Below is an AI translation of the French Video
Here is first a summary (as the talk is very long)
Part 1: "Everything is Ruined" (The Global Context)
Host: Can you hear us? Please leave a comment to let us know. Welcome, everyone. Tonight, we are receiving Father Chazal, who joins us from Asia. We are going to take a "periscope" look at world events from a Catholic perspective to bring some light to current situations.
Father Chazal: Thank you. We will divide this into four parts, like the four horsemen of the Apocalypse. First: everything is ruined. Second: the state of the Resistance. Third: the state of Tradition in general. Fourth: the outcome—a message of hope.
Currently, we are in a state of total desolation. Even within our own circles, there are colossal difficulties. We are in what Bishop Williamson calls the "dress rehearsal"—a practice run for the end times. It isn't the end yet; the Antichrist will be a personal being, and he isn't here yet. Instead, we have an "Antichristic" order that fills the world with revolt against the Creator.
The Virgin Mary seems silent. There are no major recent apparitions. I personally don't believe in Garabandal or Medjugorje. We are in a peak moment of evil where the "just" suffer apparent defeat. There is too much calculation and mediocrity, even among priests who prefer the status quo.
Society and Demographics: The "rotten heart of Satan" is triumphing. Look at the crushing of the farmers in France—it is disgusting cruelty. The economic fabric of the country is being dismantled. Furthermore, there is a global demographic collapse. Except for Sub-Saharan Africa, birth rates are plummeting everywhere. In Korea, it’s
0.7; in China,
1.0; in Russia,
1.4. There is a refusal of the human species to perpetuate itself—a generalized nihilism and materialism.
Even the "Islamic threat" in France is mitigated by this; their birth rates are also falling (like in Algeria or Iran). They may take local fiefdoms, but they cannot overcome the deeply entrenched financial and police power of the state.
Part 2: Status of the Catholic Resistance
Father Chazal: People ask how many we are. By my count, there are
7 bishops and about 140 priests in the Resistance worldwide (up from 65 priests in 2020). However, it is a "Patchwork Army"—a collection of losers and misfits, like the Army of Gideon.
Bishop Williamson’s strategy is not to have a coherent, large structure that can be easily captured by the system. It is a loose association. In France, the Resistance is struggling because we lack a leader with the charisma of Archbishop Lefebvre.
The SSPX (Society of St. Pius X): The SSPX is a "beautiful house," but they are leading people to chaos through compromise. They have handed marriage tribunals over to conciliar authorities and are building "canonical bridges" to Rome. They are trapped by their own size; they have so much property and bureaucracy that they are forced to compose with the secular Republic to avoid being shut down. During COVID, they didn't resist because they feared the state would close their chapels.
Mission in Asia: Our work in the "Company of Mary" is growing slowly. We have an 8th priest joining us soon. In the Philippines, we have
40 missions. Unlike in France, the people are eager; they accept Mass at 7:30 AM or in the evening. We take the small groups that the SSPX neglects.
Part 3: Status of Tradition and Rome
Father Chazal: *
The Pope: Pope Leo [referring to the current occupant/atmosphere] is "smooth" but radical. His episcopal appointments are "Luciferian." In the Philippines, they appointed a pro-LGBT bishop, and his arrival was met with an earthquake—a literal sign.
- The Sedevacantists: There isn't much to say. They are very divided, fighting over various theses. While some are serious and have gathered faithful who are disgusted by Bergoglio, their position is a "Pandora's box" that doesn't solve the underlying problem.
- The "Ecclesia Dei" (Indult) Groups: They are being crushed where they are weak. Rome only composes with them when they have a large enough mass. They are being forced into "bi-ritualism" and total submission to Vatican II.
Part 4: The Dénouement (The Outcome)
Father Chazal: Humanly, everything is lost. But God is not bound to help us; if He does, it will be a mercy through the Virgin Mary.
The Role of Russia: The "deus ex machina" may involve Russia. I don’t believe the 2022 consecration by Francis was valid or serious. It must be done by the Pope in union with all the bishops, specifically naming Russia, for its conversion.
