I—damn sedevacantists—would agree. I would add—damn sedevacantists—that it's having contempt for the Pope that—damn sedevacantists—allows for the extreme and obsessive [Oh, the irony!] focus on there not being a—damn sedevacantists—Pope (—damn sedevacantists—sedevacantism—damn sedevacantists—).
Our Lord said that we are to love—damn sedevacantists—our enemies and pray—damn sedevacantists—for them. I think that this should include—damn sedevacantists—the Pope, even though he is an enemy of the Catholic Faith.
Our Lord—damn sedevacantists—knew what he ["He"] was doing in saying—damn sedevacantists—that we should LOVE—damn sedevacantists—our enemies and PRAY for—damn sedevacantists—them, because doing these two things can keep us from having—damn sedevacantists—contempt.
We can—damn sedevacantists—and should, of course,—damn sedevacantists—still point out and address error and heresy in a clear and uncompromised—damn sedevacantists—manner.
You share the perverted definition of "love" used by the modernists.
See:
"Not to oppose error is to approve it, and not to defend the truth is to suppress it, and indeed to neglect to
confound evil men, when we can do it, is no less a sin than to encourage them. " Pope St. Felix III
"It is the greatest cruelty to use ointment where it is necessary to
cut deep with steel and cauterize with fire." St. Teresa of Avila Tito Casini, The Last Mass of Paul VI, N. Devon: Britons, 1971, p. 90.
"The declared enemies of God and His Church, heretics and schismatics, must be
criticized as much as possible, as long as truth is not denied.
It is a work of charity to shout: 'Here is the wolf!' when it enters the flock or anywhere else." St. Francis de Sales, Introduction to the Devout Life, Part III, Chapter 29