Let’s Honor our murdered dead

http://news.yahoo.com/no-purple-hearts-fort-hood-victims-pentagon-says-152503982–abc-news-topstories.html

Please write your congress person to insist that these great American citizens who were wantonly murdered on their way to deployment should not only get a purple heart, but the increased benefits to their families that is required of our nation.  That is, if are willing to be honest and insist that our dead, (they are dead brothers and sisters, and their children are without them!!). These American soldiers volunteered to serve the military mission of our nation.  They were American service personnel.  They would not have been brutally murdered if they were not on their way to carry out the commands of the American government.  Yes, that means the orders of President Obama. (look folks, those are merely the facts and not anti Obama statements.) So let’s not be small-minded and childish in our treatment of these heroes.  Yes, they did not die in combat, they were murdered.  They were brutally and wantonly murdered by a fellow soldiers who was himself a secret terrorist.  So they were killed by terrorists and we must demand that our military do the right thing and the right thing is NOT to allow Attorney General Holder’s insistence that this was “workplace violence”.  Shame on us if we do not honor these service members with a purple heart and decent benefits to their spouses and children.

Vatican Official Response

 

February 23, 2013, Saturday — Communique

…news reports abound which are often unverified or unverifiable, or completely false…” –Communique this morning from the Vatican’s Secretariat of State, released at the Vatican Press Office

The Vatican Speaks Out

Evidently concerned that the upcoming papal conclave to elect a successor to Pope Benedict XVI (the conclave is now expected to be held between March 10 and 15, though the date is not yet fixed) may be subjected to undue “pressure” from outside the Church, this morning, the Vatican Secretariat of State released the communique printed below.

The hope expressed is that the cardinals entering the Conclave be completely free to make their choice of the next Pope.

The desire expressed is for the complete freedom of the Church, libertas ecclesiae, from information, and from disinformation.

The fact that this Communique was thought necessary shows how seriously the Vatican is taking the current situation in the media, with rumors of all types swirling and spreading across the globe in mere seconds.

Clearly, the Secretariat of State is concerned about the danger that an individual cardinal, or the Conclave as a whole, may be unduly influenced by overwhelming “pressure” from outside the Church.

At the same time, there is a growing feeling among the Catholic faithful that the best way to ensure that such undue pressure is not exerted, that the “freedom of the Church” is protected, is for more of the truth about the “Vatileaks” affair, and the results of the investigation of the three cardinals into that affair, to come out.

As one reader (but there were dozens like him who have written to me) put it in an email this morning: “All the people and the faithful want, is the truth. If this continues to blow up as it would appear, then the Vatican should release the report. The people of God deserve the truth and nothing less, despite what may offend or injure the Church’s reputation. This has similar tones of cover up like what happened with the sexual abuse world wide. Let the cleansing begin.”

 

=================================

 

Secretary of State Communiqué on Conclave
(Vatican Radio) Please find below a Vatican Radio translation of a Secretary of State communiqué on conclave, issued Saturday:
“The freedom of the College of Cardinals, which alone, under the law, is responsible for the election of the Roman Pontiff, has always been strongly defended by the Holy See, as a guarantee of a choice based on evaluations solely for the good of the Church.
“Over the centuries, the Cardinals have faced multiple forms of pressure exerted on the individual voters and the same College, with the aim of conditioning decisions, to bend them to a political or worldly logic.
“If in the past it was the so-called superpowers, namely States, that sought to condition the election of the Pope in their favour, today there is an attempt to apply the weight of public opinion, often on the basis of assessments that fail to capture the spiritual aspect of this moment in the life of the Church.
“It is regrettable that, as we draw near to the beginning of the Conclave when Cardinal electors shall be bound in conscience and before God, to freely express their choice, news reports abound which are often unverified or unverifiable, or completley false, provoking damage to people and institutions.
“It is in moments such as these, that Catholics are called to focus on what is essential: to pray for Pope Benedict, to pray that the Holy Spirit enlighten the College of Cardinals, to pray for the future Pope, trusting that the fate of the barque of St. Peter is in the hands of God.”

Here is the same text in the original Italian, for those of you who would like to check the one against the other:

