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Author Topic: Ted Cruz drops out of presidential race  (Read 3644 times)

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Offline Matthew

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Ted Cruz drops out of presidential race
« on: May 03, 2016, 08:26:42 PM »
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  • INDIANAPOLIS — Ted Cruz, the insurgent Texan whose presidential campaign was fueled by disdain for Washington, dropped out of the 2016 race Tuesday night, removing the last major hurdle in Donald Trump’s quest to become the Republican nominee for president.

    Cruz’s decision came after losing overwhelmingly to Trump in the Indiana primary, all but ensuring that real estate mogul will claim his party’s mantle at the Republican National Convention in July.

    “I said I would continue on as long as there is a viable path to victory. Tonight, I’m sorry to say, it appears that path has been foreclosed,” Cruz told a small group of supporters here Tuesday night. “Together we left it all on the field in Indiana. We gave it everything we got, but the voters chose another path.”

    Cruz also said he would “continue to fight for liberty,” but did not address whether he would support Trump as the nominee.

    The exit comes after a series of desperate moves to keep his candidacy afloat in recent weeks, including naming former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina as his running mate in a bizarre announcement where Cruz spoke for a half hour and Fiorina sang to his young daughters.

     Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz (R-Texas) speaks with supporters of fellow candidate Donald Trump at a campaign event outside The Mill in Marion, Ind., on Monday, May 2. (Aaron P. Bernstein/Reuters)
    In his last day on the campaign trail, Cruz unloaded on Trump, calling the businessman a”pathological liar” and a “narcissist” who was proud of being a “serial philanderer.” The attacks were reminiscent of the broadsides Sen. Marco Rubio launched against Trump in the waning days of his own presidential campaign — and a far cry from the lavish praise Cruz heaped on Trump for most of 2015, declaring, “I like Donald Trump.”

    Cruz’s campaign hit its zenith in February when he resoundingly won the Iowa caucuses, due in large part to months of cultivating grassroots support in the state. But it soon became a roller-coaster ride of crushing losses in states where Cruz expected to do well, including South Carolina and Georgia, followed by resounding wins in his home state of Texas and Wisconsin. Cruz’s campaign used its grasp of the delegate process to beat Trump at state conventions where delegates were chosen, but it was not enough to overcome the businessman’s tally and strength with the electorate.

    [Cruz’s latest fight with Republicans is a reminder: Many don’t like him]

    The fact that Cruz remained one of the last candidates standing in a once-crowded field would have been viewed as improbable when he entered the race 13 months earlier. Cruz, the first major candidate to enter the race, is a first-term senator best known for getting under the skin of his Senate colleagues and championing controversial tactics to block the implementation of the Affordable Care Act. He was painted as a long-shot underdog who was too religious and conservative to advance past the early nominating contests.

    But his campaign had a meticulous strategy it planned to roll out over the year that followed, and it started working soon after he announced.

    “It is the time for truth. It is the time for liberty. It is the time to reclaim the Constitution of the United States,” Cruz said during his campaign kickoff at Liberty University, which was founded by the fundamentalist preacher Jerry Fallwell.

    Cruz was immediately buoyed by impressive fundraising and the national platform that comes with announcing first. Groups backing the senator raised $31 million during the first week of his candidacy, and the campaign raked in $4 million.

    The Texas Republican’s campaign employed a strategy of slowly introducing Cruz to a national audience while furiously working to shore up support with local activists and evangelical leaders in the first four voting states and the South, where the campaign expected Cruz to do well.

    The campaign also talked about securing the support of delegates to the July convention almost as soon as it launched, envisioning Cruz in a head-to-head matchup with an establishment rival. The campaign sent emissaries to far-flung places such as Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands to try to lock down delegate support over the summer.

    [Cruz unloads on Trump: A ‘narcissist at a level I don’t think this country has ever seen’]

    It was a campaign that reflected its candidate: methodical, strategic and data-driven. Cruz’s campaign deployed a sophisticated data strategy that used psychographic information to appeal to the fears or hopes of potential voters.

    Cruz touted his outsider status and contempt for what he called the “Washington cartel” of politicians and lobbyists in politics to get rich. He made the enmity of his Senate colleagues a point of pride, joking about needing a “food taster” in the Senate dining room. He made it clear that no other candidate would get to the right of him, particularly on the issue of immigration.

    But then came Donald Trump.

    Cruz made an early, conscious decision to buddy up to Trump, brushing aside the businessman’s caustic comments about Mexicans and praising his toughness on immigration.

