Saturday, November 3, 2018

Michael Voris Sucks


"The only way to prevent a democracy from committing suicide is to limit the vote to faithful Catholics," Michael Voris, 2018

For those of you just now tuning in, the christians, intentionally spelled with a lower case 'c', seem to be having a a bit of an issue with its public image when it comes to its DOJ investigation into its operations of trafficking tiny humans, which has been presented to the public as a "sex abuse scandal".

The Holy See Residuals Of The Peculiar Institution - Part Two - Civil Rights & Chattel Law - DOJ Issues Spoliation Letter To Conference Of Catholic Bishops


I must admit, I was a bit disturbed that I could not find the actual letter source from DOJ to the Conference of Catholic Bishops, which just so happens to include:

  1. The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America;
  2. Diocese of the Armenian Church of America;
  3. Episcopal Church (United States).

So, what you do is call in your psychoptic propaganda image maker to clean up your image around the world for preparation of international prosecutions.

In walks Michael Voris.

Let me sum up the interview he did in response to the "christian church crisis" (a.k.a. pedophilia and the trafficking of tiny humans through child welfare programs like foster care and adoption), he refused to mention children, the land, or the votes.

Boy, oh, boy was he good.

Not one mention of mention of the federal and international investigations, or even the ongoing trail dealing with the insolvency of the Vatican Bank or its 'questionable' banking through Deutsche Bank and its international children's Trusts Funds.

That is how you know you have a pro.


Michael has a long and illustrious career in Detroit religious propaganda of the imperialistic morality parade going all the ways back to the days of when the North Oakland Republican Party was emboldening the Family Rights Council of Michigan, that I just so happened to be the Government Relations Director with my old crew, I so affectionately refer to as my "husbands" because they all loved me.

John Stahl, Jack Hoegendyk, Pete Hoekstra, Bill Hardiman, Mark Jansen.

The christian women hated me.

Whatever.

Yes, these same christian power structures took a hold of the Grand Rapids region where I used to roll hard out there in DeVos country, too.

These were very sophisticated spiritual operations to take over the voting powers (I call them powers because I was not up on voting rights at the time) by bringing together the down and out fathers who were victims of divorce and child support, to put them back into positions of financial and social glory through the tax exempt god, in the acquisition of land, to make them all manly and stuff, again, by setting them up in business and making money the christian way, through children's charitable organizations.

I know.

Even Mike Cox* used to have a child support non-profit, something or other, for laundering Title IV-D in state contracts for whatever it claimed it was doing, because it was only up for a hot second before it cashed out, so there are no IRS filings, which was one of the "hit-n-quit" models they set up to become financially re-empowered, again, as a social conservative, you know, conserving their status in society, by any means, christianly necessary.

(Ssshhh...Mikey used to be a Dem before he got to Livonia.)

*We have not forgotten about Strawberry.

I was in D.C. for the first gathering when they asked me to run data for policy development.

So, I did.

It was all financials and they did not like that I was showing them child welfare fraud so they kicked me out the family.

Oh well.

Here is backgrounder to the positions he is claiming the Catholic Church should be taking because only he can save the church, because he said so.

Oh, he is not a priest, but I swear he has a military background, hence, its name, Church Militant.

It also seems the Church Militant folks have a fundraising project called Funding Morality which looks like a propaganda campaign to protect...oh, how shall we say this....the pedophilic lifestyle of prominent leaders in the Catholic Church, which just so happens to be called the Jewish Institute for Global Awareness, registered in New Jersey, with no updates on its IRS filings.

Even Nancy Schaffer from Georgia was in on the operation with the christian hate rhetoric.

The cyberverse chatters have it there was a dark money scheme to help out Team Kavanaugh through JIGA, perhaps through GoFundMe, but, hey, what do I know?

Welcome to what I believe is going to be the Final Battle in the world of child welfare fraud: Religion.

Even though this particular post focuses on the republican christian facet in this highly evolved, complex financial fraud scheme known as privatization under chattel law, there is a direct, financial partnership with jewish and muslim religious factions, operating deeply within these political institutions of human history, on both sides of the aisle, with an extremely odious agenda.

The black churches have been infiltrated, too.

I have always said, the propaganda started in child welfare because no one cares.

Detroit was the pilot model city to steal the children, the land and the votes.

Michael Voris was mean to my Sweetie.

This is why Michael Voris Sucks.

Ex-Gay Crowdfunding Site Raises $100K To Help “Death To Gays” Chicago Priest Who Burned Rainbow Flag


Views on provocative Real Catholic TV station anger Detroit archdiocese and others


As a Catholic TV station based in Ferndale becomes increasingly popular around the world, church officials are trying to tell the public that the media outlet does not represent Catholicism.

In two public statements, the Archdiocese of Detroit has taken the unusual step of publicly criticizing Real Catholic TV, saying "that it does not have the authorization required under church law to identify or promote itself as Catholic."