COMUNICATO DELLA SEGRETERIA DI STATO

La libertà del Collegio Cardinalizio, al quale spetta di provvedere, a norma del diritto, all’elezione del Romano Pontefice, è sempre stata strenuamente difesa dalla Santa Sede, quale garanzia di una scelta che fosse basata su valutazioni rivolte unicamente al bene della Chiesa. Nel corso dei secoli i Cardinali hanno dovuto far fronte a molteplici forme di pressione, esercitate sui singoli elettori e sullo stesso Collegio, che avevano come fine quello di condizionarne le decisioni, piegandole a logiche di tipo politico o mondano. Se in passato sono state le cosiddette potenze, cioè gli Stati, a cercare di far valere il proprio condizionamento nell’elezione del Papa, oggi si tenta di mettere in gioco il peso dell’opinione pubblica, spesso sulla base di valutazioni che non colgono l’aspetto tipicamente spirituale del momento che la Chiesa sta vivendo. È deplorevole che, con l’approssimarsi del tempo in cui avrà inizio il Conclave e i Cardinali elettori saranno tenuti, in coscienza e davanti a Dio, ad esprimere in piena libertà la propria scelta, si moltiplichi la diffusione di notizie spesso non verificate, o non verificabili, o addirittura false, anche con grave danno di persone e istituzioni. Mai come in questi momenti, i cattolici si concentrano su ciò che è essenziale: pregano per Papa Benedetto, pregano affinché lo Spirito Santo illumini il Collegio dei Cardinali, pregano per il futuro Pontefice, fiduciosi che le sorti della barca di Pietro sono nelle mani di Dio.

As regards the material handled in the Moynihan Letters, the writer of this blog has a tendency to believe everybody.  I think there is some truth in all that is happening.  However, what that truth really is, nobody knows.  This aspect of Vatican politics can be very frustrating.  However, I believe that the approach of Dr. Moynihan is realistic, reliable, and interested in that which is considered by many to be the best for the Church.  However, I  also agree with the officials of the Vatican who rightly exposed and emphasized, as Dr. Moynihan did in his second report, that the reports and stories swirling around the Vatican are really rumors and sometimes rumors based on previous rumors.

I would also agree with those who say that historically, this kind of environment is not unheard of in the Vatican.  It is a small place.  It is a government and a Church.  It is international in scope and far reaching in effect.  So, it really shouldn’t surprize us.  Nor, if it does, should it automatically cause us to become self righteously judgemental regarding the people of the Vatican.

Blackmail at Vatican -more info

February 22, 2013, Friday — Stop

…As we grow older the world becomes stranger, the pattern more complicated…”

–T.S. Eliot, The Four Quartets, East Coker

The Witnesses

Last night, my phone rang twice, just before 3 in the morning. In the morning, I found three emails from the same person, a priest I know. He called again this morning.

 He wanted to know about my letter of yesterday, which discussed an Italian press report that the Pope has received information that his Curia is riven with factions, and that this was part of the reason he decided to step down from the papacy.

“What are you doing?” the priest asked me, excitedly. “Do you really have evidence of what you are writing? And why did you put those photos in, the photos of Simeon, and Balestrero, and Bruelhart? Are you suggesting they were involved somehow in this? Are you accusing them? That’s what it looks like. I’ve been getting calls and emails from all over the world. Most people were dismissing this as typical mud-slinging without any foundation, another attack on the Church, false. But now that you have written it, because you are respected, people are wondering what the truth is. What is the truth?”

“I was primarily just reporting what is appearing in the Italian press,” I said. “I put the photos in because they were the photos in the article in La Repubblica.”

“But is there any evidence the La Repubblica article is anything other than an invention? How could they have seen the cardinals’ Report? It makes no sense. The Pope has the only copy, right?”

“You have a point,” I said. “It isn’t clear from the article who is the real source for these reports.”

“Well, how could anything from the cardinals’ Report have leaked out?” he asked. “The three cardinals handed it directly to the Pope. Where was the leak? Only four people knew the contents of that Report: the three cardinals, and the Pope. Are you saying one of the three cardinals leaked it?”

“No. But that’s not the only possibility,” I said.

“What do you mean?” he asked, excitedly. “There were the three cardinals, and the Pope. Four people. No one else knew the contents.”

“Not necessarily,” I said.

“What do you mean, not necessarily? Tell me where I’m wrong.”

I hesitated.

“Look,” I said. “Don’t you see any other way that information about what was in that Report could have gotten out, without the cardinals revealing it, and without the Pope revealing it?”

“No,” he said. “The three cardinals wrote the report, and they gave it to the Pope. How could anyone else know what was in it?”

“Well, be imaginative,” I said. “What could be another possibility?”

“I can’t think of any,” he said. “Just that the whole thing is made up, a sheer invention, that there is no truth in it. It wouldn’t be the first time…”

“Ok,” I said. “Let’s imagine you are doing an investigation and you are preparing a report. How do you do that?”

“Well,” he said, “you take testimony. You interview people.”

“And so…” I said.

“So what?”

“So who knows what is in the Report?”

“The three cardinals,” he said. “They took the testimony, and it was all sub segreto…”

“Look,” I said. “Do you know the story by Edgar Allan Poe, ‘The Purloined Letter’? The letter was right there on the mantlepiece, out in the open, and no one saw it because they were sure it was hidden…”

“What are you saying?”

“Well, ok,” I said. “You are correct, the three cardinals and the Pope are the only ones who know the complete, final version of the Report, and it is unlikely that any of them revealed anything to anyone — unless the Vatican actually wanted this all to become public. But that seems unlikely. But you have forgotten about… the witnesses.”

“What?”

