answer.
I am about to write something indelicate and if you are someone who loved the late George Neumayr you may want to stop reading now. It's been about three weeks since the death and there have been no indications that George was able to marry his fiancee and the body was buried in country. Presumably the remains are in a morgue until Neumayr's next-of-kin can fulfill all the local government requirements for release. There have been no reports about the conditions of morgues in Cote d'Ivoire. Has the body been embalmed? Does Cote d'Ivoire require that? Have tissue samples been preserved? The mortal remains may have deteriorated beyond the point where a proper autopsy is even possible.
Contrary to what you've seen in the movies our government doesn't automatically ship deceased civilians home nor does the government pay any medical facility bills. The US consulate takes charge of personal effects and assists next-of-kin to navigate the laws of the land when a citizen dies overseas.
If a US citizen dies in a first world country getting the body home in a timely fashion can be done. A friend of my mother and of mine died in London*, while studying there. The embassy did a fine job helping his elderly parents make it to the hospital in time before he was removed from life support and with paperwork and accommodations until the poor parents could return home. Everything was done with speed and efficiency and kindness. The time from my friend's death to his funeral was not too much more than if he'd died in the US. George Neumayr was visiting a third world country. Nothing about this process is going to be quick.
Out of all the countries to visit in Africa, Cote d'Ivoire is one that shouldn't be on your list unless you are an experienced third world traveler or have family there. The State Department has four levels of travel advisories from "exercise normal precautions," down to the last one which is "do not travel". Cote d'Ivoire is rated at level three, that is "reconsider travel." The country has high violent crime. Home invasion, robbery and carjacking are common. Local police, government officials and soldiers have been known to demand bribes. Embassy personnel are not allowed to travel at night. Visitors are strongly urged to make "evacuation plans that do not rely on U.S. government assistance," avoid crowds and "obtain comprehensive medical insurance that includes medical evacuation." In the State Department's Traveler's Checklist it states that medical evacuation for treatment could cost up to $100,000.
Lepanto Institute said that George Neumayr refused to go to the hospital-- probably until he couldn't object anymore-- and if you read the State Department description of medical facilities in Cote d'Ivoire I see why:
- Adequate health facilities are available in Abidjan and other major cities, but health care in rural areas is below U.S. standards.
- Public medical clinics lack basic resources and supplies.
- Hospitals and doctors often require payment “up front” prior to service or admission.
- Credit card payment is not always available, and most hospitals and medical professionals require cash payment.
- Medical staff may speak little or no English.
- Generally, in hospitals only minimal staff is available overnight. Consider hiring a private nurse or having family spend the night with the patient, especially a minor child.
- Patients bear all costs for transfer to or between hospitals.
- not widely available, and training and availability of emergency responders may be below U.S. standards.
- not equipped with state-of-the-art medical equipment.
- Injured or seriously ill travelers may prefer to hire a private ambulance or take a taxi or private vehicle to the nearest major hospital rather than wait for a public ambulance.
In short, Cote d' Ivorie can be a dangerous place and whatever bad happens there could end up staying there. This is a tragedy that probably won't end with a neat explanation. May George Neumayr rest in peace.
* British medicine may be free but I'd rather cut my trip short than trust NHS doctors especially as a foreigner. To this day I still think my friend would be alive if he'd gone to see a doctor at home.
Thursday, February 02, 2023
Candlemass
A Medieval hymn for Candlemass
The queen of bliss and of beauty.
Behold what life that we run in,
Frail to fall and ever like to sin
Through our enemy's enticing;
Therefore we sing and cry to thee:
Revertere, revertere,
The queen of bliss and of beauty.
Come hither, Lady, fairest flower,
And keep us, Lady, from dolour;
Defend us, Lady, and be our succour,
For we cease not to call to thee:
Revertere, revertere,
The queen of bliss and of beauty.
Turn our life, Lady, to God's lust, [pleasure]
Sin to flee and fleshly lust,
For, after him, in thee we trust
To keep us from adversity.
Revertere, revertere,
The queen of bliss and of beauty.
This holy day of Purification
To the temple thou bare our salvation,
Jesu Christ, thine own sweet Son,
To whom therefore now sing we:
Revertere, revertere,
The queen of bliss and of beauty.
Farewell, Christmas fair and free!
Farewell, New Year's Day with thee!
Farewell, the holy Epiphany!
And to Mary now sing we:
Revertere, revertere,
The queen of bliss and of beauty.
Sunday, January 29, 2023
Rest in peace, Sonny Boy
My Uncle Sonny Boy, died in 2015. Today would have been his birthday. I loved him very much.
Tuesday, January 10, 2023
These People Just Can't Be Anything But Nasty
Petulant, nasty, vicious beyond the pale and just plain tacky. Cardinal Gambetti may have pleased his master on earth but he'll have to explain his behavior to the One who wept over Lazarus one day.
Who made the decision that Benedict's body should be stuffed into a van without a coffin or even a shroud to cover the body? We package our groceries with more care. Have you ever seen a dead body transported like that for a funeral?
Saturday, January 07, 2023
Random thoughts on a Saturday morning
- Rocky and I made a short visit on Epiphany Eve to a local parish on Epiphany Eve. I was startled to see Fr. Rupnik's art on the catechetical material in the vestibule. This is nothing against the parish or the pastor who are both known to be fine but shows how ubiquitous Rupnik's work is. Those hideous, dead goggle eyed mosaics are everywhere. Just trashing any images of his work or painting over originals is going to cost a fortune.
- Pope Benedict's funeral was enlightening in many ways but I'll mention one very small thing I noticed. I signed onto Twitter and looked at the various professional Catholic accounts. One guy was raging at his enemies and making homosexual jokes. One woman who considers herself to be superior to most Catholics and Americans in particular but constantly seems to be flirting with Eastern Orthodoxy spent the day being bitter and miserable. Days before the funeral she stated that she "DGAF" about Benedict. Both these people have asked for donations from Catholics in the past and presume to tell us how we're wrong or ignorant about the Faith. The uglier they got, the uglier they looked themselves. They reminded me of the old Ronald Dahl quote.
- If you have a good parish with a holy priest please don't post photos of him or the interior online unless he agrees. Do not video his homilies without his permission. We have come to the point where even celebrating the Novus Ordo as reverently as it can be done and sticking to the rubrics is going to cause good priests to be attacked by their bishops.