Maybe you can get it through to his thick skull.
As I said in this thread, there are Sedes who have taken his position regarding indefectibility, who are consistent, and have made a viable case regarding Sedevacantism. For example, in terms of those whose opinion I respect and who are worthy of much consideration, John Daly, John Lane, Bishop Sanborn, Father Cekada . . . those are the ones that jump out to me at the moment.
His position is totally inconsistent, and one cannot regard him seriously. He hurts the Sede position with his contradictions.
This would be laughable if it isn't so tragic. Here you put your dishonestly on display in glaring fashion.
Those men you cite as "worth of much consideration" would agree with me that your attribution of error to the Church (V2 and the New Mass) is in fact heretical. I know for a fact that Bishop Sanborn would, as Father Cekada woud have (RIP). They would condemn your position as heretical even much more strongly than I do, and Servus here has no use for your heresy either.
But YOU disagree with them about infallibility, and yet you would force me to accept their view of infallibility. This is absurd dishonesty, and you should be embarrassed
I disagree with them regarding the extent and the scope of infallibility. I believe that they've ended up in this exaggerated position precisely as the result of having to combat heresies such as yours.
But you've played a lot of games to distract from the core issue. You lump all "Magisterium" in the same category, whereas in fact there are different degrees of authority within the Magisterium. I've never said that an Ecuмenical Council could teach error in any way shape or form, just lesser expressions of the Magisterium ... a letter by a pope to a bishop, a papal allocation, and to a lesser extent a papal encyclical. Ecuмenical Councils cannot teach error. But I hold that Trent did not teach BoD (as you try to define it, and most certainly didn't teach the heretical Pelagian form of BoD that is prevalent out there). If I believed that Trent actively taught BoD, then I would of course accept it. But the simple fact is that it did no more than mention a term
votum, saying that justification cannot take place without it.
So you keep playing dishonest games like this to justify your false dichotomy that either there can be errors in the Magisterium or there can't be, going so far here as upholding as "worthy of consideration" the dogmatic Sedevacantists who would condemn for heresy even more strongly than I have ... and rightly so. But then you try to falsely leverage the notion that there can be errors in the Magisterium to assert that the Magisterium (and the Mass) can become so corrupt that it requires severing communion with the Catholic hierarchy.
You keep trying to play games to re-assert your false dichotomy in order to justify your heresy.