“The witnesses,” I said. “They took testimony from dozens of monsignors, and some lay people. What do you think happened after those witnesses gave testimony? What do you think happened before they gave testimony?”

“What?” he asked.

“They talked to each other.”

“Meaning?”

“They talked to each other. They tried to see what questions they were going to be asked, and tried to coordinate what answers they might give, and after the testimony, they talked again, about what questions they had been asked, and what answers they had given.”

“How do you know that?” he asked.

“It’s a logical deduction,” I said, patiently. “An investigation means, ipso facto, that there were witnesses questioned. True, you can’t take it much further than that, on deduction alone. But, suppose you are an Italian journalist, and your job is to try to get something, anything, about the contents of that Report. And say you know some of the officials who work in the Vatican, and you talk to them. And suppose one or another of them  lets slip that, yes, they were questioned in the investigation. At that point, it wouldn’t be a far stretch to get some confirmation about what questions were asked and what answers were given… Because, of course, people would know what answers they themselves gave.”

“So, you are saying these reports are not based on a leak of the Report, but on interviews with monsignors who testified?”

“I suspect so, ” I said. “And not just monsignors.”

“Well, that seems pretty sketchy to me,” the priest said.

“I agree,” I said. “It is sketchy. There is not a single report yet that really is more than a sketch. They are drawing a sketch. That’s right. They don’t have all the details, just the broad outlines.”

“So there is no detailed evidence about those three people whose pictures you included?”

“No,” I said. “I included them only because they were the photos in the La Repubblica article, only for that reason.”

“Well, I hope you print a rectification,” he said. “Otherwise, what you are writing seems irresponsible…”

A few minutes later, he sent me an email. “Thanks for the clarifications,” he wrote. “It sounds to me like La Repubblica is throwing out very serious innuendo. I was just calling to give you a heads up that, unintentionally, a very wrong impression was coming across. Glad you can correct it. I think La Repubblica is throwing out a lot of innuendo (he repeated). Forgive me for advising out of place, but we need no more of these scandalous stories from the secular press, without corroboration and full of nasty implications. We have had plenty of this. Let’s meet some time.”

I went down near the Vatican. It was a cool day, almost cold. I felt exhausted, and slightly feverish.

Walking by a restaurant, the restaurant door opened and a monsignor came out. He came up to me. He was wearing clerical back and wore a Roman collar. Evidently, he had recognized me.

His face seemed familiar to me. It seemed to me I had seen him in the Vatican but I wasn’t sure, so I don’t know whether he works in the Vatican.

“Please,” he said to me, “allow us some privacy.”

He spoke in English, but with a slight accent.

At first I thought he wanted me to go with him to someplace private and talk, perhaps to tell me something.

“Give us some privacy,” he repeated, insistently.

Then I thought, “He must be referring to the article of last night.” I thought, “this priest, like the one who called me, is upset about what I wrote.”

I looked closely at his face, trying to place him. I still wasn’t sure who he meant by “us.” Priests in general, that is, all Catholic priests? Or, Vatican monsignors in particular?

“I am only reporting what others are reporting,” I said.

My words seemed not to satisfy him.

“Think about it,” he said, his eyes intent on mine, speaking with some emotion. “Give us some privacy.” He paused. “I mean it. If you don’t, it will only hurt your work, and you.”

He turned and walked back into the restaurant.

As I walked on, I received a phone call from my assistant, who had been in the press office.

“Monsignor Balestrero has just been named nuncio in Colombia,” she said to me. “It was announced officially this morning. He will be leaving the Vatican.”

I continued to study the La Repubblica article, and the Panorama article it was based on.

And the more I compared the two articles, both of which deal with the secret 300-page cardinals’ dossier prepared by Cardinals Herranz, Tomko and De Giorgi between April and December of 2012 “for the Pope’s eyes only,” the more I realized that there were numerous unsourced statements and conclusions.

Clearly, those who are skeptical or concerned about these reports, like the priest who called me in the night, or the priest who left his lunch to come talk to me, have a valid point: the evidence for a powerful “gay lobby” in the Vatican operating to influence curial and papal decisions, is “sketchy,” to say the least.

Perhaps the key phrase in the La Repubblica article of February 21 is the following: “La Relazione e esplicita. Alcuni alti prelati subiscono ‘l’influenza esterna’ — noi diremmo il ricatto — di laici a cui sono legati da vincoli di ‘natura mondana.'” (“The Report is explicit. Some high-ranking prelates are being subjected to ‘external influence’ — we would call it blackmail — by laypeople to whom they are linked by ties of a ‘worldly nature.'”)

This is the phrase which gave me the basis yesterday for my title, “Blackmail.”

The allegation here is that the Report of the three cardinals “explicitly” says that some high-ranking officials in the Curia are being “influenced” by “laypeople” who have “worldly connections” to them and therefore have influence over them — can blackmail them.

In the next few paragraphs, the article claims that the Report includes testimony about a number of past incidents in which Vatican officials were allegedly involved in some type of sexual activity, and asserts that the three cardinals delved into these incidents in their report in detail.