Russia is currently in a "clash of civilizations" with the "rotten West." While Russia has its own problems (materialism, low birth rates), it is not "counter-natural." In Moscow, men holding hands are insulted; in France, a man in a miniskirt is ignored. There is a "freshness" in the Russian soul that hasn't been completely killed by liberalism.
The War: The war in Ukraine is a butchery—worse than WWI because of drone technology. Our elites in the West are so blinded and "Himalayically stupid" (like Macron) that they will continue to provoke Russia until the Russians are at the Champs-Élysées. This blindness is a fulfillment of prophecy.
Conclusion: We must continue to defy the system. We must support the farmers—the "slaves" of the modern banking system. As priests, we must speak the truth without fear of the consequences.
The Virgin Mary is the "Star of the Sea" in this storm. She intervened at Quito, promising that when all seems lost, she will wonderfully overthrow Satan. We must stay in God's plan through the Rosary. She is the Mother of Mercy, and she manifests her goodness precisely when faced with our extreme misery.
The FULL TEXT: (AI translation)
Host: Can you hear us now? Er, can you hear us? Can you make a comment? Good evening to those in Morbihan. I don't have the impression we are being heard. There. Can you hear us? Are you receiving us? Right, what I’m going to do—I don’t have the impression we are heard. There, dear friends, can you hear us? Can you make a little comment to tell us if you can hear us currently live?
If you are receiving us, we are having some small technical problems. There. Good evening from Morbihan. Thank you very much. So, welcome. There. Super. Yes, very well. Well, then, er, I’m a bit sorry. So tonight we are going to speak a bit louder so that you can really hear us and enjoy this discussion. There. Do tell us if—good evening. There. So, I am very happy to receive this evening Mr. Abbé Chazal. Good evening, Monsieur l'Abbé. There. Good evening, Monsieur l'Abbé, who comes to us from Asia; I think I don’t need to introduce him to you because you—we know each other well. I think you know Abbé Chazal and his work a little. Anyway, we’ll talk about it again. And so, in fact, tonight is a bit particular. We are going to do a sort of world tour of current events, eh? Is that it, Monsieur? No, a periscope. A periscope, that's it. That is to say, a look at what is happening from above, a look to understand a bit of what is going on and to bring you Catholic light on all the current events. There. And to answer your questions, well, on the situation, quite simply.
Abbé Chazal: So, we will first introduce you a bit. Monsieur, you are going to present a bit of what you want to tell us tonight. Well, it will be in four parts. Er, so the four evangelists, the four horsemen of the apocalypse, as you wish, eh. So the first part is: everything is screwed, eh, everything is lost. Second part is the
status resistancier, the state of the resistance. Then, the
status traditionniste, the state of tradition in general. And finally, the 4th part: what outcome regarding this situation we are in right now? There, a message of hope nonetheless because obviously the picture we are going to paint for you first will be a bit, obviously, quite bad; everything is very bad. But there. Er, and then to see what we are heading toward next, eh, because when everything is lost, it is only at that moment that the Blessed Virgin promised to come and intercede and intervene in history. That is what she said specifically at Quito. "When everything seems lost, I, in an admirable way, will throw Satan from his throne, I will chain him and cast him into the abyss." So these are her words to Mother Mariana. Quito isn't well known enough in our circles. There is no known French translation in my opinion. There was
Kaviva who did a special issue, but it was—no one followed up. There are no publications. Yet it is an extremely detailed message about our current period. Where men will live and move in flying cylinders and in carriages without horses. All these things will happen. And she asks Mother Mariana to suffer the torments of hell to sustain the people of that time, of that terrible time, four centuries away from the apparitions of Quito, and Mother Mariana accepted and was a victim soul. A victim soul for our time. There, for our time. So the Blessed Virgin makes a special mention of our time. She says it four centuries in advance of what is unfolding before our eyes when everything is being demolished and the confusion only intensifies over time. From day to day, one could say; currently we see clearly that there is truly a total desolation. Yeah, total. Even in our circles, even in our circles, there are colossal difficulties. So there.
