Right. If we mostly agree on the principles, the next question becomes, how do we proceed? And even more fundamentally, have even 1% of the Bishops of the Teaching Church today (whom we both agree must pronounce the declaratory sentence, right?) agreed to proceed to making such a declaration. The two Bishops, imho, who are the most likely to consider it, would probably be Bishop Athanasius Schneider and Cardinal Raymond Burke. Cardinal Burke has said, loss of office would be automatic, but H.E. obviously doesn't believe it has happened yet, and continues to refer to the Pope as Pope, even while criticizing many of his actions and statements. And Bp. Athanasius seems to be of the view that a heretic-Pope is a rare event to which the Church has no other defense than to "last it out" and of course to contradict the Pope, as H.E. did in the Abu Dhabi falsehood, the pachamama idolatry, and other such things. But, what about the other 5000+ Bishops in the Church? So, it doesn't seem to me, Ladislaus, that this kind of thing can even get off the ground until we have at least 50 Bishops who are ready to consider declaring loss of office. What do you think about that?
Exactly. I have brought this up also. Let's say that
Amor Laetitiae is in fact heretical ... and it certainly seems to be the case. Given the fact that 99% of the hierarchy are either heretical themselves or asleep at the switch or don't care or too lazy to rebuke Bergoglio or whatever ... then how can we hope, naturally speaking, that it can ever get resolved by a General Council?
Regardless of what position one takes regarding the status of a heretical pope, there's no question but that we just have to "last it out". God will provide the solution ... in His time.
In the MEANTIME, while we wait, what is our own personal response? Given their "doubtful" state, I think that we simply adhere to Tradition and wait it out. Since they are, in my mind, doubtful, then I am not obliged to accept their Magisterium and their Mass, since those too then are doubtful.
Despite the fact that, considering the question ontologically, the sedeprivationist/sedimpoundist position makes the most sense, that's for the Church to ultimately sort out. In my own personal response, I can go so far only as to say that I am "in doubt".
That's why I have referred to myself as a sede-doubtist. This position actually dovetails nicely with my previous responses, just above, to PC2. If the suspect Pope cannot dissolve a heretical Council, it must only be because he's crippled somehow by the mere suspicion of heresy from exercising the plenitude of papal authority.