Wednesday, March 9, 2022

Run With Life: People stealing or knowingly possessing personal p...

Run With Life: People stealing or knowingly possessing personal p...From the Ottawa Sun:

"Several data breaches targeting the Christian crowdfunding website GiveSendGo in February revealed the names of more than 100,000 donors who raised millions for the “Freedom Convoy 2022” and “Adopt a Trucker” campaigns. Ottawa police officers were among them, according to reports from the CBC and the Toronto Star."

Someone hacked the GiveSendGo site. They stole information on donations to the truckers. Stealing is a crime. Has anyone been charged for this crime? 

Other people then accessed that stolen information and now possess stolen information. Have they been charged for this crime? 

The police also have the stolen information. How many other people are using that stolen information? The media perhaps? Will they be charged?

Nobody should know that there were cops who donated. The cops are allowed (just like every other Canadian) to have personal opinions and support whomever they like, since in a democratic society they have a right to their personal property and a right for it to remain private without interference from anyone.

Ottawa Police Chief Steve Bell:

“You can have a difference of opinion,” he said, “but what you can’t do, you can’t come and take over a large set of streets, terrorize entire populations, engage in activities that result in either criminal investigations or hate-related investigations in our streets, and as a member of our police service, as a member of any police service, you actually can’t support those people to do that. It has nothing to do with the dialogue and has everything to do with supporting the unlawful activity that can’t be condoned or accepted in a policing environment.”

Terrorize entire populations? Ah...but there were some charges of "counselling to commit mischief". Good grief Chief Bell. Get a grip.

Now the truckers may be disciplined and worse, lose their jobs because other people are criminals.

Thursday, March 3, 2022

The fog of war takes over Ukraine

It's complicated to understand but I do have confidence in Candice Malcolm from True North

Tuesday, March 1, 2022

A Massive Betrayal - Brian Holdsworth - Church Teaching on Social Justice / Solidarity and Subsidiarity

Here is a transcript of the partial podcast by Brian Holdsworth


"If you ever spend any time trying to learn about Catholic social teaching, you will inevitably collide with two concepts, solidarity and subsidiarity, and many respectable commentators and instructors on the subject will point out that if you ever want to evaluate and compare some system or fabric of society for its compatibility with Catholic social teaching you should look to see if they get these two things right and I'm not going to go into a lot of detail with those concepts mean, although I am going to explain them a little bit for you here, but I would encourage you, if you are unfamiliar with them, to spend time learning about them, especially if Social Justice is something that's important to you and a great place to start is in the Catechism of the Catholic Church starting with Paragraph 1878 going all the way to 1917

So again, for the sake of this video, I will summarize them as concisely as I can, starting with solidarity.

So solidarity means treating your fellow man or humans, your fellow humans, if you prefer the gender-neutral language as neighbors rather than rivals. It means loving your neighbor as yourself and being invested in their interests as well as your own

On the political stage, this means the preferred policy is to produce a common good rather than only one for individual in concern for the poor? It's one thing to claim that, it's another thing to actually support policies that produce those effects. I think you'll see what I mean by the end of this video.

And on that note, the last thing I'll say about solidarity is that our interest for our neighbor needs to account most significantly for the most vulnerable. What you call this: a preferential option for the poor, and it is summarized in Christ's teaching when he says that what you do for the least you do for me and I think it's fair to say that most Christians have some appreciation for this concept, whether they get the nuances of it or how necessarily it's applied or not,

But subsidiarity Centisimus Annus, which is so named Centisimus means centenary because it was published on the 100th anniversary of Pope Leo, the 13th, legendary Social Encyclical Rerum Novarum thus placing John Paul, the second's thought within the stream of the thought of Leos.

And here's what John Paul this second had to say, summarizing and defining subsidiarity, he said
  • A community of a higher order should not interfere in the internal life of a community of a lower order, depriving the latter of its functions.
What this means is that the Governance of a community should take place at the most intimate and local level possible and that larger, more remote, and more powerful structures should restrain themselves from interfering with those smaller community structures.