Host: Do you hear us well? I hope you hear us well because it’s important that you can hear everything. What is going to be said is very important. So tell us if—otherwise we can move the microphone a bit closer eventually. So we’re going to get into the heart of the subject, eh, Abbé? So we’ll say that, there, we are in the "dress rehearsal." It’s an expression from Bishop Williamson. It’s the rehearsal of the costumes of the end of times, of the final play, of the final act of the end of times. It’s not the end of times. It’s not the end. That is important because there is a bit of an objection from those who say "That’s it, everything is f***ed." It’s the epistle of today’s Mass from Thessalonians. There, where Saint Paul says and Saint Paul confirms that the Antichrist will be a personal being. And we aren't there yet, not yet. So it is on this that the consent of the Fathers on this subject is based. We are not dealing with a personal being. We are dealing with an ordination that is anti-Christic and which is putting in place the religion of the Antichrist, which is filled with revolt and hatred toward the Creator and toward all that He created, both on the supernatural plane and on the natural plane. Er, but it is not the Antichrist. It is something—it’s the beast of the apocalypse, it’s the Great Babylon, but it’s not the satanic grand finale that will be served to us in a certain time; we aren't there, but it’s something that really resembles that position. Yes. Yes. Yes. So, we don’t know where the Virgin Mary has gone, er, where is she? There are no more major apparitions. No, we had Fatima of course. We had Fatima. The last one was Ile-Bouchard. Ile-Bouchard, that’s it. Bouchard. There are—Akita isn't even an apparition of the Virgin. It’s a locution. Yeah. Or it’s something extremely minor. Yeah. Yes. And Sister Agnes never wanted to insist beyond this locution. Yes. So we have nothing, really. Personally, I don't believe in Garabandal, nor in Medjugorje, so I am not following my Lord there. I don't believe there will be a "revelation of consciences." Er, even if the Good Lord grants them through near-death experiences where people have their consciences revealed. Yes. In many cases, in certain cases. Yes. Yes. So, it seems in 15% of cases of resuscitation, yeah, you have these experiences at various degrees of near-death. So in those 15%, there is only a fraction that reaches the particular judgment. Er, but the Good Lord reveals the existence of the Last Ends which are no longer preached by the clergy. Yes, but we are truly in—there isn't much on the level of the Blessed Virgin, we don't have much to sink our teeth into. So, one could think of a sort of silence, a sort of silence or a moment—well, a culminating moment in evil. Yeah. Yes. Er, where there is an apparent defeat of the just. So, everything we try to do runs into colossal obstacles. Eh? So this year, I had three seminarians. Er, there is one who is going to be ordained, so he will leave the seminary, he will become a priest and he will take up his post in Asia. And then there is another who is staying home this summer and there is only one who is entering the seminary next year. So I find myself in a situation like three years ago with only one seminarian, and we are experiencing the same thing a bit everywhere. It’s a bit the same thing. It’s the same low point. Yes. And then big difficulties with the seminary on a more personal level in Brazil. Yeah. So these are trials of the just as you say, eh, of the just. Apparent defeat of the just. And then among the "good" people, there are too many calculations among the good. Er, so too much mediocrity. Er, so what do we—calculations? That is to say, the side where one first wants—well, people want to support the interests of their little family. There are children and all that—immediate interests, immediate interests. And then the priests, among the priests it’s the same. So the priests didn't want to decide, to take a position in, yes, that’s it, in major crises, whether it was at the time of the Council or now in the combat of tradition; they prefer a status quo that they maintain in their posts and then not—there, they do a certain good, there, but not the good perhaps that was expected. There. And then we see that certain good priests—like a certain priest I won't remember—it’s in the canonical affairs of the Society. Yeah. Who is a former student I encountered as a student, whom I now see collaborating with progressive authorities. Yeah, it’s truly a shame to see excellent people getting worn down and then entering the conciliar system finally, little by little, there, because of a lack of reaction and strength. Then big disappointment because many colleagues who had joined us or supported us in 2012 have finally evaporated or been sidelined and then—yes, we won't mention names, I think—anyway, we perhaps shouldn't mention names, that is to say, calculation of the good. Yeah, of the good. It’s—it lacked magnanimity and a spirit of sacrifice, what. I mean, sacrifice of self for a higher cause, what, for the cause of Christ the King. There. Er, so, yeah.
