The Vatican's Anti-Nazi Financial Plan

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This is fascinating. At the start of WWII, the Vatican transferred much of its assets out of Nazi-held countries into the U.S. a new study reveals.
The documents show that at the beginning of World War II, the Vatican lost no time in transferring its bonds and gold reserves from areas that were faced with the threat of Nazi occupation to the United States. The U.S. became the financial base from where the universal Church was sustained and administered, with another ten million dollars being invested in the American economy.
But that's not all: 
As Nogara’s Washington contacts confirm, as of 1939, the Vatican invested enormous sums of money in US Treasury Bills, in important manufacturing and technological companies, in companies such as Rolls Royce, the United Steel Corporation, Dow Chemical, Westinghouse Electric, Union Carbide and General Electric. Patricia McGoldrick even speaks of a flow of money from the Vatican, being used to fund the U.S. war industry which helped in defeating the Nazis.
That Pius XII was personally responsible for the rescue of more than 860,000 Jews is now a matter of record -- and now it turns out the Vatican was helping the war effort directly. So can we stop with the crap about Hitler's Pope already?

To Women Who Have Had Abortions

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The weekend of the March for Life seems like a good time to revisit Bl. Pope John Paul II's 1995 Encyclical, Evangelium Vitae:
I would now like to say a special word to women who have had an abortion. The Church is aware of the many factors which may have influenced your decision, and she does not doubt that in many cases it was a painful and even shattering decision. The wound in your heart may not yet have healed. Certainly what happened was and remains terribly wrong. But do not give in to discouragement and do not lose hope. Try rather to understand what happened and face it honestly. If you have not already done so, give yourselves over with humility and trust to repentance. The Father of mercies is ready to give you his forgiveness and his peace in the Sacrament of Reconciliation. To the same Father and his mercy you can with sure hope entrust your child. With the friendly and expert help and advice of other people, and as a result of your own painful experience, you can be among the most eloquent defenders of everyone's right to life. Through your commitment to life, whether by accepting the birth of other children or by welcoming and caring for those most in need of someone to be close to them, you will become promoters of a new way of looking at human life. 

Couldn't Have Said It Better

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Update: apparently the video I discuss here has been "removed by the user." Updater: Here it is again, while it lasts:
Pro-lifers and even some abortion supporters have been profoundly offended by this tasteless ad. But what's to be offended by? It's perfect, as it perfectly reflects the reality that Roe is for MEN, not women. This IS exactly what Roe means for women, what it envisions for them, and I think we should salute a moment of honesty from the other side for once. (Private to "Greg": 20 years later someone finally made our ad -- only I didn't expect it to be their side.)

Shorter pro-choice video (shamelessly pinched from facebook): 

Update: And then there's this.

I Want One!

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Did you catch Justice Scalia's weird hat at the Inaguration yesterday? It appears to have been a "statement." Check it out:
The twitterverse is alive with tweets about Justice Scalia’s headgear for today’s inauguration. At the risk of putting all the fun speculation to an end . . . The hat is a custom-made replica of the hat depicted in Holbein’s famous portrait of St. Thomas More. It was a gift from the St. Thomas More Society of Richmond, Virginia. We presented it to him in November 2010 as a memento of his participation in our 27th annual Red Mass and dinner.
Make of it what you will, but I think ALL Catholics in the U.S. should wear one until the HHS Abortion Mandate is fully rescinded and the Administration quits arguing in Court that your right to freely exercise your religion ends the instant you step out of your home or church and onto a public sidewalk. 

Is This What You Mean By "Choice"?

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Or this? How about this? Or this?

Less Miserable Than I Expected

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In dread of attending within a month a second three-hour movie I knew I would hate, I nonetheless accompanied Girl Weed, several girlfriends, and another brave mom to Les Miserables.

Had to be done, I s'pose. How long can you claim to love the theater and hold out on Les Mis?

Girl Weed's review speaks for me:
Beautiful story, highly over-rated movie.
I liked it better than I expected to, mostly because the music isn't as awful as I feared. Don't get me wrong: it's plenty awful, but it's mostly sort of a recitative with a couple of songs instead of endless stormy ballads, so I sort of got used to that and didn't mind so much.

Most reviewers have said that Russell Crowe is a disaster as Javert because he can't sing. I was surprised, because while he's no Bryn Terfel, he was respectable enough I thought. The actor who really can't sing is Hugh Jackman as Jean Valjean. Jackman is terrific --new respect for him as an actor-- and because he doesn't seem to have any real tunes to sing it doesn't mar his performance-- but he can't hold a note. Everything sounds like Tony Bennett hitting high notes as an octogenarian. (I asked the rest of our group about this to see if I am crazy. They agreed with my assessment of the two voices, but the gals who have seen stage productions and have other performances to compare thought Crowe was awful as I did not, so I suspect other reviewers must have been comparing Crowe to past stage productions.)