But how does the author of this article know this?

Nowhere in the article — nowhere — is there any indication that the author has actually seen the cardinals’ Report.

And, if one reads the La Repubblica story a 3rd and 4th time, one finds that there are only four quotations, that is, only four sourced sentences, in the entire article.

The first is a quotation is from a public talk of the Pope on Ash Wednesday, three days after he announced his resignation (in column 1), where the Pope warned of “divisioni nel corpo ecclesiale che deturpano il volto della Chiesa” (“divisions in the ecclesial body which besmirch the face of the Church”).

This says nothing specific about the contents of the Report of the three cardinals.

The second is a public talk by Cardinal De Giorgi (bottom of column 1, top of column 2) in reaction to the Pope’s resignation, where De Giorgi says: “He made a gesture of strength, not of weakness. He did it for the good of the Church. He gave a strong message to all in the exercise of authority or of power who believe that they are not able to be replaced. The Church is made up of human beings. The pontiff saw the problems and faced them with an initiative [his resignation] which was as unprecedented as it was visionary [the word used is ‘lungimirante,’ ‘far-sighted‘].”

This says nothing specific about the contents of the Report.

The third is from the Pope’s last Angelus remarks, on February 17, when he said there is a need to “unmask the temptations of power that exploit God for their own interests.”

This says nothing specific about the contents of the Report.

The fourth quotation (column 3) is from “a man very close to the man who drafted the Report.”(!)

This is at best second-hand information.

And this is the only source even close to the Report that is cited in the entire article, and un-named, of course.

And what does this source say? “Tutto ruota attorno alla non osservanza del sesto and del settimo commandamento.” (“Everything [in the Report] centers on the non-observance of the 6th and 7th commandments.”)

The entire 4th column of the article is a series of “vignettes” or allusions to old cases which the author of the La Repubblica piece, Concita De Gregorio, says were “explored” by the three cardinals in their investigation, and summed up in their Report.

But no evidence is given that this actually occurred; that is, no evidence is given that the Report actually contains material related to “a villa outside Rome” or other places where meetings or parties allegedly occurred.

In other words, this article contains no sourced evidence whatsoever, except for the (alleged) statement of “a man close to the man who drafted the Report” that “everything centers on the non-observance of the 6th and 7th commandments.”

That sentence is the only “semi-sourced” sentence in the entire article.

Everything else is assertion.

And, interestingly, at the end of the article, there is a very odd little paragraph, which I noticed the first time I read the article, yesterday at noon-time. It says that “on the last day of his pontificate [February 28], Benedict XVI will receive the three cardinals who composed the Report in private audience. Immediately afterward, next to Tomko [who is from Slovakia], he will see the bishops and faithful of Slovakia in St. Mary Major. His last public audience.”

The point of this was to show how much respect Pope Benedict has for Cardinal Tomko, enough that he will meet with Slovakians on his last day as Pope.

And Benedict undoubtedly has great respect for Tomko, who is now 89.

But it is simply not true that the Pope will meet with Slovakian Catholics in St. Mary Major, or anywhere.

This sentence is simply, totally, untrue.

The Pope will not go to St. Mary Major on the last day of his pontificate.

Indeed, the effort to get a Pope across the city of Rome from the Vatican to another basilica is a major one, requiring weeks of pre-planning. Such a trip never happens without weeks of advance notice. And there has been no notice of such a planned trip across town.

Frankly, anyone who knows anything about the Vatican, any Vatican journalist, from the newest to the oldest, would have, and should have, known that this statement, that the Pope would go across town to St. Mary Major on the last day of his papacy, is impossible and silly.

Yet this statement ends the article.

Father Federico Lombardi, S.J., the director of the Vatican press office, noted this at a press conference yesterday, just a couple of hours after the La Repubblica article appeared.

He said that this evident error at the end of the article should be reason for anyone who reads the article to take

A question arose: who is Concita De Gregorio (photo), the author of the La Repubblica article?

Well, she is a 49-year-old Italian journalist and writer, married with four children. She was born in Pisa to a Spanish mother and an Italian father. She took her college degree in political science, then went to work for various TV and radio stations in north-central Italy. She began to work at La Repubblica in 1990, covering Italian politics.

Significantly, she was named the editor of the daily l’Unità, from 2008 to 2011. L’Unità was the daily of the Italian Communist Party throughout the 1970s and 1980s, until the party dissolved and changed its name to the Democratic Party of the Left.

So the thought came to me that perhaps this woman, who certainly is accomplished and is known in Italy as an excellent, eloquent writer, may nevertheless have superficial knowledge of the Vatican, and may write from the perspective of someone who has focused on Italian politics, and has worked for a formerly Communist newspaper. It would be useful to meet with her, I decided.

Of course, a person can make one mistake, and her article can still contain some truths.