So, for example, the most intimate level of the community would be the family, and it should govern itself as independently as possible from larger or higher community structures. The family shouldn't define its domestic life or base its relationships based on mandates from higher authorities like the city or the state. Likewise, the city should not be interfered with by the state, the province, or the nation, or these, again, these higher forms as much as possible.
  • And it continues to scale up accordingly. Another way of saying this is that large and powerful political structures should be restrained from telling intimate and local structures how to live and function as a community.
  • And the Catechism goes further. It goes on to say that the principle of subsidiarity is opposed to all forms of Collectivism and sets limits on state intervention. In other words, collectivist socialism that is not compatible with Catholic social teaching or the principles of solidarity or subsidiarity. 
Now it's important to remember that solidarity and subsidiarity aren't exclusive to each other. One of the things that often happens when political principles get applied in the real world is that they end up falling prey to these false dichotomies that exist everywhere within the political spectrum. So, if you're someone who gravitates to one end of the political spectrum, you might be someone who says, oh, I love subsidiarity, and you talk about it all the time, and then you neglect solidarity as if that doesn't apply. 

And then the truth is, the same is true for the opposite end of the spectrum. And that's because people are getting the sense of a false dichotomy that exists between them. The truth of Catholic social teaching is that these two things are meant to work together in harmony to produce a common good. 

So, for example, subsidiarity doesn't mean that we're supposed to be living in some sort of extreme individualism. Solidarity reminds us that we are accountable to our neighbors and to each other, and we need to help each other. But this help doesn't come primarily from large government structures. It occurs through intimate and local relationships first and foremost. 

  • So again, why am I talking about these concepts in the context of this video? Well, I would say, God willing, we are emerging from a global crisis in which two key strategies became dominant and widespread, and which I would argue clearly breach the principles of solidarity and subsidiarity, and we as a church seemed far too enthusiastic to endorse these policies in spite of our own teaching."
Brian Holdsworth 

Inflation Explained and its Devastating Effect on the Poor and the Vulnerable - Brian Holdsworth





Pierre Poilievre asked 10 top government officials
where government money comes from and none of them had an answer


Brian Holdsworth explains Inflation 
and the devastating effect of inflation on the poor and vulnerable 



Here is the transcript of the partial podcast by Brian Holdsworth

 "He tries in a variety of ways, but he doesn't get a response, and eventually he hints at the answer which the other side doesn't seem to want to admit, which is that they are printing money, which is another way of saying they are conjuring money out of thin air money that doesn't exist, and then writing checks with it. Now we all know that counterfeiting money. Producing fake money and then paying for goods with it is illegal for obvious reasons. Firstly because it's fraudulent, it's dishonest and secondly because it can cause real harm to honest people by inserting money that doesn't actually exist into the economy. Printing money is the exact same thing, but it's when the government does it and we all know that only the government is allowed to do corrupt things.


Printing money means writing checks with money that doesn't exist to appease those who are on the receiving end of this fictitious money and the immediate effect of this kind of policy is that it creates inflation.


Now, I know this is exhausting. If you're not familiar with this terminology, so just bear with me. Stick with me. I'm going to start connecting some of these dots for you. Inflation this concept that I just described means that the money that exists in the economy is now worth less because it's been divided up by the addition of cash, fake cash by the government.


So the same amount of wealth still exists in the economy, but now there are more dollar bills which represents that wealth, which means that each dollar bill is now worth less. So if you have a savings account with $5000 in it, when inflation raises, the cost of everything that $5000 isn't worth $5000 anymore because it won't get you what $5000 used to get you.


This means that everything that the working class needs to provide for themselves costs more, making their vulnerability that much more severe. So things like food, fuel, housing, clothing, utilities, all of these things have now gone up in price, which, if you're among the working poor, is a huge injustice.


Here in Canada, the average house price has gone up 21% just in the past year, and it went up significantly more the year before that, when the pandemic started. This means that if you've been excluded from the housing market so far because of a lack of opportunity well, because you started with nothing, you're renting, you're working hard, you're trying to save up to eventually purchase a property of your own, that prospect may have just been ripped away from you because of reckless government policies that favor those who already have wealth at the expense of those who don't.


