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Author Topic: "Neo-cons are like fascists and nαzιs!"  (Read 3297 times)

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"Neo-cons are like fascists and nαzιs!"
« Reply #10 on: March 31, 2013, 02:53:48 PM »
Fine Gael are now on the verge on legislating for abortion. Contrast this with.

http://www.advertiser.ie/galway/article/8405
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A forgotten night at Galway Docks
GALWAY ADVERTISER, FEBRUARY 12, 2009.
By Paul Mcginley

When Christy Moore sings his well known song, “Viva la Quinta Brigada”, in honour of those who fought against Franco in the Spanish cινιℓ ωαr one of his sardonic verses includes the lines:

“When the Bishops blessed the Blueshirts in Dun Laoghaire As they sailed beneath the swastika to Spain”

While it is historically true that some members of General O’Duffy’s Irish Brigade left from Dún Laoghaire to fight in Spain; the vast majority of that force secretly departed Galway Docks, on a dark winter’s night in December 1936.

It was an interesting time. Young Irishmen, most of whom held polarised political views at home, sailed to Spain to fight on both sides for what they believed in. The Spanish cινιℓ ωαr was a complex confluence of power, politics, principle, and faith which reached far beyond the Iberian Peninsula. Many of the Irish who took Franco’s side in the conflict did so out of religious as much as political conviction.

The Church of Christ the King in Salthill was first dedicated in August 1936. The opening sermon prompted the banner headline “Christ or Chaos” reported The Connacht Tribune. In his homily, the Bishop of Clonfert pointed out that ‘Russia, Mexico, Spain and other nations, in a less blatant manner perhaps, have risen in open rebellion against God.’ Many Catholics were outraged that Mexico had endured the Cristero-Calles war, and was despised for its treatment of Catholic clergy. Russia was home to godless Communism; while Spain had just begun a bitter war between absolute forces, intent on total victory.

At home Taoiseach DeValera, adopting a neutral stance, took a non–intervention path. This political policy did not deter those committed on both sides from making their way to Spain. General O’Duffy (the leader of the Irish ‘Blueshirts’, a quasi- military movement, which ideologically, and in terms of its rituals, had much in common with European fascism of the time), announced in November 1936 that Galway offered the best embarkation port for the majority of his volunteers. He urged his followers to assemble there.

Arrival in Galway

On the second Friday in December 100 of Franco’s Irish supporters left Dún Laoghaire bound for Liverpool, before making their way to Spain via Lisbon. When questioned by reporters at the quayside in Dublin, the departing volunteers refused to give their names, and were seen off by the man in charge of the operation: Captain Walsh, secretary to General O’Duffy.

The following day, on a cold, wet and stormy Saturday (December 12, 1936), up to 700 of O’Duffy’s volunteers arrived late in Galway. Recently deceased Murt Rabbitt, of the famed Forster Street bar, often recounted that the only time the Garda Síochána requested him to open his premises after-hours was on that miserable night. He was asked to give shelter to men - the majority of whom were in the 20 to 35-year-old range – on their way to a war in Spain.

‘Extraordinary scenes’

We can see from the photomontage, on this page, some of the 700 Irish volunteers, gathering on the quayside on that Saturday night, while medical supplies were being loaded on the tender which would later meet the mystery ship. More of that in a moment, but note the four volunteers wearing the Irish Brigade cap. (Irish Independent December 14 1936 Page 3.)

The Irish Times described “extraordinary scenes” as cars, buses and lorries heavily laden with men descended on the city. They came from all parts of the country with 22 volunteers arriving from north of the border. County Galway, according to the Irish Independent report, supplied 14 of the volunteers, far below the more sizeable Cork (104), and Dublin (201) contingents.

The Dún Aenghus which then serviced the Aran Islands was to transport the men to rendezvous in the bay with the mystery ship. The familiar Galway boat was loaded with medical provisions, socks, pullovers and other necessities from a lorry, aided by car headlights. The medical supplies were furnished by the Irish Christian Front.

By two o’clock in the morning almost 50 cars and 15 buses had arrived at the docks. The departure was delayed by a mishap to a bus from Kerry en route to Galway. Waiting men paced up and down the quay to keep warm and calls of “Viva Franco” could be heard. At three o’clock the volunteers were marshalled by Captain Liam Walsh, secretary to General O’Duffy, down the gangway of the Dún Aenghus.

‘Where is Tighe?’

The Irish Press reported that three Galway men, standing alongside, were suddenly swept along by the enthusiasm of the scene and departed for Spain: “They ran up the gangplank and volunteered their services. They were Kevin Geoghegan, Ely Place, Galway, Ml. Donoghue, Fairhill, Galway, and J. McGrath whose father is a porter in the Munster and Leinster Bank, Galway.”

One scene touched all who saw it. Somebody called out “Where is Tighe?” “Here I am,” shouted a young fellow from the belly of the boat, and a member of the Civic Guard said; “You are wanted at home, your mother has taken ill.” The boy who was only sixteen years of age, returned with his father, Seán Tighe, proprietor of the Phoenix Cinema, to Dublin.