But, in the case of this article, the overall bottom line is this: the article is a strange amalgem which makes unsubstantiated, un-sourced assertions about the Report of the three cardinals, weaves them into a story built around two quotes from Pope Benedict and one from Cardinal De Giorgi — none of which make a direct reference to the cardinals’ Report — and one un-sourced quote from “a man close to the man who drafted the Report” which says the whole Report revolves around the two sins of adultery and stealing.

In short, there is nothing here to hang one’s hat on.

Then why did I give any credibility whatsoever to the article, in my letter of yesterday, and even today?

Well, for four chief reasons.

First, this article appeared in one of Italy’s major papers — the largest circulation paper in the country — and it was “picked up” by others who sent the news around the world.

Second, because this was not the only article on this matter. There was also the article the La Repubblica article was based on: the article by Ignazio Ingrao in Panorama, which I still need to examine.

Third, I have had conversations with high-ranking Church officials over more than 25 years, including with Archbishop Paul Marcinkus, who once headed the Vatican bank, and Pope Benedict himself, before he became Pope, which led me to consider the possibility that some of these allegations might have some truth in them.

Fourth, and most importantly, because I think it is critical to discern whether the Church and her leaders are: (a) being slandered by the attacks of her enemies, or (b) whether human weaknesses, sins and betrayals are preventing the Church from carrying out her mission effectively, and subjecting her to forces from outside her. It is part of my work as a writer about the Church to try to discern these things.

The Church’s mission is to preach and live the Gospel, not simply to maintain a political or cultural position, a position that sometimes may even be an impediment to her mission.

Few things could be more dangerous to the Church than that her leaders be subject to blackmail. If a friend or member of my family would be subject to blackmail, I would move heaven and earth to help that friend or family member to be free of such evil tentacles.

I believe that, to protect the Church, to protect her freedom and her mission, each and every source of outside pressure and control which might influence, constrain or compel a decision to be taken on any basis other than the basis of what is for the good of the Church, and in keeping with the faith that has been handed down to us, must be identified and if possible removed.

I believe that it is critical that no Pope, no cardinal, no bishop, no priest, no layperson, be subjected to any form of “blackmail.” We should fight to remove any shadow of outside “influence” over the decisions of the Church’s leaders.

I believe that some of the issues touched on in the La Repubblica and Panorama articles are, in fact, of deep concern to the Holy Father.

I believe that the cardinals who enter the upcoming Conclave must be free to continue the effort to cleanse and purify the Church that Pope Benedict has attempted to carry out.

The truth on these matters is not to be feared. Christ is with His Church, and always will be. What is to be feared is anything that covers up the truth, and makes the Church vulnerable to outside pressures and interests.

The Church must be free to carry out her essential identity and mission. And it is the freedom of the Church that is at stake today.

(to be continued)

Blackmail at the Vatican?

A am introducing this story because I subscribe to this letter and have found it very reliable.  The author is a Roman Catholic and has no desire to defame or destroy the Church.  However, he is unflinching serious about accurate reporting and truth.  I share this with my readers because I hope it shed a light on this topic before the sensationalist press like AP and Reuters get a grip on it.

Thu, Feb 21, 2013 at 6:46 PM
6:46 PM
FROM Dr. Robert Moynihan TO You

Letter #18: Blackmail

Having issues viewing this message? Please click here.

February 21, 2013, Thursday — Blackmail

Therefore is my spirit overwhelmed within me; my heart within me is desolate.” –Psalm 143:4

The Secret Report Given to the Pope on December 17

Today a veil of secrecy was shredded in this eternal city.

Today therefore marked the beginning of a difficult, important struggle for the purification of the government of the Church desired for so many years by Joseph Ratzinger.

We were given a glimpse today into some of the reasons, previously unknown, that prompted Pope Benedict XVI to announce his resignation on February 11, to take effect February 28, in seven days, reasons that apparently “overwhelmed his spirit within him” and “made his heart desolate.”

It is a story that in many ways seems the plot of a novel.

It is a story of blackmail and betrayal at the highest levels of the Church, and, allegedly, of a homosexual lobby organized within the Vatican to influence and obtain important decisions.

To recount this story, I will simply set forth how I learned about it, in the course of an ordinary day in Rome.

=======================

“What Can You Tell Me About the American Cardinals?”

I began my day at 6 a.m., editing a book I am preparing on one of the cardinals whom I admire greatly. (I had not expected the conclave to come so soon, and had expected to prepare the book at a more leisurely pace for publication later this year.)

At 9:45 a.m., I went to the Vatican and shortly after 10 a.m. met for 30 minutes with a European cardinal who will be going into the Conclave in a few days, a good and wise man who might himself be a candidate to be the next Pope.

He asked me a number of questions about the American cardinals. I answered as cautiously and as truthfully as I could.

The cardinal’s questions, and his interest in my remarks, made clear to me that  the cardinals themselves may be trying to understand each other, in order to understand who among them may have the qualities of a strong, effective, global leader for the Church in this unprecedented time.