    The two men met at Trump Tower in July, where Cruz invited Trump to tour the U.S.-Mexico border with him. Trump went, but Cruz could not because of Senate votes. Cruz and Trump both appeared at a rally against the Iranian nuclear deal on Capitol Hill in September.

    As rivals were punching at Trump during the fall and quickly seeing their poll numbers drop as the businessman swatted back at them with insults, Cruz lavished praise on his rival for the nomination.

    Cruz also tacked sharply to the right in order to compete with Trump’s rhetoric. Cruz’s immigration proposals grew tougher the longer Trump was in the race. He criticized Trump’s plan for mass deportation of illegal immigrants, then seemed to support it. He spoke of being weary of foreign intervention, but promised to “carpet bomb” the Islamic State to see if “sand can glow in the dark” there. He introduced a bill to bar refugees from Syria and other groups.

    In December — as Cruz’s poll numbers were up nationally and in Iowa — he was caught on tape saying at a closed-door fundraiser that Trump may not have the judgment to be president. Cruz moved to smooth over the fracas, but Trump pounced. A few weeks later in January, Trump questioned whether Cruz, who was born in Canada, is eligible to be president.

    Cruz then went on an offensive blitz against the businessman, assailing him for supporting partial-birth abortion and bankrolling Democratic candidates. It seemed to work, with Cruz beating Trump in the Iowa caucuses. But the momentum stopped in New Hampshire, where Trump won by big margins before marching to victories in South Carolina and Nevada.

    [Why the ‘Lyin’ Ted’ attack worked so well for Donald Trump]

    Trump also upended Cruz’s plan to chalk up big wins in the South, an area the campaign saw as receptive to Cruz’s unyielding conservatism and his Christian faith. The campaign was hit with internal turmoil when Cruz fired his communications director, Rick Tyler, after Tyler posted on social media a video falsely purporting to show Sen. March Rubio disparaging the Bible. Some of Cruz’s most prominent backers openly questioned his campaign strategy.

    Despite his other losses in the South, Cruz notched a big win in his home state that offered him a bonanza of delegates and kept his candidacy alive. A win in Wisconsin in early April infused much-needed momentum into the flagging campaign.

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    Cruz’s team proved adept at mastering the arcane art of delegate allocation, regularly snatching delegate support from Trump at state conventions. But as the primary calendar moved to the Northeast — an area hostile to Cruz, who derided “New York values” on the campaign trail — Trump gained momentum while Cruz flagged.

    Indiana, which Cruz’s team had identified - along with Nebraska and California - as a state where it thought it could do well, never warmed to him. Cruz announced that he and Ohio Gov. John Kasich had an agreement where Cruz would campaign in Indiana and Kasich would not, instead focusing on Oregon and New Mexico. But the alliance turned rocky just hours after it was announced when Kasich refused to tell his supporters to vote for Cruz. The Texas Republican later said that there was no alliance, to which Kasich’s chief strategist tweeted, “I can’t stand liars.”

    Cruz laced into Trump across the state, criticizing the endorsement he received from boxer Mike Tyson, who served time in prison in Indiana on a rape conviction, and decrying Trump as an insecure bully. The Fiorina announcement, meant to revive Cruz’s flagging candidacy in the state, gave it no discernable boost. The two barnstormed around the state, where Cruz faced less than enthusiastic crowds, and confronted a pro-Trump protester in Marion.

    Cruz said of Trump, “This man is lying to you and he’s taking advantage of you.”

    The man accused Cruz of lying, and said: “You’ll find out tomorrow. Indiana don’t want you.”


    https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/ted-cruz-drops-out-of-the-republican-presidential-race/2016/05/03/8f955a06-0fe7-11e6-81b4-581a5c4c42df_story.html

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    Offline Matthew

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    Ted Cruz drops out of presidential race
    « Reply #1 on: May 03, 2016, 08:31:22 PM »
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  • Oh well. I guess I'll have to vote for Mickey Mouse this November. I won't make any promises though -- I might vote for Garcia Moreno or Donald Duck.

    It won't be Trump though. That much is certain. And I encourage everyone to do the same.

    I can't vote FOR Trump any more than I can vote FOR Hillary. I'm a devout Catholic.

    "Come on, vote for Beelzebub -- we can't have Lucifer winning the White House!" rings rather hollow with me, sorry.

