"Francis has already broken with several Vatican traditions, although he is yet to begin tackling the many problems assailing the Roman Catholic Church including reform of the scandal-ridden Vatican bureaucracy and bank."
Did anybody else notice the implication of the sentence ? "Francis has already broken with Vatican traditions, although he is yet to begin tackling [diverse problems]." The so-called "Vatican" traditions are being implicitly linked to the same cause as the "many problems assailing the Roman Catholic Church," that is to say,
"Vatican traditions" and "scandals" are being placed into the same category in need of Judae-Masonic Communist reformation.
The internal logic of the sentence wouldn't hold unless this unmentioned assertion did not underpin it conceptually. Psychological warfare is sly, but these foul journalists are experts at it.
This is an astute observation, PereJoseph. What this is is an implied
syllogism, which evokes in the mind of an unsuspecting reader the
notion that he "gets it" because the thing that they are trying to teach
him is not spelled out, as you say, "this unmentioned assertion
[underpins the sentence logic] conceptually."
But there are at least three such syllogisms at work here. How do these
syllogisms go? Check it out:
FIRST SYLLOGISMMajor:
The Pope acts toward the Catholic Church's benefit by tackling problems
that assail the Church.
Minor:
But for certain problems to be resolved in a way that meets the demands
of the modern world, they are in need of ʝʊdɛօ-Masonic solutions, including
but not limited to the breaking of long-held Vatican traditions.
Conclusion:
Therefore, when the Pope applies ʝʊdɛօ-Masonic solutions to the
problems of the Church by breaking Vatican traditions, he is acting
toward the benefit of the Church.
SECOND SYLLOGISMMajor proposition:
Pope Francis has already broken Vatican traditions, by which he acts
toward the benefit of the Catholic Church.
Minor proposition:
But Vatican traditions and scandals are both problems in the Church
that are in need of reform.
Conclusion:
Therefore, the Pope can well proceed to deal with scandals just as
he has broken long-held Vatican traditions, toward the Church's
improvement.
THIRD SYLLOGISMMajor proposition:
Among the many problems assailing the Roman Catholic Church is
the scandal-ridden Vatican bureaucracy and bank.
Minor proposition:
But the Church already benefits by Pope Francis in his beginning to
break Vatican traditions, such as not naming the Father, Son and Holy
Ghost when blessing people because some of them are not Catholic,
and including a non-Catholic Mohammedan woman among those
whose feet he washed in the Maundy Thursday Mandatum, among
others, and these are ʝʊdɛօ-Masonic solutions.
Conclusion:
Breaking Vatican traditions as well as resolving scandals such as the
Vatican bureaucacy and bank, can be achieved by application of the
principles of ʝʊdɛօ-Masonic reform in the Roman Catholic Church.