Two priests on the dockside blessed the departing men who sang “Faith of Our Fathers” and “A Soldier’s Song”, before the Aran tender headed out into a dark, and windswept bay. “Rev T Fahy, Professor of Latin UCG, and Rev Fr Donohue CC, Galway, were among those present to bid the men farewell,” reported The Irish Press which also recorded that “Blue shirts were waved and cheers raised for General O’Duffy as the tender left the quay.”

"Neo-cons are like fascists and nαzιs!"
« Reply #11 on: March 31, 2013, 03:03:46 PM »
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Uh yes libertarianism is left-wing. It comes from the Austrian School of Economics and supports free trade and open borders. I guess by today's "conservative" standards since liberaltarianism supports corporate interests and global capitalism it is very "conservative."


That's not true. Libertarianism believes in free markets, but NOT in a way that is geared to interests of mega-corporations and banksters such as NAFTA; the repeal of Glass-Steagall; and corporate bailouts and corporate welfare. Ron Paul is libertarian and he objects to all of the aforementioned.

One example of libertarian nationalism is having free market, union-busting corporations WITHIN the confines of the U.S., but NOT being allowed to sell out U.S. jobs so corporations can move factories over seas for slave labor. Another example is ending foreign aid to countries, and not fighting or starting wars when they really have nothing to do with our national security - meaning, basically we only go to war when we are attacked or an attack is imminent, unlike the fαℓѕє fℓαg attacks orchestrated by the Money Manipulators/ѕуηαgσgυє. Protecting the national identity, culture and the official language, but honoring God-given freedoms is also libertarian nationalism.

Face it, buddy, America will NEVER be a Catholic Monarchy. I wish we could have one, but it's NEVER going to happen. If you want to live in such a nation, then you should move to France, because I hear the Crown of Lillies will arise there. However, hell will freeze over before it happens in America, therefore, the next best form of government is a Constitutional Libertarian form... God gave us free-will, so it is NOT governments right to infringe upon this free-will as long as nobody else is getting harmed.

Check out that Political Compass link I posted. It's a good source.

Also, I made a typo in my first comment. I meant to write "...all of these laws, policies and agencies have huge support FROM (not for) Jєωιѕн Congressmen, Cabinet members and "think" tanks.


"Neo-cons are like fascists and nαzιs!"
« Reply #12 on: April 01, 2013, 07:39:41 AM »
"Right" and "Left wing" is modernist terminology, and the revolution, as the shapeshifter that it is by nature, has expressed itself in the various doctrines that are ascribed to both terms. How is one to fight against the revolution by adopting it's language?

Liberalism, communism, fascism, national socialism etc. all share the same core of satanic doctrine, which is the subversion of the natural and supernatural order willed by God, and this is exactly what the revolution is by definition.

Also, when Churchmen spoke of nationalism in the past, they meant the poisonous flower which sprung from the cæsaro-papist seed which was already planted in olden Greco-Roman days, watered by men such as Barbarossa and which burst forth in the political systems of more recent times. The Church remembers how she has suffered by the germ of nationalism arrogating rights to the nation which it does not have. Verily, St. Albert of Louvain earned his crown of martyrdom through it's persecutions!

The real duty stemming from natural law to protect and contribute to the welfare of one's kindred and nation is not what nationalism is, and should therefore not be labelled as such. What nationalism is, is the attempt to make all things, including religion, the footstool of the nation.

The politics of St. Louis and of the vierge guerrière, St. Joan of Arc, divine politics, are the only ones to be aimed for by Catholics. Anything less is to be rejected. Christendom, and Christendom alone can liberate society from the multiple-headed beast which is the revolt against God, and all the consequences of it, which includes social/economical disorder.

"Neo-cons are like fascists and nαzιs!"
« Reply #13 on: April 01, 2013, 08:05:07 AM »
Defining nationalism so as to make it into an evil doesn't make sense to me.

Nations are being broken down, this is a post-Vatican II development, it is a post Christian development.

Catholicism is not opposed to nations.

Nationalists have often been opposed to the Church, that's true.

Yet groups like the Irish Nationalists and the Croatian nationalists wanted to establish Christian states.

There is no doubt the internationalists are far more opposed to Catholicism than the nationalists.

Let's never confuse their universal aspirations (for destruction) with Catholic values, ever.

"Neo-cons are like fascists and nαzιs!"
« Reply #14 on: April 01, 2013, 08:32:53 AM »
Telesphorus,

I stated in my previous post that defending nation and kin is a duty that stems from natural law. What I am against is attaching the label of nationalism to the exercise of this duty, because that is not what it is. Most people on this forum are aware of the tyrannical regime that the globalist agenda seeks to establish on an international scale, but my point is that we should not seek help from Egypt, that broken reed, to repel the attacks of Assur.

Cardinal Manning spoke of nationalism as an evil, so I am not inventing any of this.