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    Offline JezusDeKoning

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    Ted Cruz drops out of presidential race
    « Reply #2 on: May 03, 2016, 08:49:57 PM »
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  • Odd that he dropped out before Kasich, who barring his home state, has been doing ABYSMALLY.
    Remember O most gracious Virgin Mary...

    Offline Conspiracy_Factist

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    Ted Cruz drops out of presidential race
    « Reply #3 on: May 03, 2016, 09:01:56 PM »
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  • Quote from: Matthew
    Oh well. I guess I'll have to vote for Mickey Mouse this November. I won't make any promises though -- I might vote for Garcia Moreno or Donald Duck.

    It won't be Trump though. That much is certain. And I encourage everyone to do the same.

    I can't vote FOR Trump any more than I can vote FOR Hillary. I'm a devout Catholic.

    "Come on, vote for Beelzebub -- we can't have Lucifer winning the White House!" rings rather hollow with me, sorry.

    If you care about the state of the USA you should vote Trump, if the choice was Cruz or Trump would you actually vote for Cruz? Is there any catholic teaching that states we can't vote for a non catholic when all there is to choose from are non Catholics?

    Offline tradlover

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    Ted Cruz drops out of presidential race
    « Reply #4 on: May 03, 2016, 09:18:08 PM »
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  • Quote from: Matthew
    Oh well. I guess I'll have to vote for Mickey Mouse this November. I won't make any promises though -- I might vote for Garcia Moreno or Donald Duck.

    It won't be Trump though. That much is certain. And I encourage everyone to do the same.

    I can't vote FOR Trump any more than I can vote FOR Hillary. I'm a devout Catholic.

    "Come on, vote for Beelzebub -- we can't have Lucifer winning the White House!" rings rather hollow with me, sorry.



    I think every trad should back Trump.  He is anti nєω ωσrℓ∂ σr∂єr. A nationalist who would ironically herlp Christianity like Merry Christmas etc


    Offline PG

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    Ted Cruz drops out of presidential race
    « Reply #5 on: May 03, 2016, 09:47:49 PM »
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  • Matthew - don't be lyin'.  Someone can be a devout catholic and vote trump.  And, someone can be a devout catholic and not vote trump.  However, what I do not know is how someone can be a devout catholic and vote cruz.  That I do not know.  
    "A secure mind is like a continual feast" - Proverbs xv: 15

    Offline JezusDeKoning

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    Ted Cruz drops out of presidential race
    « Reply #6 on: May 03, 2016, 10:14:58 PM »
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  • Quote from: tradlover
    Quote from: Matthew
    Oh well. I guess I'll have to vote for Mickey Mouse this November. I won't make any promises though -- I might vote for Garcia Moreno or Donald Duck.

    It won't be Trump though. That much is certain. And I encourage everyone to do the same.

    I can't vote FOR Trump any more than I can vote FOR Hillary. I'm a devout Catholic.

    "Come on, vote for Beelzebub -- we can't have Lucifer winning the White House!" rings rather hollow with me, sorry.



    I think every trad should back Trump.  He is anti nєω ωσrℓ∂ σr∂єr. A nationalist who would ironically herlp Christianity like Merry Christmas etc


    A vote for Trump is a vote for more war. We'd be getting a Bush 2.0.

    I'm voting third party this election and Democrat for local races (like Senate and House). We should be doing everything in our power to silence the GOP nationally.
    Remember O most gracious Virgin Mary...

    Offline MaterDominici

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    Ted Cruz drops out of presidential race
    « Reply #7 on: May 03, 2016, 11:28:31 PM »
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  • Quote from: Matthew
    Oh well. I guess I'll have to vote for Mickey Mouse this November. I won't make any promises though -- I might vote for Garcia Moreno or Donald Duck.


    I'd go with a living person ... Matt Walsh is top of my list right now.

    Quote from: Walsh
    The third thing is that my decision to not vote for Trump is not a “protest” or a “statement” or anything like that. Really, it doesn’t matter what my reasons are, all you need to know is that everyone, besides you, can’t stand Trump and won’t vote for him, and literally every poll, every piece of data, everything that’s happened this election cycle proves that point, and therefore he will lose. But because I’m generous, I will endeavor to explain my decision to you.

    I won’t vote for Trump because he’s a vindictive, self-obsessed, pathological liar who has not demonstrated the competency to run a campaign, let alone a country.

    I won’t vote for Trump because he lacks the moral fortitude to take a stand on any issue, the wisdom to understand the issues and the sincerity to care about any of them in the first place.