Nothing's going to do justice to the 600-pp novel, so I forgive many of the cuts and liberties, but the objection I have to Crowe's Javert has nothing to do with his performance and everything to do with the play's interpretation of the character. Les Mis turns Javert into a religious fanatic: the source of his coldness is (in song) revealed to be Christianity. He's one of those guys who thinks he must defend God. That's just bogus and makes Javert's eventual suicide inexplicable. I don't know what the stageplay does, but in the film there's a moment where Javert lays his medal on the chest of a young boy who's died in an uprising (utterly out of character) and you get the sense Javert dies because he sees he's on the wrong side of the political struggle and regrets the "collateral damage." That's to completely miss the point. For Hugo, Javert exemplifies strict Justice and scorns religion.

The beautiful redemptive ending is marred by the final scene. I don't know if the play does that -- I suppose it must since a musical needs a rousing finale. It just doesn't work here, though. Justice has been done, the saintly Jean Valjean is greeted on his path to heaven by the equally saintly bishop who "claimed his soul for God" ... and then everyone mans the barricades once again to sing a radical anthem? That was weird.

My legs fell asleep sitting for that long, and I feared blood clots. And I definitely tired of gritty close-ups of tear-stained faces. I can't relate to people's gushing over it, but it wasn't as awful as I thought (hurrah for low expectations!) In justice I must say there were some scenes I found genuinely moving.

Extraneous observations:
  • I think it is cruel to show 20 minutes of previews before a three hour movie. And I was deeply ashamed of the content of the previews. Before the Hobbit it was 20 minutes of post-apocalyptic sci-fi dystopia. Before Les Mis it was 20 minutes of relationship dystopia with lots of coarse humor and simulated rutting. Sheesh. 
  • If you can judge by a preview -- and you can-- Leonardo diCaprio looks perfect as Gatsby, but Hollywood has completely misunderstood that story.

Free Bill Posters

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From everywhere on the internet, but I shamelessly pinched it from here.

And How Do You Feel About the Rape of Your Wife, Gov. Dukakis?

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Mr. W. occasionally recommends an exercise in which we imagine Al Gore had been President on 9/11 and thereafter.

I think it would have looked a lot like this. Behold the current DefSec's response to the taking of American hostages in Algeria:


Panetta said he was “confident” that the United States would ultimately decide to provide military assistance to France, but that the Obama administration first needed to conduct a careful legal review to ensure that it has the authority to become involved in the conflict.
“One thing I’ve learned is every time I turn around, I face a group of lawyers,” Panetta told reporters. “Lawyers basically have to review these issues to make sure they feel comfortable that we have the legal basis for what we’re being requested to do. And I understand the need for that.”


Jeepers. Put a little "Cowboy" in it, for the love of country. I bet those terrorists are just quaking at the thought of lawyers coming at them.



Two Sonnets And Absolutely No Haiku

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I ain't sayin' they're Shakespeare, but they aren't the useless haiku most English teachers assign, either. Three cheers for Girl Weed's Literature teacher.

The Golden Trio, by Girl Weed or Rose Among Thorns

Of Ronald Weasley firstly do I sing,
He stays with friends forever from the start.
He perseveres, so teammates call him "King" --
He represents the value of the heart.
Hermione Granger, now of thee I speak:
The brightest witch of any age or kind.
Cool logic serves thee, never finds thee weak --

You show us the potential of the mind.
Now Harry Potter, called the Chosen One
The boy whom Voldemort conspires to kill;
He never gives up, not until good's won--
And this displays the power of the will.
Thus in the Golden Trio, comrades three
Heart, mind, and will unite for all to see.




A Director's Struggle, by Girl Weed's Friend after a day trying to shoot a movie

I sit in my director's chair and yell, 
"Quiet on the set!" Silence falls. I sigh. 
"Take your places people!" Brriinnngg! goes the bell.
Actors: bad. I try to stay calm... I cry.
"Let's try it again. Take it from the top."
Back on set, characters flunk. I cry more.
My lead is daydreaming, I throw a prop. 
"I give up!" I leave and slam the door.
I think of those poor unfortunate souls,
Go back in and find repentant faces.
They start to shape up; I guess they aren't trolls
But they still lack in so many places.
 Eventually, through blood, sweat, and tears
We wrap a film enjoyed for many years.

