Of course V2 taught error, is there a trad who denies this? I do not question the validity of V2, but if you want to, I guess no one will stop you.
Simple syllogism:
1. The Catholic Church cannot teach error
2. But Vatican II, claiming to be Ecuмenical Council of the Catholic Church, taught error
3. Vatican II cannot be a valid Council of the Catholic Church
So you believe the false teaching of the 20th century theologians. Fine. You have a lot of company that believe the same lies you believe, but that being the case, your pope problem and V2 validity problem and Magisterium defecting problem remains. But you may add an additional problem of believing a teaching that contradicts V1's teaching.
You are yet to demonstrate why this teaching is wrong and how does it contradict V1, and how do you reconcile your belief that non-infallible teachings of the Church can be harmful to the faithful with the fact that the Catholic Church cannot teach error (clear contradiction).
So, Fenton, van Noort et al. were ignorant of V1 and could not see what Stubborn sees as a clear contradiction? It seems more likely that you are just plainly wrong.
I am not confusing a thing. You are the one confusing things. It is quite simple actually, there are certain parameters which per V1, must be met for teachings to be infallible. Teachings that fall outside of those parameters are entirely fallible. Isn't that simple?
That is exactly correct and exactly irrelevant to this discussion, because we are not discussing Papal infallibility, but non-infallible teachings of the Church (we agree that V2 was not infallible).
The indefectibility of the Church means simply, that no matter what anyone does from within or from without, they will never succeed in destroying the Church. Even heretical popes who are hell bent on destroying the Church will never succeed. That, in a nutshell, is the doctrine of the Church's indefectibility.
Once again you re-define indefectibility of the Church, turning it into indestructibility of the Church, much like modernists re-define EENS. Indefectibility of the Church does not mean merely that the Church cannot be destroyed (that would be indestructibility, not indefectibility), but that it cannot teach error to the faithful (even in her fallible capacity) and it cannot fail in her universal discipline (thus, if the Novus Ordo Mass is evil and displeasing to God, it could not have been promulgated by the Catholic Church).
Those poor souls who adhere to the false teaching that "The teachings of the Pope that are not infallible are protected by the Holy Ghost from being harmful to the faithful" cling to teachings that are obviously not teachings of the Church, what they are, are teachings of 20th century theologians.
OK, so according to you fallible teachings of the Church can be harmful to the faithful. This means that the Church can in fact teach error (so you contradict yourself, since you claimed she cannot) and can lead souls to hell through its teaching. This is completely wrong and is a denial of Church's indefectibility.
As I wrote before, if the fallible teachings of the Church can be harmful to souls, than an individual Catholic is a final authority to sift the Magisterium and decide on his own which teachings are harmfu land which are not, which is completely non-Catholic notion.
If you are right, than a Novus Ordite can decide that St. Pius X
Pascendi, Pope Pius XI's
Mortalium Animos or Pope Gregory XVI
Mirari Vos (to mention just few docuмents which condemn modernist ideas) are simply wrong and are examples of fallible teachings (none of thee encyclicals defined any dogma) harmful to the faithful, and are in fact trumped by Vatican II as an Ecuмenical Council. From your standpoint you can hardly object that.