    I won’t vote for Trump because, from what can be discerned of his actual views on things, he is a big-government authoritarian who has, at various points, pledged to raise taxes, instate a single-payer health care system, impose protective tariffs, keep abortion legal, slaughter civilians, appoint progressive judges and do exactly the opposite of everything I’d actually want a president to do.

    I won’t vote for Trump because he’s not even dependable on “his issue,” immigration. He’s already softened his stance on it and implied numerous times that all of his statements – including the ones he’s made on immigration – are negotiable. It’s also quite clear that he personally sees no problem with illegal immigration, which is why he endorsed amnesty a few years ago, donated extensively to open borders politicians, and hired illegals to construct his gaudy, hideous buildings.

    I won’t vote for Trump because he’s a scam artist under investigation for financial fraud.

    I won’t vote for Trump because he has promised to squash dissent and punish those who criticize him.

    I won’t vote for Trump because, on top of all of this professional and political weaknesses, he’s a serial adulterer who abandoned two wives and couldn’t be troubled to raise his own kids. I could almost forgive his numerous failed business ventures, but if a man fails in business, and fails as a father and a husband, and writes books bragging of his betrayals, and insists he does not need forgiveness for anything, that tells me he is utterly bankrupt and morally destitute to his core.

    I won’t vote for someone like this. You might say Hillary is guilty of most of these things, and you’d be correct. It should trouble you that your argument for Trump is that he’s just like Hillary. I’m aware of that. I won’t vote for Trump because I won’t vote for Hillary. They are both thoroughly objectionable and would be disasters for the country.

    I’m not going to get into the game of measuring the precise anticipated disaster and choosing whichever one I think will be slightly less cataclysmic than the other. I’m not going to do that because it’s pointless and arbitrary, and because I will not actively choose or affirm a disaster, even if I think it will be moderately less severe than another disaster. When the disaster comes, whichever one, I will not be among those who chose it.

    Besides, there’s no evidence Trump would be the lesser disaster. Indeed, there’s a high likelihood he could be worse. Yes, they’re both corrupt, lying, narcissists, but at least Clinton has to sort of pretend she’s not, whereas Trump has actually made it his platform. That means Trump would have a mandate to govern the way he’s campaigned and do all the terrible things he told us he wants to do. Clinton would like to do the same, but perhaps she will not be quite as free to do it.

    Yes, she’ll have the media in her pocket, but Trump owns quite a few media stooges as well. And beyond the media, if Trump were actually elected, which he won’t be, then the American people will have explicitly signed on to four years of the Trump Show, broadcast live from 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

    So if we’re doing the lesser-of-two-evils thing, I would have to consider the possibility that Hillary Clinton, for reasons that have more to do with context than with her personally, is the lesser. But I am absolutely ruling Hillary out, no matter who she’s against, because she is all the things we discussed, and I would sooner take a bullet to the head than cast my ballot for her. And if Hillary is out of the question, regardless of the degree of evil she’s running against, then Trump is out for the same reason.

    They’re both out, from my perspective.

    But if Trump is the nominee, Hillary will be in the White House.

    And that’s on you.


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    "I think that Catholicism, that's as sane as people can get."  - Jordan Peterson


    Offline Matthew

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    Ted Cruz drops out of presidential race
    « Reply #8 on: May 03, 2016, 11:47:24 PM »
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  • Well said, Matt Walsh!

    He is a credit to our patron, St. Matthew.

    In this particular article, every word he said speaks for me. He articulated my thoughts better than I had time to do.

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    Offline LaramieHirsch

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    Ted Cruz drops out of presidential race
    « Reply #9 on: May 04, 2016, 02:00:02 AM »
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  • President Trump!  Welcome to Trump World, folks!


    [youtube]https://www.youtube.com/embed/6ZL3ofreuQo[/youtube]



    .........................

    Before some audiences not even the possession of the exactest knowledge will make it easy for what we say to produce conviction. For argument based on knowledge implies instruction, and there are people whom one cannot instruct.  - Aristotle

    Offline OHCA

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    Ted Cruz drops out of presidential race
    « Reply #10 on: May 04, 2016, 03:27:07 AM »
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  • Quote from: JezusDeKoning
    Quote from: tradlover
    Quote from: Matthew
    Oh well. I guess I'll have to vote for Mickey Mouse this November. I won't make any promises though -- I might vote for Garcia Moreno or Donald Duck.