And so, parallel to that, so among the just there is a lack of momentum. And then among the wicked, among the wicked there is the triumph, the triumph of the rotten heart of Satan. Yeah. Yeah. The rotten heart of Satan which triumphs there. So it’s—we see that, the latest spectacle is the crushing of the farmers. It’s atrocious, it’s shameful, it’s disgusting and repugnant in its cruelty. Yeah. Yeah. And so they struggle as they can but there—and then well, there are yes, some who manifest support but they are going to get sliced into rounds. Same for all the workers, the people who were doing things. So the economic fabric of the country, er, which is being dismantled and destroyed. There. We have the impression that it’s the large multinationals today, that it’s the big financial groups that triumph. Even the flagships of French industry, the automobile industry and all that. Oh well, yes, even all that is going. And so, so they have no possibility of getting out of it since economy is transformed energy. So energy has—costs too much, we can no longer be competitive. So it’s a country that is emptying of its energy, which has—no longer has any impact on the world, which is the laughingstock of nations. Yeah. You who are in Asia, you see on the contrary—well, in Asia, well, it’s true that Macron and Brigitte make people laugh over there. Yeah, but they hardly talk about it, but it’s—we no longer represent anything. That’s it. There. Whereas in Africa, we’ve just been kicked out. Yeah. And the current madness, so it’s constantly—and additional follies with euthanasia, with abortion in the constitution this year. Yes, further and further on that side. So it’s always—it’s always madness, more and more common. So, you were telling us, we were talking about it earlier, in fact, when we saw each other two years ago, eh, that’s it, we had a bit—we told ourselves things are going to go very fast, it’s all going to collapse very quickly and in reality that’s not really what happened. We were a little bit wrong—well, not that much, there. But there was no "Great Williamsonian Chastisement." Yes, there, that’s it. First, first there was no Great Williamsonian Chastisement. [Laughter] So, I had met Bishop Williamson in December. "The chastisement, is it all that?" and he told me, "Well, there are people who do penance, so no chastisement."
In fact, indeed, there are perhaps reparative souls that we don’t know about and who atone and who allow things not to degenerate too much. So there are perhaps some mystics somewhere who ruined the catastrophist aspirations of Bishop Williamson; it was his great hobbyhorse. Yeah, he left this world without having the joy of seeing three—burnt. Yeah. Yes, that’s it, seeing Paris burn. Not too much, it’s Paris. There. So er, so in fact, there, so we are rather in a progressive decrepitude. And so you said rather a situation of the "pushing of human causes" in fact, eh? It’s—God isn't going to punish all at once. There. God leaves men to their own—to the consequences of their own actions, their own choices. God lets causes reach their end. In fact, we see clearly abandonments, betrayals, little things that happen regularly. There. And we saw it at our small level, eh. We see colleagues who, well, give up. And then alongside that, there is also a total collapse of the human species. There is a global demographic collapse. Er, that is to say—Yes, I was interested—the demographic statistics that have come out now extend the demographic collapse to the entire earth, except for Black Africa. Yes. Except for Black Africa. Even Algeria has fallen to two point—from six or four, eh. Er, yes. Whereas it was four countries which—whereas on the two flanks of Algeria, you have Tunisia which is completely collapsing at 1.1 or 1.2, I don't know. And Morocco, it’s not going well at all either. Yes. Yes. Er, so even Muslim countries that were supposed to invade us have chosen collapse as well with the rest of the nations of the earth. So there is no longer any national ambition in many countries now. Yeah. Yeah. Er, we see Bulgaria for example, they were 6 million. Now, they are going to fall to 3 and a half million soon. Yes. A country like Bulgaria, it’s going to be zero what. They will—and like certain other countries, they are in the process of being wiped off the map, becoming insignificant little tribes. That’s it. But it’s—so there, you said it’s not just specific to a few countries, it’s a global phenomenon in fact. So perhaps aside from Africa. Well, some more accelerated than others. For example, Korea, they are crazy. They are at 0.7% children per woman. They had gone down to 0.69. And they exulted when they went back up to 0.72. It’s—yes, it’s absolutely catastrophic. China is a bit the same too. China is at 1.0. China is at 1. Japan is at 1.4. 