Bearly There

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 Photo by Rick Sheremeta, National Geographic, shamelessly pinched from here.

Yep, that's about how I feel after I rustle up dinner for everyone, too.

I Win Again

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What delights a kid is often delightful in itself. This evening Middle Weed asked if we could watch a movie, a thing he's taken to asking a lot. I said we'd overdosed on movies during Christmas break and he should read instead.

This brought his usual protest: "I've already read every book in this house that even slightly interests me. Many times."  Which is a little bit true, though he judges books by their covers and doesn't realize how many things that would interest him are in the upstairs library, as opposed to his room.

"Why not read the Hobbit?" says I.
"Already have."
"Nonsense. You listened when Dad read it to the older kids, but you were too young for it. You should read it on your own now. I promise you'll love it. Here, get your brother, and we can read it aloud together."

He was willing enough, though maybe not thrilled --until I poured myself a glass of wine because to narrate a chapter as long as a Hobbit chapter and do all the throaty dwarf voices requires proper lubrication.

"Mom!" say he, with a sudden gleam in his eye. "May I pour a drink into one of those special glasses and drink it in the living room, too?"

Ordinarily I would not risk my wine glasses nor my carpet, but I could see he was thinking about dwarves and goblets, so I assented. So he and his younger brother poured themselves the last of the Christmas egg nog, toasted --and took such pleasure from the permission and this simple act of entering imaginatively into the story that I was completely charmed.

We read two chapters. Or rather, I read a chapter and the boys wanted to continue but my voice was worn out, so Middle Weed read the second.  They were sort of game for a third, but we'd all suddenly grown drowsy so I had them stop.

Later Middle Weed comes up and asks, "Mom, may I read ahead?"

Hehehe. He's hooked, just as I planned.

No more begging for movies for a couple of days now. And soon the Lord of the Rings shall follow.

Ninme's Oscar Picks

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The only Oscar-related news I actually look forward to

I haven't even heard of four of the best picture nominees, have seen none of them, and basically don't care to see any of them, although I am reliably informed I am wrong about Lincoln (Mr. W. & Eldest Weed loved it). And will probably break down and see Les Mis just to say I did, even though I **know** I will hate it. Not because the movie will be bad, but because I can tell I won't like the music. (None of which I've ever heard, that's how innocent I am!)

America Has Officially Jumped the Shark

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National Father's Day Council names Bill Clinton Father of the Year. There is no coming back from that folks. Sucking up I understand, but how are they not too ashamed to do this?

Update: totally different topic, except related to this nation jumping the shark. The French are having massive demonstrations in defense of marriage against the government's effort to foist gay marriage on them. I keep asking myself how it is that the French turn out to have a healthier sense of what marriage is than Americans do? That is, the French, who won't work for a living, can rouse themselves to defend marriage. Even their gays are defending marriage! Here's a gay author being interviewed:
The law they're proposing, this marriage for all; I have to take pause. I have to wonder, "who's this law for?" I say to myself, "is it made for homosexuals?" I live in Provence and I work in Paris. I know very few homosexuals who wish to marry beyond the PACS (civil unions) they already have. In fact the number of people in PACS unions in France, couples of the same sex, is minimal. Therefore who's this law for? If it's for the 5,000 people who live in the district of Le Marrais, then it's just a militant act. But behind it all, it must be a question of the child.
Freedom, equality for all?
Me, I'm not part of any political party or any association. For me, the question behind this, the fundamental issue, is the child. Among the responses I've heard, I've had this business of freedom and equality. Then I pose this question: What of the freedom and equality of the child? The child won't have its equality vis-a-vis its friends in school. Its peers may have divorced and blended families, but they have, at least, a father and mother.
So it seems the French are serious about vive la difference! And more realistic and accepting of simple biology or nature, as we might say. Why is that? Is it because even our radicals are actually puritanical, unable to cope with the realities of the body?

And the French high court just repealed the loony French president's soak-the-rich confiscatory tax plan. When the French evidence more common sense than you, you need to rethink your life, my beloved country!

Update 2:  More than a million Frenchmen can't be wrong?  French police report more than a million people demonstrating against gay marriage near the Eiffel Tower.

Update 3: Mon Dieu! Now the French are stepping up against al-Qaeda in Mali.

It's All In The Wrist

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As a public service, I hereby offer this means of distinguishing between a useful food preparation implement and a dangerous weapon.

Common Chef's Knife: dinner is on the way.

Dangerous Assault Knife: Run!