    It won't be Trump though. That much is certain. And I encourage everyone to do the same.

    I can't vote FOR Trump any more than I can vote FOR Hillary. I'm a devout Catholic.

    "Come on, vote for Beelzebub -- we can't have Lucifer winning the White House!" rings rather hollow with me, sorry.



    I think every trad should back Trump.  He is anti nєω ωσrℓ∂ σr∂єr. A nationalist who would ironically herlp Christianity like Merry Christmas etc


    A vote for Trump is a vote for more war. We'd be getting a Bush 2.0.

    I'm voting third party this election and Democrat for local races (like Senate and House). We should be doing everything in our power to silence the GOP nationally.


    Vote for Dems who's party platform is support for abortion and gun-grabbing for Senate and House?  Jєω would do that, wouldn't Jєω?


    Offline Graham

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    Ted Cruz drops out of presidential race
    « Reply #11 on: May 04, 2016, 04:33:01 AM »
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  • Matt Walsh is a hack and watching his meltdown has been a glorious life experience.

    Offline Stubborn

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    Ted Cruz drops out of presidential race
    « Reply #12 on: May 04, 2016, 05:01:24 AM »
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  • I don't see how a trad can vote for anyone of them, I honestly don't.

    "But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

    The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse

    Offline JezusDeKoning

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    Ted Cruz drops out of presidential race
    « Reply #13 on: May 04, 2016, 08:01:13 AM »
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  • Quote from: OHCA
    Quote from: JezusDeKoning
    Quote from: tradlover
    Quote from: Matthew
    Oh well. I guess I'll have to vote for Mickey Mouse this November. I won't make any promises though -- I might vote for Garcia Moreno or Donald Duck.

    It won't be Trump though. That much is certain. And I encourage everyone to do the same.

    I can't vote FOR Trump any more than I can vote FOR Hillary. I'm a devout Catholic.

    "Come on, vote for Beelzebub -- we can't have Lucifer winning the White House!" rings rather hollow with me, sorry.



    I think every trad should back Trump.  He is anti nєω ωσrℓ∂ σr∂єr. A nationalist who would ironically herlp Christianity like Merry Christmas etc


    A vote for Trump is a vote for more war. We'd be getting a Bush 2.0.

    I'm voting third party this election and Democrat for local races (like Senate and House). We should be doing everything in our power to silence the GOP nationally.


    Vote for Dems who's party platform is support for abortion and gun-grabbing for Senate and House?  Jєω would do that, wouldn't Jєω?


    I have never gotten the aversion to gun control. A Catholic society would have reasonable gun control where if people want their guns, they can have them. Got no problem with that. BUT, we have them checked and background tested, so they go into the right hands. That's all.
    Remember O most gracious Virgin Mary...

    Offline Matthew

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    Ted Cruz drops out of presidential race
    « Reply #14 on: May 04, 2016, 08:13:42 AM »
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  • Quote from: JezusDeKoning

    I have never gotten the aversion to gun control. A Catholic society would have reasonable gun control where if people want their guns, they can have them. Got no problem with that. BUT, we have them checked and background tested, so they go into the right hands. That's all.


    Wow. Just wow.

    You really are a democrat, aren't you.

    If you think mere "background checks" is what this is about, you are naive and foolish.

    The 2nd Amendment is there to protect all the others. Only an armed populace can't be controlled (as in, tyrannized over and abused by the government).

    And the 2nd Amendment says we have a RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS. Now the government of late has been trying to curtail this right any way they can: background checks, limits on magazine size, limits on gun types, restrictions on what veterans and those convicted of crimes can have, limitations for those who have received psychological counseling, etc.

    Once you have limits in place, it's very easy to expand and abuse these limits.


    Say they pass a law that says "those who have received psychological counseling can't own a gun". Who cares, right? We don't want crazy people owning guns!

    ...until they require mandatory psyche evaluations to buy or own a gun. And when you get evaluated, you'll be surprised to know that everyone on CathInfo is considered crazy. Anyone who isn't a sheep will be labeled crazy with some made-up disorder like "against the grain disorder" or "nail that sticks up disorder". We are Catholics that believe in corporal mortification of the body. Modern, Freudian psychologists would have a lot of fun with that.
    We believe that we receive the Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity of Christ in Holy Communion. And so forth.

    Understanding the need for an armed populace, and putting in a 2nd Amendment is one of the few smart moves our Freemasonic founders made.


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