At 10:50 a.m., I walked into the press office, greeted Salvatore Izzo as he sat typing in the first booth (I regard him as one of the leading Vaticanisti), greeted Ania Artymiak, who writes for Inside the Vatican, and then greeted Paddy Agnew from Dublin, Ireland, correspondent for the Irish Times, whom I have known since the 1980s.

Paddy was busily typing away. Next to his computer, spread out on the large table in the center of the press office, was an Italian newspaper opened to p. 17.

It was a full-page story about something related to the Vatican. There was a large picture of Pope Benedict and Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, and three smaller photos.

The striking thing was that Paddy had marked almost every single paragraph of the story with colored markers, some in yellow, some in red, some in blue.

“What’s that?” I asked. “Something important?”

“Read it,” he said, typing away. “It’s from this morning’s La Repubblica. Someone has leaked the results of the cardinals’ commission investigation…”

(Note: La Repubblica of Rome is a sort of center-left paper founded in the mid-1970s along with three other papers of a similar outlook: El Pais in Madrid, Spain; Liberation in Paris, France; and The Independent in London, England. I’m not saying there was a relationship between the papers, or that the same people were behind all of them, just making the observation that they were all founded at nearly the same time, and all have more or less the same, secular humanist, line, and all in some way helped prepare the way for the development of the European Union as it exists today.)

I looked at the headline: “Non fornicare, non rubare” — i due commandamenti violati nel dossier che sconvolge il Papa (“Thou shalt not commit adultery, thou shalt not steal” — the two commandments violated in the dossier that shocked the Pope”).

I looked at the sub-title: “Lotte di potere e denaro. E l’ipotesi di una lobby gay.” (“Fights for power and money. And the hypothesis of a gay lobby.”)

And I saw a sentence, highlighted in yellow, at the center of the article: “La Relazione e esplicita. Alcuni alti prelati subiscono ‘l’influenza esterna’ — noi diremmo il ricatto — di laici a cui sono legati da vincoli di ‘natura mondana.'” (“The Report is explicit. A number of high-ranking prelates are being subjected to ‘external influence’ — we would say blackmail — from laypeople to whom they are linked by ties of a ‘worldly nature.'”)

“Blackmail?” I said.

“That’s what they are saying,” Paddy replied.

I looked at the three smaller photos in the article:

Marco Simeon, 33 anni, ex direttore delle relazioni istituzionali e internazionali della Rai” (Marco Simeon (photo left), 33, director of institutional and internationals relations at RAI, the Italian national television network);

Ettore Balestrero, 47 anni, sotto-segretario ai Rapporti con gli stati della segretaria del Vaticano” (Ettore Balestrero, 47, under-secretary of Relations with States of the Vatican Secretariat of State);

Rene Bruelhart, 40 anni, direttore dell’Autorita di informazione finanziaria della Santa Sede” (Rene Bruelhart (photo, bottom), 40, director of the Authority of Financial Information of the Holy See).

(Marco Simeon)

The essence of the article was this. Pope Benedict last year had asked three cardinals to investigate the “Vatileaks” affair. He had chosen three cardinals older than age 80 — Julian Herranz, Josef Tomko, and Salvatore De Giorgi — to conduct the investigation. They had begun their work last April, even before the Vatileaks scandal really “broke” in May. They were given the authority to summon any Vatican official, including other cardinals, to be questioned.

(Monsignor Ettore Balestero)

The three, evidently with a small but dedicated staff to help them, worked all year, interviewing dozens of officials. Their investigation paralleled the investigation of the Vatican police, but was of an even higher level, since the three cardinals could also interview other cardinals.

(Rene Bruelhart)

Each session began with the same set of questions, and then additional questions were asked related to the specific work of each official. (So, these sessions were very well prepared.)

Each session was recorded and then transcribed.

Eventually, the cardinals were able to compare testimony, see patterns, find connections, drawn flow charts.

The members of the Curia were charted according to their region of origin, their religious orders, and also identified as part of (or not part of) “a network across all groups based on sexual orientation” (“una rete trasversale accomunata dall’orientamento sessuale“).

On December 17, the three cardinals submitted their report to Pope Benedict. The report was some 300 pages long, and there was only one copy. And that copy is in the possession of the Pope.

Eight weeks later, the Pope resigned his office, saying there was a need for a younger, stronger man to carry out the needed work of the papacy…

“Ok,” I said to Paddy. “I’ll go out and buy my own copy of the paper.”

I walked out of the press office and ran immediately into Cardinal Jose Saraiva Martins (he is now 81, so he will not vote in the Conclave). I have known him for many years. Since he is from Portugal, and knew Sister Lucy personally, we have spoken on occasion about the apparitions at Fatima in 1917, about the “Third Secret” of Fatima, and about the Consecration of Russia to the Immaculate Heart of Mary.