Noted Boomer Dies

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Intellectually, which is all I'm asking. Here is former atheist A. N. Wilson's jeremiad against what his generation hath wrought.
I imbibed all the liberationist sexual mores of the Sixties as far as sexual morality was concerned. 
I made myself and dozens of people extremely unhappy — including, of course, my children and other people’s children.
Not only has he died as a boomer, he predicts imminent Boomer death.
My guess is that the backlash will be even greater in the wake of the whole Jimmy Savile affair, and in reaction against the miserable world which my generation has handed on to our children — with our confused sexual morality, and our broken homes.
Our generation, who started to grow up ‘between the end of the Chatterley ban and the Beatles first LP’ got it all so horribly wrong.
We ignored the obvious fact that moral conventions develop in human societies for a reason.
We may have thought it was ‘hypocritical’ to condemn any form of sexual behaviour, and we may have dismissed the undoubted happiness felt by married people as stuffy, repressed and old hat. 
But we were wrong, wrong, wrong. 
Two generations have grown up — comprising children of selfish grown-ups who put their own momentary emotional needs and impulses before family stability and the needs of their children. 
However, I don’t think this behaviour can last much longer. The price we all pay for the fragmentation of society, caused by the break-up of so many homes, will surely lead to a massive rethink. 
At least, let’s hope so.
That from the Daily Mail. The Guardian, by contrast, wants to normalize pedophilia.

Related: (in a go home and rethink your life kind of way) Elizabeth Wurtzel Confronts her One-Night Stand of a Life; (in a here's how reasonable people get to weirdly divergent conclusions about the same sex-scandal kind of way): The Revenge of Conscience.

Happy Little Christmas!

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 From the sublime --the Holy Father's homily
What kind of men were they? ...These men who set out towards the unknown were, in any event, men with a restless heart.  Men driven by a restless quest for God and the salvation of the world. They were filled with expectation, not satisfied with their secure income and their respectable place in society.  They were looking for something greater. They were no doubt learned men, quite knowledgeable about the heavens and probably possessed of a fine philosophical formation.  But they desired more than simply knowledge about things. They wanted above all else to know what is essential.  They wanted to know how we succeed in being human.  And therefore they wanted to know if God exists, and where and how he exists. Whether he is concerned about us and how we can encounter him.  Nor did they want just to know. They wanted to understand the truth about ourselves and about God and the world. Their outward pilgrimage was an expression of their inward journey, the inner pilgrimage of their hearts.  They were men who sought God and were ultimately on the way towards him. They were seekers after God.
-- to the ridiculous: a series of photos of Epiphany celebrations throughout the world. (Particularly love the Bulgarian take on riverdance.)

The Twelfth Day of Christmas

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Fatcats

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I can't feel schadenfreude when people are hurting, but it's really something watching all my smug and gloating Obama-voter friends on FB b***** about how light their first paychecks of the year are thanks to increased payroll & #SS taxes. Nothing like waking up and discovering you're "rich" for the first time.

The real question is how they can be so shocked.

The Eleventh Day of Christmas

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St. Joseph the Worker, artist unknown

The Tenth Day of Christmas

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The Ninth Day of Christmas

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Books Read, 2012 (Look Away!)

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By now you know the drill: Is there anything worse than the vanity of bloggers who think anyone cares what they're reading? No, there isn't, but I'm going to indulge myself anyway. Therefore, skip over this and forgive me. Every so often I do a post purely for personal record-keeping, and that's what this is. Post-dated so you mostly won't see it, and if you do, you have only yourself to blame. 

Not up to my usual snuff, numbers-wise, but 6 of them are such huge novels I give myself slack. Need to do better w/ kid reading this year. 

Scripture
The New Testament

Ratzingers
Jesus of Nazareth: The Infancy Narratives  (not finished)
Porta Fidei


Professional & Devotional
Dei Verbum
A Heart on Fire: Catholic Witness & the Next America
Lumen Gentium
Saints of the American Wilderness
The Next Christians
Redeeming Economics
Spiritual Exercises
Testimony of Hope
True Freedom: On Protecting Human Dignity & Religious Liberty

Book Club
Age of Innocence
David Copperfield
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde 
Les Miserables

Just Felt Like It
Anna Karenina
The Father's Tale
The Good Earth
A Soldier of the Great War
Unbroken

With the Kids
Akimbo & the Lions
Akimbo & the Snakes
Harry Potter & the Order of the Phoenix
Mr. Midshipman Hornblower 
The Girl Who Married A Lion
The Tyranny of Cliches

The Eighth Day of Christmas

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