The dispute comes as the TV station, which operates mainly over the Internet, has exploded in popularity since it started in 2008. Its videos have attracted 10 million views on YouTube and its public face, Michael Voris, has become a well-known, aggressive global advocate for conservative Catholics.

Voris returned from Nigeria last Monday, where he visited the church that terrorists attacked on Christmas Day. And on Friday, he left for the Philippines to help make the case against contraception use.

But as Real Catholic TV's popularity rises, the station is facing its share of detractors concerned about how its traditional views are sometimes expressed in a blunt manner.

"The only way to prevent a democracy from committing suicide is to limit the vote to faithful Catholics," Voris said on a show that stoked controversy.

On a mission to save the Catholic Church from itself, Michael Voris isn't afraid to offend

For much of his life, Michael Voris of Ferndale was a lukewarm Catholic, someone who usually just went through the motions at church.

But after the sudden death of his brother in 2003 from a heart attack and the death of his mother from stomach cancer the following year, the former TV reporter became a changed man.

"Her dying really kind of started to wake me up," Voris recalled. "You have to face mortality. And then the questions came pouring in: What is the meaning of life? Who are we as human beings? Is there life after death? Those are fundamental questions everyone has to look for."

Voris found those answers in the Catholic Church. In 2006, he formed St. Michael's Media, a Catholic TV production company and studio in Ferndale. And in 2008, he helped launch Real Catholic TV. Today, the never-married 50-year-old is consumed by his passion to promote what he considers the one true faith. Working up to 18 hours a day, seven days a week, Voris is on a burning mission to save Catholicism and America by trying to warn the public about what he sees as a decline of morality in society.

But it's a vision that has rubbed some the wrong way. His critics said his remarks, at times, promote division and extremism. Catholic officials from Pennsylvania to Spain to Detroit have warned people that he doesn't speak for the Catholic Church. The Archdiocese of Detroit released two public statements on Voris, saying in December that the TV station was not permitted to have the word "Catholic" in its title. After receiving complaints from Voris' supporters, it sent out a second release last month reiterating its stance.

But Voris and his supporters said it's their critics who violate the core teachings of the church. They're not surprised by the attacks because they see them as part of an effort to water down the faith.
"Chaos has run through the church for the last 40 to 50 years," Voris said. "For people who are faithful Catholics, it's a source of great sorrow. It's definitely broken."

The Catholic divide
The tension between the two sides reflects an intense debate among Catholics over how to stem the number of Catholics leaving the faith. Liberals argue that people are leaving because the church is too strict and outdated, but conservatives such as Voris say the opposite is true.

Voris said the church's liberal tilt in the years after the 1960s reforms of the Second Vatican led to declining mass attendance and the decline of morality in the West. In his videos -- which on YouTube have drawn more than 10 million views -- Voris criticizes everything from abortion (comparing it to a holocaust) to contraception to liberal Catholics who promote feminism and homosexuality. In one of his more controversial videos, Voris said:

"The only way to run a country is by benevolent dictatorship, a Catholic monarch who protects his people from themselves and bestows on them what they need, not necessarily what they want."
After an uproar, Voris apologized, saying that he misspoke but he stands by his larger point, which is that a society needs strong morals in order to survive.

Defending the faith
Last April, the diocese in Scranton, Pa., banned him from speaking in its facilities after it received complaints about his comments on other faiths.

In response to the criticism, Voris told the Free Press:

"Current culture doesn't let things be said plainspokenly. It's ... political correctness. Anything somebody takes offense at, whether it's true or not, seems to be out of bounds."
Despite the controversy, Voris travels the world to promote the Catholic faith. He has done shows in Nigeria, the Philippines, Ireland, Spain, Portugal, France, Belgium and Germany and has upcoming trips to New Zealand and Australia.

Voris' efforts are financed by Marc Brammer, a business developer for Moody's who lives in South Bend, Ind., and is a member of Opus Dei, a somewhat controversial group known for its traditional views.

Voris started and owns a media company, St. Michael's Media, which Brammer contracts to produce Real Catholic TV.

Like Voris, Brammer is concerned about what he feels is the liberal shift of the Catholic Church. They both criticize what they call "Americanism," a term they use to describe a post-1960s culture that they say has negatively influenced Catholics.

"Our Catholic Church is infected with Americanism that has gone wrong," said Brammer. "Not that America is wrong. But America's best days are not today; it was in the past, just like the Catholic Church."

While in Madrid, Voris bemoaned the American Catholics who attended, saying they were dressed immodestly.

"It made you downright cringe to see so many Americanized Catholics standing there at mass half-naked," he said in a video.

Voris and his backers are committed to forging ahead on a mission to save the Catholic Church and the U.S.

Many current church leaders are "namby-pamby," Voris said. "It's all about, 'Love your neighbor.' "
What's needed instead, he said, is a muscular Catholicism that isn't afraid to encourage battle and sacrifice.

"Sometimes, you have to provocative," Brammer said.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

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