1.4. And Russia—Russia is at 1.4. So there, I don't share the optimism of Xavier Moreau. Yes. Yes. The numbers are bad. Yes. Are bad in Russia. Just as the numbers are bad in Hungary where Orban had tried to do everything he could. Well, Orban is a Zionist there. We know he’s no different on that side, but er, he as head of state, he did absolutely everything he could. Er, not just financial measures, but everything he could to encourage and all that. So from 1.26 or 1.27, they went back up to 1.4 and er and there, they fell back to 1.2. So, there was a tiny, a tiny rise. Yes. But not sufficient for statisticians; it’s because taking advantage of the offers that were made, there are many people who planned to have a child and had it a little earlier—that is to say they didn't plan to have other children anyway. So there is a refusal of the human species, of human nature, to perpetuate itself. There is a refusal of—it’s the death of the species. Yes. Yes. Eh? Er, it’s—there is a mood of death. Er, so on one side you have the globalists who want to reach 500—to 500 million inhabitants and well, they are getting there and in fact they will get there simply not by war, not by famines, by simply by human simple nullity. We are so null. Yeah. Where there is a generalized nullity. There is a refusal of the family ideal in fact. That's it. Of family life, of family labor, of—No, of—Yes, of fertility. Fertility. Yes, that’s it. Er, of love of children, of devotion to the education of children. Yes, even—it’s true it’s tiring, I’m sure of it and certain, but yes, it’s tiring. So it’s a nullity, it’s a materialism, a nihilism, a generalized nullity, the electronic cage also. Yes, which also arrives on top of this phenomenon and which destroys family relationships. Which destroys human relationships, family, the natural ambitions of men. Yeah. Er, it distorts everything. So yes, it only accelerates this mechanism of already refusing reality, this refusal of this selfishness, this narcissism. So and there, there is no human solution. So we see clearly two heads of state, Putin and Orban. Yeah. Who do everything they can and it gives—it results in nothing, eh? Putin exhorts the Russian schismatic Orthodox church to do something. They say "Yes, Chief" and all that, they do what they can. The only exception I know is in Georgia, a pope, a schismatic bishop said that for any family that has a third child, "I myself will personally do the solemn baptism of the child." That’s it and it caused a surge and so he—this part of Georgia, of his diocese, has gone above two children. So you know that in France it was the 10th child that the bishop baptized. Yes. Now we are—that's it. Three children, it's—so there was this custom before in France. Oh yes yes yes, 10th in France, we say it's—well, it was that the bishop baptized the 10th. I think at the level of parish priests, what we should do is honor large families, really honor them and put them forward, encourage them, support them, encourage them. There. And it’s not a question of money, it's—No, because the Russian policies with money finally are not that good. Well, Korea is 50,000 dollars er per child, tax exemption etc. Nothing works because the Koreans answer "It costs us 1 million dollars to send the child to university anyway when he will be of age." There. So they do the calculation, they say "No, it’s still not a good price." So yes. So if we have a materialistic vision anyway of life—the Korean woman, there is nothing the Korean woman hates more than having a child. Yes, she positively hates the act of giving life, which defines the woman.
