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Author Topic: Tele and his "Theory" about Machismo.  (Read 3868 times)

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Tele and his "Theory" about Machismo.
« on: March 22, 2011, 09:37:21 PM »
Tele, I took a look at that book To Love, Honor and Obey in Colonial Mexico ( admittedly, only a couple pages, then I got angry ), and I'm not buying your thesis about the connection between what you consider Spanish anti-clerical machismo and ʝʊdɛօ-Masonic, feminist liberalism.

Is that book even written by a Catholic?  I doubt it.  The theme seems to be that the Spanish nobility was trying to survive in its twilight, and so it was banning marriages it felt were inappropriate for reasons of class and / or race.  

Number one, I don't even know if this is true or not, I want to see Catholic sources.  I used to read secular university books and Novus Ordo books and they are very good at planting subtle errors in your head.  I remember reading one that talked about how St. Augustine would be against NFP if he were alive today, which really set me off on my road to home-aloneism.  

Secondly, if it is true, then by taking control of marriages and restricting them, the Spanish -- however clumsily -- only intended to form a bulwark against the liberalism that has exploded full bloom into the America you see around you today.  So you have it all backwards.  The Spanish were trying to stop what later became feminism, what later become Zionism, all forms of liberalism, all these things that flowed like a pustulant river after the decay of the Catholic aristocracy.  

They may have gone too far or been too rigid in trying to stem this decay.  But let's face it -- the priesthood becomes corrupt at times, and the government steps in.  This has happened constantly throughout history.  It sounds very pious to say "Oh, how dare they stand up against the priests," but think of the plagues of simony, of absentee bishops.  Even then, it may not be right to stand up against the clergy, and to appoint your own bishops, as happened in France with the Gallicans.  But it is understandable.

I'm not saying there was anything wrong with the priesthood in Spain in this case, because I don't trust this book.  All I can say is, I have never heard the Church rebuke Spain for being "anti-clerical."  Please give me another source besides this book.  

*************

In this case, you aren't wrong to be attracted to a young woman, so I have nothing to say against you.  But please don't bring the Spaniards into your list of enemies.  You are speaking ill-advisedly and with lots of hypocrisy, because you Irish are the most liberal of the liberal of Catholics, generally speaking.  You went right along with the Jews in many ways -- what bigger supporters of democracy and "freedom" are there among the Catholic ranks than the Irish?  It is the aristocracy and monarchy that truly stood against Jєωιѕн designs, and yet here you are raging against the nobility trying to protect itself, which you call machismo, and somehow, through some massive leap of logic, tie this little bit of Tele-revisionist history in with a Puerto Rican guy trying to bar you from seeing his daughter.  

You're trying to have it both ways.  You approve of the levelling process whereby all distinctions of class and race are abolished, and when the Spanish nobility tries to stop this, perhaps in a ham-fisted, overly suffocating and less-than-ideal way, you call them "anti-clerical."  But then you complain when you end up having to live with the results -- modern-day ʝʊdɛօ-Masonic democracy.  

How did this Spanish "machismo" POSSIBLY lead to feminism, what is the link?  The only link could be that the Spanish were so strict and made so many people rebel, that these people became liberals, in the way that kids rebel against overly strict Catholic parents.  

I don't mean to start bad blood between us, but you have irritated me with your blanket statements about Spain and your pretentious belief you have drawn some connection between the Spanish nobility and modern feminism, which is just wrong and needs to be corrected.  Modern feminism is a wild swing in the opposite direction.  

Tele and his "Theory" about Machismo.
« Reply #1 on: March 22, 2011, 09:42:09 PM »
A few side notes on Spanish Machismo:

1. It was not necessarily like the Machismo that we think of today.
2. It did not exist all throughout Spain. It was located mostly in Southern Spain and Andalusia.


Tele and his "Theory" about Machismo.
« Reply #2 on: March 22, 2011, 09:47:50 PM »
Okay, so Tele is right that the Church gives eighteen-year olds the right to flout their parents and choose who they want to marry.   In this case, he has the quote from Leo XIII to back it up.

But this book he's reading struck me, from what little I read, as being extremely liberal in outlook and not a trustworthy source.  The tone of it all is "Look what jerks the Spanish were and how they were so unenlightened compared to us today when we can do whatever we want."  This is the general tenor of most "scholarly" books today that come out of these disgusting ʝʊdɛօ-Masonic colleges.  I don't know why Tele is promoting it.  

There is nothing anti-clerical about trying to preserve bloodlines.  If the clerics were trying to stand in the way of that, they were not speaking for the Church.  As far as being against mixed-race marriages go, I have read that the Spanish CLERICS were against that -- but that was in a secular book too  :guitar:

This book is not enough proof for me to be able to judge who was really being anti-clerical.

Tele and his "Theory" about Machismo.
« Reply #3 on: March 22, 2011, 09:49:09 PM »
Quote
How did this Spanish "machismo" POSSIBLY lead to feminism, what is the link?


It can lead to a double standard which women then rebel against.

Quote
because you Irish are the most liberal of the liberal of Catholics


Raoul that's a bit unfair. Men such as Fr Fahey, Fr. Cahill, and most of the Irish Hierarchy in Ireland were not liberals.

Tele and his "Theory" about Machismo.
« Reply #4 on: March 22, 2011, 09:52:21 PM »
Yeah, I suggested that in my post.  But it's a major stretch.  That's like saying "Everyone who isn't an absolutely perfect Catholic and who never makes mistakes is responsible for feminism and Zionism and ʝʊdɛօ-Masonry."