I thought this vile, stupid Pope could not possibly be any more disgusting, but oh yes, he can. He’s going to Cuba to meet the corrupt KGB snitch and notorious gangster Goondiayev.
Goondiayev’s current assignment is to work as the Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church. Even in an organization as sensationally and shamelessly corrupt as ROC, Goondiayev stands out for his insane greed and debauchery. Goondiayev is close to Putin, approving and celebrating every atrocity his KGB colleague commits.
Nobody with a shred of decency would agree to appear in the same room with Goondiayev who’s known for mocking the Bible and making millions from tobacco and alcohol sales. Stupid Francis, however, wouldn’t know what decency looks like if it stared him in the face. He’s happy to flit to Cuba to kiss up to Goondiayev, Putin, and Castro because he doesn’t care about faith, the Bible or Jesus. All this piece of shit wants is to appear in the news and feel important.
Don’t you read “Salon.com”? If you did, you’d realize how religious Putin is, and how much you’ve misjudged the current influence of the Russian Orthodox Church:
“The church is experiencing something of a revival in Russia, with the strong support of deeply religious President Vladimir Putin, who has woven religious themes into both his domestic and foreign policies and brought other devout figures into his inner circle. ” (from an article posted today)
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This was written by somebody certifiable. I will never understand the need to write about things people have no knowledge about or interest in. Deeply religious Putin is like saying “profoundly modest Trump” or “deeply pro-capitalist Bernie Sanders.”
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To paraphrase The Princess Bride, “Never go up against a Jesuit when theology is on the line.” Edited by yours truly for emphasis:
https://blogs.harvard.edu/hnmcp/hnmcp/blog/pope-francis-the-great-negotiator/
There’s a reason Hitler referred to Jesuits as “Those black crows”. And you worry that he won’t be able to handle the leader of a religion with 7.5% of the ROC membership?
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The Pope already got handled by these people : https://clarissasblog.com/2015/06/12/putin-uses-the-pope/
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Saw this, it’s not as pessimistic as you are:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-06-10/putin-keeps-pope-waiting-gets-told-off-by-francis-on-ukraine
I don’t know what you expected the Pope to do instead of what he said at the meeting in question.
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I expected him not to meet with this creep and not to let himself be used for propagandistic purposes.
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Good point — of course Putin isn’t going to pay any more heed to the Pope’s lectures that he does to John Kerry’s or Obama’s. All this meeting does is once again demonstrate Putin’s ability to show how important he is on the world stage.
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That’s what I’m saying! Putin will spin any sign of attention as a huge victory for himself. The fellow worked for the KGB, he’s incapable of taking religious folks seriously.
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This is interesting. Was German the only language Putin and Francis I have in common? From Vatican.com
http://www.cruxnow.com/church/2015/07/17/the-popes-sainthood-decree-for-a-ukrainian-legend-has-a-political-edge/
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blockquote>Sheptysky’s sainthood cause was launched in 1958, under Pope John XXIII, but it stalled at the request of the late Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński of Poland. A staunch Polish nationalist, Wyszyński feared that making a saint out of Sheptytsky could not only provoke the Russians, but also impugn Poland’s on-again, off-again history of colonizing Western Ukraine.
That 57-year logjam has angered Greek Catholics, for whom Sheptytsky’s case for a halo is a slam-dunk. The delay can only be explained today in terms of not wanting to upset either the Russian government or the Russian Orthodox Church, an important interlocutor for the Vatican in the quest for greater Christian unity.
By now, there are three generations of Ukrainian Catholics who have ground their teeth over what they see as an injustice driven by an excess of political caution. A 1997 editorial in The Ukrainian Weekly captured that frustration by asking, “Will the Vatican do the right thing?”
Those Ukrainians likely won’t forget it was Pope Francis who finally moved the ball. A Sheptytsky Institute in Canada, reflecting the sentiments of the Ukrainian diaspora, issued a statement on Friday saying that “during this time of foreign aggression against Ukraine … the recognition brings particular consolation.”
If it’s a mistake to conclude that the primary reason for which Francis signed off on Sheptytsky’s decree was political, equally it would be naïve to think this savvy Jesuit pontiff wasn’t aware of its political dimension.
The fact he didn’t let that stop him may well tell Ukrainians everything they wanted to know about where he stands.
John L. Allen Jr., associate editor, specializes in coverage of the Vatican.
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blockquote>
Now, it’s not unusual for a Catholic media outlet to praise a living Pope, whether he merits in this case is another question.
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Whatever you think of this Pope and this Patriarch, their meeting will be a major milestone in the history of the Catholic Church. It will be the FIRST meeting of a Pope and a Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church since the “great schism” in 1054, when the two branches of the Catholic Church split apart almost a thousand years ago.
The meeting may not accomplish much, but it will definitely become a prominent date in Church history.
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That’s exactly what this prick of a Pope cares about. Milestones, photo ops, praise, fame, headlines. Typical vain Argentinean.
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Do vain Argentinians learn Ukrainian for nothing, Clarissa? Besides he not only speaks Italian but the dialect of Piedmontese, which indicates to me he’s more like an Italian-Argentinian than a monolingual Argentinian.
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Yes, Argentineans are the only Spanish-speaking Italians in the world and they are very proud of it. 🙂
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