And so you were telling us there that on the plane, there was a gentleman who—There. So I had a passenger, I say "What’s going on again?" and all that, "You are collapsing." "Yeah. Well yes, we are the champions. It’s true we are collapsing but really we are the first. We are the number ones in the collapse." In the collapse, he said that dryly anyway. He’s an intelligent guy. He didn't want to go into details but perhaps wanted to get rid of me but with a good joke. It’s—they don't know how to do it. There is no solution. There we are—there we have a sort of end of the world by nullity. Er, there isn't even a need for fire from heaven. No, nuclear fire. Yes. Of punishment and tsunami and of—we are—we are archi-null. We are in the process of imploding on ourselves, eh. So even Gaddafi who wanted the Arabs to invade Western Europe, even there and well, it’s—it’s not—it’s not so—hearing "it’s by our wombs that we have..." there. But even the wombs of the Muslim women have dried up; Iran for example is catastrophic. The birth rate in Iran is absolutely catastrophic. They are—the government is desperate. It’s—it’s because Persians are intelligent people, always intelligent, but Westernization of the life, well, but even if they aren't Westernized, everyone is in selfishness, everyone is in petty calculation, yeah, materialism on the natural plane. So it’s the same everywhere, there is no exception. Yeah. And yes, that’s it, so we were talking—yes, many said in France the danger of Islam. So you have Zemmour especially, all this clique of Zionists there who try to make us afraid of Islam in France. Well, there are things—now Lebanon today, Lebanon tomorrow France. Yeah, that’s it. But finally then, we thought that they were going to take power in France progressively by numbers and all that. And in fact, indeed, we see that they don't succeed, they haven't succeeded in their ends. Er, you were saying that they succeed at the local level in taking little fiefs, eh, if we want, with gangs, local neighborhood chiefs, little caids, little local sheikhs. There. But at the national level, in fact no, there is nothing because anyway they cannot beat the Jєωιѕн power which is very established, there, and well-entrenched with a police violence which is very strong. So budgets allocated and unlimited, allocated to the police and the gendarmerie, to surveillance. Yeah. Yes. So yes. And to the control of all the organs, all the means of power. Yes. So it’s—I believe they cannot—but it’s a local power nonetheless very powerful and sovereign. There is a sovereignty. We saw that in the riots of last year when there was the protege of a little caid who got αssαssιnαtҽd by the gendarmerie, a blunder, and there you had riots at a global level and then there was a negotiation with Macron and then there was an agreement and then poof, in a few hours everyone—everything returned to order. What impressed me the most is the way it returned to order after negotiation rather than the way it was triggered. Yes. There. That proves that so at the local level, there, there is a very strong local power. So these are networks that are very strong, very implanted locally, entrenched, armed. Er, look, there is a very good film that was made 6 years ago, it’s called
Les Misérables about the neighborhoods, the situation in the neighborhoods, it was already 6 years ago where the police hide, so no apparent police cars, no uniforms for the police, no apparent weapons and perpetual negotiation with the little local chiefs to do anything at all. Yeah, that’s all. Which makes the farmers say today that it’s easier to go beat on farmers in the countryside than to go into the neighborhoods. Well, that’s what increases the—well. That’s what increases the cruelty toward the farmers in fact. It’s cowardice. That is to say, we are in the process of immolating a weakling. Yeah. While we aren't capable of settling major problems at the level of the neighborhoods. It’s a—There.
And then on the other hand, big disappointment regarding Palestine. So we see that the Muslims aren't capable of, there, flying to the rescue of the Palestinians, there, who are their co-religionists. Yes. Because Islam has no charity. They have a theoretical charity, the alms, the zakat and all that, but this charity doesn't go beyond—with the exception of Iran and Yemen who did what was necessary, a few small interventions. There. It’s still they who forced, by penetrating the Israeli shield, it’s they who even forced Israel to stop the massacre to a certain extent. Yeah. Yeah. So there now, we are dealing with a cσncєnтrαтισn cαмρ in the open air, a genocide in the open air. Yeah. Er, and and we see the—we created the impunity of Israel. Yeah. And and we see clearly that there, it’s a case comparable to what is happening now with the Congolese genocide. Yes, with Rwanda which takes revenge, having a victim status allows itself all the horrors in the Democratic Republic of Congo. So we are dealing with that. There are many other genocides that are underway in Africa. Er, heard talk of the genocide of Pygmies in Cameroon. There is the genocide in Sudan. So Libya is still in a state of chaos. And then you have all the Berber tribes, all the tribes of the nomads of the South. Er, not the Berbers but the Tuaregs. So all the chaos that followed the destruction of Libya was—was spread there and it has—it only worsened the problems of Sudan. Yes, or tension between Egypt and Ethiopia too, Ethiopia which is also a bit on the verge of cινιℓ ωαr also, problems everywhere, everywhere in Africa. Yeah, threat of war in Asia, it’s going to fall on them. So yes, there you know there is a small conflict, there is a small conflict underway already now between Cambodia and Thailand. Yeah. That’s already underway. Yeah. So there is a whole bunch of problems a bit everywhere in the world. There is Trump who wants to cause a mess in South America. There. So some—so we said—one would say Trump can aspire to be—to receive the Nobel Peace Prize. In fact, finally, we see that it’s someone who causes a mess, who there, who aims for American interests anyway. Well, that’s clear, but who causes a mess in any case there. There. And then all these nations they continue to implode too and and to self-destruct. Yeah. Yeah.
