Gender Critical School Chaplain Put Through 6 Years Of Shame, Jenny Holland Reports


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: August 6, 2025

“It Shows Who Is Actually Paying The Bills In The Catholic Press” Frank Walker On Pope Leo’s Traditional Veneer


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: June 25, 2025, at 10:00 pm EST

“UK Gen Z Catholic Outnumber Anglicans 2-1.” Jenny Holland On Youthful Spiritual Awakening


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: June 25, 2025, at 10:00 pm EST

Holland: “The Church Of England, The Moral Center For The United Kingdom, Called For A Bill Allowing The Gov To Off Its Own Citizens”


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: June 25, 2025, at 10:00 pm EST

RADICAL PACIFISM: Frank Walker Pope Leo’s Jab At President Trump On Middle East Conflict


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: June 25, 2025, at 10:00 pm EST

Catholic Church Warns of the Dangers of Socialism


Posted originally on Jun 16, 2025 by Martin Armstrong 

Pope Leo XIV hosted Argentina’s President Javier Milei at the Vatican. The head of a Catholic nation, Milei, clashed with former Pope Francis on social reforms, with Milei publicly bashing the pope and the Vatican. This did not sit well with the people of Argentina, and despite being the first Argentine pope, Pope Francis never returned to his homeland during his 12-year papacy.

Pope Leo XIV announced that he plans to visit Argentina in the near future. President Milei presented the pope with two books before their departure: “The Fatal Conceit” by Friedrich Hayek and a Spanish book by Libertarian economist Jesus Huerta de Soto. The latter advocates for free markets, private ownership, and voluntary cooperation. The author emphasizes non-coercive methods for giving compared to state interventions. Friedrich Hayek believes that society cannot be controlled through centralized planning. Fatal conceit is the belief that reason alone can control a society, yet no human has the ability to control society or the economy.

The Catholic Church has never embraced the concept of socialism. The pope’s namesake, Leo XIII’s 1891 book Rerum Novarum, condemned centralized control while supporting worker rights. The poor are to be protected and served from one’s own goodwill. The church believes that denying people the right to own private property threatens the family unit.

Vatican

There is a reason that the far left hates Christianity and Catholicism. Joe Biden went as far as to order the FBI to spy on Catholics during his regime. Marxist philosophy is anti-Christian and anti-family. Friedrich Engels, a pioneer of Marxism, argued that the nuclear family was merely a “unit of consumption.” He advocated polygamous group marriage and the abolishment of private property and generational wealth.

Hillary Clinton recently admitted that she fears a return to the nuclear family. “It’s all in there,” Clinton said of the debunked project 2025, “The return to the nuclear family, the return to being a Christian nation, return to producing a lot of children, which is sort of odd since the people who produce a lot of children are immigrants.”

Father Mike, a popular online sensation for the younger generation of Catholics, has come out to explain that the Catholic Church does NOT support socialism. He acknowledged that both Christians and Socialists believed in giving to the poor, however, there is a key difference. “’The Christian says ‘Where can I give my stuff to help the people in needs?’ And the socialist says, ‘Where can I take someone else’s stuff and help the people in need?’”

“One is charity and one if theft,” the priest explained, calling socialism “genuinely evil.”

The Vatican has famously clashed with governments over its stance on immigration, taking the “Welcome the stranger” stance. The Catechism stated that developed nations are “obliged, to the extent they are able, to welcome the foreigner in search of the security and means of livelihood which he cannot find in his country of origin.”

Yet, the church does not believe that governments should usurp all power, as we see in socialism and communism. Why does it matter what the Vatican believes? Well, the Catholic Church is one of the most powerful and influential institutions in the world, with over 1.4 billion followers across every continent. The pope is not only a spiritual leader but a global diplomat whom heads of state treat with respect (besides Milei regarding the late Pope Francis). It is no coincidence that the church is asking influencers like Father Mike to expose the cruelties of socialism at this particular moment.

Categories:Religion

Sunday June 15th


Posted originally on CTH on June 15, 2025 | Sundance 

Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy Name. Thy kingdom come. THY WILL BE DONE, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation, but DELIVER US FROM EVIL.

For Thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory, forever and ever. Amen †

.

How to Find a Partner Worth Marrying 💍 | Charlie Kirk & Riley Gaines


Published originally on Rumble By Turing Point USA on May 30, 2025 at 7:00 pm EST

Intangible Art


Posted originally on May 27, 2025 by Martin Armstrong 

Artist

Art can be a tangible commodity, but what happens when that art exists only as a concept? Italian artist Salvatore Garau created a statue entitled, Io Sono (“I Am”) that sold for $18,300. The sculpture itself is invisible.

“You don’t see it, but it exists,” Garau stated. The artist focuses on “immaterial sculptures” that exist by thought alone. Still, he believes that Io Sono must be displayed in a private home with climate control and provided with 5 x 5 ft of space. This piece of art could rise in value if consumers believe it to be worth more and are willing to pay more. The coverage this concept has received in the news has certainly caused it to become a conversation piece, and therefore, someone out there may be willing to spend more to have an invisible statue that exists as a concept.

The fine art market has become one of the most effective, sophisticated tools for laundering money. Unlike real estate, stocks, or precious metals, the art market is unregulated, unstandardized, and cloaked in confidentiality. It is considered upscale and a tool utilized by those who already have wealth and need a place to park it. Unlike financial instruments, which must pass through reporting requirements, art often changes hands privately, across borders, and without disclosure of the buyer or seller. In this case, the art does not even need to exist, and yet it still was sold through an official fine art auction house.

Art is not valued like stocks. There are no earnings, dividends, or tangible utility. There is only perception. A Picasso, a Basquiat, or a Warhol are not just artworks; they are safe havens for capital, especially for oligarchs, cartel bosses, and political elites looking to move funds discreetly. A $15 million painting hung in a Zurich vault is more secure and less traceable than a Swiss bank account, which is no longer secure.

Mar-A-Lago was once valued beneath Hunter Biden’s “art.” Hunter Biden’s artwork is estimated to be worth up to $500,000. His personal friend, Kevin Morris, purchased a few pieces and also gave him a loan of $2 million to cover Hunter’s late tax payments. Most of his buyers remain anonymous, but the known art collectors are all associated with the DNC. Hirsh Naftali, for example, was appointed by Joe Biden to be the Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad after he expressed interest in his son’s artwork.

Art as an asset is entirely subjective and based on confidence. It holds no inherent value but the public perceives its value and prices it accordingly. Art does not generate income nor does it create economic output. Art is purely speculative and becomes a bubble when confidence peaks.

We saw this in the late 1980s Japanese bubble when Japanese investors were buying Van Goghs and Monets at astronomical prices. That bubble burst along with their real estate and the Nikkei index. We saw it again leading up to 2007–2008, and now, as the sovereign debt crisis looms globally, we’re beginning to see the same flight again. Art can act as a temporary store of value unless you have some extremely rare piece from a renowned artist.

Governments are keen to tax everything, and one day, that could include art. The secrecy and mystery that once caused art to be a store of wealth could collapse if governments act. Since art is primarily used as a temporary asset by those who are already at the top, governments are not yet looking in that direction. Once capital gains taxes are implemented, it will be game over for much of the art world.

Mark Beall: The Vatican is Ahead of the US Government on AI Regulation


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: May 23, 2025, at 8:00 pm EST