It was Saraiva Martins who, as Prefect for the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints, announced in Coimbra, Portugal (where Sister Lucy lived and died), in February 2008 that Pope Benedict had authorized the opening of Lucy’s cause of beatification, revealing at the same time that she left a series of important unpublished writings.

“Since the death of Sister Lucia, it has been obvious how much the reputation of holiness of this humble nun has spread throughout Portugal and the rest of the world,” the cardinal said, explaining Benedict’s decision to suspend the five-year waiting period before beginning the process of beatification. (She died in 2005, just a few weeks before Pope John Paul II.)

“Your eminence,” I said. “Bella giornata” (“beautiful day”).

“Yes, it is,” he said.

We spoke for several minutes. Then I recalled the reason I had left the press office.

“There is news today in the Italian press,” I said. “Evidently something has been leaked regarding the results of the Vatileaks investigation carried out by the three cardinals.”

“Oh?” he said, raising an eyebrow.

“Well, we don’t yet know the accuracy of the report, but there is a full page today in La Repubblica. Apparently there is even talk of some curial officials being blackmailed… I’m going over to the kiosk now to buy a copy of the paper. If you would like, I’ll buy a second copy for you.”

“Please do,” he said.

While we were speaking, Italian journalist Iacopo Scaramuzzi, another excellent Vaticanist, came up. He waited respectfully a few steps away, and came up when I nodded to him and stepped away toward the kiosk. I bought the two copies of La Repubblica. When I returned, Scaramuzzi was asking Saraiva Martins questions about the Pope’s resignation, about the Pope’s mood during these days of Spiritual Exercises, and about the qualities of spirit and character that the next Pope will need.

As the two spoke, a reporter and cameraman from Associated Press walked up. “May we?” they asked, with the camera already rolling. For a while they filmed the conversation, and then the AP journalist broke in, asking if Saraiva Martins had read the news that had broken that morning in La Repubblica, about the alleged blackmail of Vatican officials. Saraiva Martins glanced at me, holding the two copies of the paper, then said, “No, I cannot make any comment on that. I haven’t yet read the article.”

A moment later, the interview was over, and Saraiva Martins and I began to walk away toward his residence nearby. I waited until we were under the colonnade opposite the press office, in front of the Ancora bookstore, then handed him the second copy of La Repubblica. He thanked me and he said we could speak again after the end of the Spiritual Exercises on Saturday.

Back in the press office, Paddy Agnew was already completing his story. This is what he wrote — clearly, succinctly, without extraneous detail:

Irish Times

Pope’s decision ‘partly prompted’ by claims over influence of gay lobby
PADDY AGNEW, in Rome
Italian daily
La Repubblica this morning sensationally claims that Pope Benedict’s resignation was at least partly prompted by an internal report prepared by three senior cardinals, alleging that various lobbies, including a gay lobby, exercise an “inappropriate influence” in internal Holy See affairs.
The newspaper suggests that such was Benedict’s dismay when presented with the details of the report on December 17th that it hardened his long-meditated decision to resign. The internal report prepared by Cardinals Julian Herranz, Josef Tomko and Salvatore De Giorgi had been commissioned by Benedict himself.
He had ordered it in response to the so-called Vatileaks scandal which culminated with the arrest and subsequent conviction last autumn of the Pope’s butler, Paolo Gabriele, found guilty of having stolen confidential documents from the papal apartment.
In this morning’s article, it is claimed that the cardinals reported that various lobbies within the Holy See were consistently breaking the sixth and seventh commandments, namely “thou shalt not steal” and “thou shalt not commit adultery”.
The “stealing” was in particular related to the Vatican Bank, IOR, whilst the sexual offences were related to the influence of an active gay lobby within the Vatican.
Last week, when presiding over the Ash Wednesday celebrations in St. Peter’s Basilica, Pope Benedict spoke of “divisions” which “besmirch” the face of the church. In a famous homily at the 2005
Via Crucis Easter celebrations in Rome, just days before the death of John Paul II, the then Cardinal Ratzinger had spoken of the “filth” in the church, a comment interpreted by many as a reference to the worldwide clerical abuse scandal.
However,
La Repubblica claims the cardinals’ 300 page report speaks of “Impropriam Influentiam” on the part of various lobbies, some of them of a “worldly nature”, reflecting an “outside influence”. The Rome daily recalls the figure of papal gentleman, Angelo Balducci, accused three years ago of being a member of a gay ring active within the Vatican and involving choristers and seminarians.
The paper does not explain the source of its information on the cardinals report nor does it provide a direct quotation from any part of the report. Rather it claims that its findings are based on information received from an unnamed Vatican source.
A Vatican spokesman this morning had no comment to make on the allegations.

The Leak

I realized I needed to sit down and read the article through still more carefully. With no sources cited, there was a risk that it was inaccurate, or wildly exaggerated. And I wondered who had gotten the story.

I looked at the author’s name: Concita De Gregorio.

“Who’s that?” I asked Izzo.