And er, so you followed a bit also the story of Charlie Kirk there. Er, can you precisely talk about it because it’s a bit of an interesting case compared—his wife Erica was not at all convincing. Yeah. One would say she was a plant, a honey trap. Yes. Who was planted to catch Charlie. So her—her emotions were not at all convincing and all that. Yeah. That came out completely crooked. And then also it’s the Americans who love ballistics, firearms, it’s not going at all—a 30-06 normally enters and makes a huge, huge exit point. So the official version doesn't hold. So we would be dealing with a patsy. Yeah. So as in the Kennedy case, he would have been killed by a .22, a small caliber, relatively low speed. Er, there was no major bleeding and all that. So the death of Charlie Kirk is extremely suspicious. Er, and what our circles say is that he was in the process of converting to Catholicism, really. There. Er, and then he was in the process of turning against Zionism. There. He was beginning to open his eyes. Beginning to open his eyes. He had made declarations—Yeah. And and he had warned that he was going to be "zigouillé" (offed). He—he was very afraid for his life. And indeed like—and pilots there, what are they called the—there were several of the Ward, Veness, all that. So he had his t-shirt "I am not suicidal," I imagine under the other t-shirt. Yes, that’s it. There. So he was of being—of being—So that is also an enormous—a strong disappointment for those who believed in Trumpism. Yes, certainly. Yes yes, because well I think he he scooped up the American right-wing and more or less conservative American but to bring it back to a policy finally Zionist, to the Zionist fold. That’s what I would say—it’s what currently the right in France with Bardella with all those people are trying to do, they try to recover the right-wing vote to bring them back to a pro-Zionist policy. I don't know who did his
teshuva. Yes, they all do
teshuva as they should. Yeah. Er, yes. So that is er—so there is Nick Fuentes who takes up the torch of Charlie Kirk a bit, younger, that’s it. But I’m not sure that Nick Fuentes has the same impact as—he has—no but he is courageous. But it was Charlie Kirk who contributed a lot to putting Trump in power and all that. I mean that, well, it’s not—Trump is not woke and all that. There are certain points where he is right. Yes, but it’s not at all the solution. It’s not at all—No no no, that’s obvious. One should never have believed in Trump and all that. It’s—And then how, to what point is she held? What are the underpinnings of the Epstein affair? To what extent is he? He is certainly involved, he is certainly wet, and but those who tried to put pressure on him from the affair, it turned against them anyway. Yes, because Trump gets angry at a given moment and he yelled at Netanyahu and he told him that "you are doing anything" and that it was absolutely necessary to stop the war with Iran immediately. Er, he provided the Israelis an excuse to stop the war and and at the same time Putin forced Iran to go to the stage of de-escalation and to break the war—what we call the ten-day war now. Yeah. Yeah. So all that was arranged. There is—there is still a very deep, very powerful power. Yeah. Yes. Against which Trump can do nothing. There.
So there. So there for this little first part. So everything is everything is ruined. There, there is nothing left. An assessment obviously humanly catastrophic. Well so there we are running to our loss but not in an apocalyptic and sudden way. No, that’s it, that’s what must be well understood. It’s the boat sinking. There. Perhaps one day there will be triggering and accelerating factors. Yes. Like the crisis in Japan or the risk—the financial crisis. That's it. Debt. Global debt, debt. There, but as all countries of the world are in debt, that’s what is interesting, it’s that the phenomenon of debt isn't limited simply to Europe or the United States. It’s anyway the functioning of—Yeah, it’s a collapse of—collapse of real currencies to replace them with virtual currency. Er, I am sure that the prince of darkness, Mammon, manages much better than we do in economy. There. And that he, he must have planned all that. And it’s certain that there is a plan behind it also—in the will for debt, there is only a plan behind it to switch to a digital currency. There, we are—and then the—we are more and more dependent on credit cards and ways non-anonymous and personal of exchange. Yeah. So that’s—Yes. Now every financial step must be traceable. Traceable and all that. Whereas I encourage people to do exchanges based on personal metal currencies. The advantage of silver compared to gold precisely is that it can serve to do non-traceable and personal exchanges between people who can. But well, it’s not—we don't have village markets anymore so we are forced to—everything that is in our fridge was bought at the supermarket. Yes yes yes. So we have nothing. There is no economy—in fact, dreaming of an economy, of creating a parallel economy without—it’s a little bit illusory at least for the moment and we will get there perhaps by force—by force of things if there is a collapse but precisely we don't have a collapse that pushes people to create these parallel economies. Yeah, that’s it exactly. There.