If I'm going to be totally candid about this, one way of looking at this is that the rich and the powerful, including government officials, threw the poor and vulnerable under the bus, so that they could quarantine themselves from a threat while the poor had to continue to find ways to sell their labor and take the risks that the rich didn't want to take as they hid in their homes that they already owned."


Brian Holdsworth

A Massive Betrayal - Brian Holdsworth - How did we as a Church Respond?

 

Here is a transcript of a partial podcast by Brian Holdsworth"

"The next thing that I think is really important for us to observe and to be attentive to is that these policies weren't devised at the local level like subsidiary implores us to do.

They came from the largest international agencies we have, like the World Health Organization or national agencies like the CDC or Health Canada. And they told local authorities what to do. And then they dutifully did so.

They proposed these one size fits all solutions for vast populations of people spread out over huge geographical areas. Really, I mean, globally, if we're going to be honest about it, with no nuanced, no appreciation for exemptions to these rules, exceptions to these rules, of which there were countless.

This approach, if you haven't detected already, is a vulgar infringement on the principle of subsidiarity.

  • And how did we as a church respond? Sadly and much to my own lament we were silent. We kept silent, we acquiesced our moral authority to the United Nations, pharmaceutical conglomerates and agencies like the CDC and lastly, what about that poke? That was imposed through coercive measures, if not mandated.

Everyone, regardless of age, risk factor, natural immunity, or general health was told that they must cooperate in this collectivist policy. No appreciations or allowance for nuances and specifics like. What if I'm in an age group that has virtually zero risk of getting seriously sick? Oh well, you need to do it to prevent you from passing it onto others, well then again this sort of collectivist mindset, well, we now know that that didn't even work. It was utterly ineffective at producing that effect.

But millions upon millions of young people were coerced into cooperating with a policy that was based on incomplete research, which we now realize turned out to be wrong. And because the lack of prudence in this could have been sniffed out for miles away with anybody who had a critical instinct or a mustard seeds worth of prudence, many people refused and were fired from their jobs and refused unemployment help while being outcast and villainized by the media who received themselves untold billions from the payouts money that Mr Poilievre is still wondering if anybody knows what the source of it is.

  • I made a video a few weeks back from which I admitted that I was struggling and I don't think I was entirely candid about all the reasons why I was really struggling. I think I can be a little a little more upfront about that now. I was really disturbed by what I was seeing going on and I had expected that in, in a time of crisis, in a time of struggle and confusion those of us who are Catholic, we should be able to turn to the church for clarity and for refuge. But I feel like we as a church betrayed ourselves and those we keep professing to care about, the poor.

What was really happening? Is that we were scared and so we hid in our homes. And not everybody could do that of course, the most vulnerable and the most poor couldn't just do that.

And cowardice. Cowardice is bad enough. But then to hide behind their facade of social justice while simultaneously throwing the poor into further destitution and then congratulating ourselves for doing our part for the common good. That's revolting, and I'm sorry for being so critical and so negative, and I hope that doesn't drive you to the point of despair.

I think it might be helpful to know that this kind of thing isn't unprecedented in the Church's history. When Henry the eighth declared himself the supreme head of the church in England, the majority of bishops ratified the act. Those clearly heretical and, motivated by his lust for women and power. In fact, I think St. John Fisher was the only Bishop correct me if I'm wrong, who refused to go along with the program and he lost his head for it.

Now fortitude is a cardinal virtue as defined by natural law and upheld by church teaching, and I think it's time we all re-familiarize ourselves with it because It is seriously lacking in this age we live in. It means courageously doing what is right, even in, especially when it's hard to do and it might cost you something, and it seems to me that this is obviously something that very few people were willing to do through this crisis. And it's why it was made far worse than it needed to be. And our Lord's words come to mind when I think about that. Enter through the narrow gate for wide is the gate that leads to destruction. And as the modern world approaches, it's next great crisis due to the frailty of the principles that it now relies upon: the fallacious principles.

Which to say that we should expect there to be another crisis before long? Consider being one of the few who will stand up for what is right and true. Even if you end up in the minority as a result"

Brian Holdsworth