“She’s not a Vaticanist,” he said. “But that is one of the best pieces she’s ever written.” He gave a thumbs up signal. “However, it’s actually based on a piece by Ignazio Ingrao which appeared yesterday in Panorama.”

“Ah!” I said.

Now I was getting the genealogy of the story.

So, I needed to read the Panorama article and then… talk to Ingrao.

(to be continued)

Our 2013 “Inside the Vatican” Pilgrimages all have openings, although some are filling up fast. For the 2013 schedule click here. 

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childlessness Could Doom the Childless and the Nation

http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2013/02/18/why-the-choice-to-be-childless-is-bad-for-america.html?utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&utm_campaign=cheatsheet_afternoon&cid=newsletter%3Bemail%3Bcheatsheet_afternoon&utm_term=Cheat%20Sheet

 

This is a very extensive, interesting and insightful article on the “Childless Culture” of modern urban America.  Will there be enough children to replace those who are growing older and those who are dying?  If there are not enough children who will pay for the elderly?  If the childless generation succeeds, then they too will suffer.  For this writer, one area that the author of this article neglected, and probably could not gauge, was the effect of aging on those who are electing to be childless.

Now, these folk have living parents and often grandparents.  But grand parents and parents will die leaving the childless children without family.  Friends, yes.  But are today’s friends the same as today’s children who remain your children when you are old!  This idea of family as companions along the journey of life may be quaint, but I suggest a visit to a contemporary elderly life home, or a nursing home.  The people in these places often have families and yet, they cannot stay at home because of illness, frailty, behavioral problems, or simply because their children do not want to take care of them.

So, we posit the idea of millions of men and women who today could have children we imagine that they successfully carry out their childlessness.  So, imagine that they are now fifty or sixty.  They are weaker than they are now.  Some are sick.  Some are frail.  All are without grandparents, parents or children.  They are also either out of a job because of technological advances eliminating their employment, or they are forced to continue working until they are dead because of the increasing costs of urban singleton living.

Hey, they may indeed be happy.  But this is also true, there comes a point in biological life when it is no longer possible to have children.  So, the decision to be childless becomes, at that point, not reversible.  Hey, they may be used to being a “family” of one.  However, the socially hip scene changes with age.  The friends move away or die away.  The body degenerates.  So, what!  They may think that is not their problem.  And it isn’t.

As the article inferred, Obama will take care of them.  Oh, I forgot, he will be old too.  And surprise! Obama is married and has two children.  His retirement will be generous.  His wife is a successful business person.  And although his parents and grandparents are dead, I am sure he will have plenty of friends to keep him company as he grows older.  Maybe, using him as the  image for ourselves is not the best idea.  Well, to each his/her own.

Sarah Palin

http://news.yahoo.com/why-fox-news-dropped-sarah-palin-164000188.html

 

this parting of the ways may be the best thing for Gov. Palin.  She is talented and although maligned as a person that some people love to hate, many Americans identified with her and her “mama grisly” attitude.  Don’t write her obituary yet, because I think that Gov. Palin is savvy, smart (her detractors to the contrary) and will be able to hone her considerable skills.  As the reporter on this article rightly said, she backed several candidates in the 2012 election and considering the number that went on to victory, her credibility as a politician is enhanced.  And for the Sarah Palin haters.  Well, you just go on hatin’ all you want because the rest of America are not haters.  We are not stupid, red necks and clingers to our guns and Bibles as your leader says.  Rather, we are college educated professionals who do not follow the phony politics of the liberal left.  We think for ourselves and make our own decisions based on our values and our analysis of each situation.

L. Ron Hubbard and Scientology

http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2013/01/28/exclusive-new-texts-from-scientology-s-l-ron-hubbard.html?utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&utm_campaign=cheatsheet_afternoon&cid=newsletter%3Bemail%3Bcheatsheet_afternoon&utm_term=Cheat%20Sheet

Absolutely fascinating account of the life of L. Ron Hubbard.  I read almost all his books, never subscribed to his religion because I am a Christian.  But I still found him fascinating and find this latest revelation about his life to be the definitive conclusion to his fantasy.

Obama and Reid Now Must do something and not just talk.

Yes.  Since anything the House has already passed was Dead on Arrival in the Senate.  And since anything the House may have been able to do was declared Dead on Arrival by Harry Reid.  And since anything that was done or could have been done was declared to be a “…item I will veto…”  by President Obama- Now it is the turn of the President to actually put something in writing.  His proposals so far have been talk and speeches and sound bites.  As we know, talk, speeches and sound bites are not proposed legislation and cannot be submitted to the House in that form.  Therefore, it is now the President and the Senate who must propose something to the House.

A Citizens Call to Action On Gun Control

https://www.usconcealedcarry.com/mindset/a-call-to-duty/?utm_source=SilverpopMailing&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=CCR%2012-21-2012%20Prospects%20(2)&utm_content=

 

A very thoughtful and passionate prposal for citizen action in light of school invasion and children’s murder.