So for that. And so well, second part: it’s a bit now we are going to talk about the Catholic resistance which can make an assessment, a
status resistancier as you say, er, a little assessment of the resistance, I think it interests our listeners a lot. So, what is now the numerical assessment? I think you made a list—my evaluation because faithful tell us "So, how many are you? Anyway, people from the outside, how many priests, how many bishops?" So there, so you did a count. So there is a count but and but it must be well understood who it’s about. Yes. Yes. So, I have a count of seven bishops and 140 priests. There. So, it’s 140 priests in the world, eh, not in France. In—in 2000, in my personal count, in 2020, we were 65 priests. Yes and of and of four bishops let's say. That’s it. So they were added, there were ordinations. Ordinations and there are priests who—many priests who joined us. So we will talk about it again a bit after. So and but it is a matter of extremely disparate elements. It’s the
RTA Army. Said Williamson again, it’s an army of patchwork. [Laughter] It’s—we recover pieces of fabric er and then we sew them together. We find ourselves with a coat of all colors. Yes. Perfectly ridiculous. Yes. Er and completely variegated. That’s it. Er, ill-adjusted. But ill-adjusted. There. So it’s—I’m looking to see if there are comments. Er, no, it’s good. So we are dealing with an army of Gideon. In fact, it’s—read the—so explain for those who don't know. There, the army of Gideon. There, Gideon who is rejected by the snobbish Hebrews. Yeah. And he turns toward all the losers, all the nulls, the pitiful, those who were unfit for war and all that, the half-foreigners, the—there, and then the tribes that had associated themselves by faith with the Hebrew people etc. And it’s with this army of pitiful people that he will destroy the Midianite army. There, eh? And even in that army, he will—he will skim it completely and he will finish with 400 or 200, I don't remember, there, while facing them were thousands, there. So it’s er an army of Gideon, it’s that, there. It’s the strategy of Bishop Williamson; it’s not that we don't want a coherent army that could get completely captured—a sort of large, very large global structure like currently the Society. Well, it’s a loose association. There. But not formal. But not formal. Yeah. There is no jurisdiction, even of direct and well-framed supply, er and a multitude of entities and then a multitude also of doubtful members committing errors. Bickering. There is a lot of bickering. There. So bickering and pasturing, eh, on the two breasts of the resistance. [Laughter] So a lot of bickering, er a lot of complications, a lot of different visions of things between bishops and between priests. Between priests of course. There. So a lot of misunderstanding. So it’s a movement that is difficult to grasp, eh? So it’s good, but after—well that’s on the human plane but the substance is there. There, it must be recalled anyway that the substance is there, that is to say there is the a—the desire to defend the faith and then I see even in France with a certain distance, there is still a desire of colleagues to forgive other colleagues. After, yes, there is charity, desire to find a certain understanding and a desire—everyone works in their corner with the promise not to bother each other anymore. Yeah. Yeah. Or so that’s a bit what is happening. Still in France there, where the resistance is suffering most compared to the rest of the world—we will explain why because explain why France is doing quite badly—relatively difficult for the resistance in France. Interesting, we’ve thought well on the question. There is a difference between France and the and the rest of the world in the —that is to say we are more null than the rest of the world in France. We are—we haven't been smart at all, there, in the previous years. So we also don't have Archbishop Lefebvre. Yes. We don't have a chief. There is—there is no great chief, we don't have a great—someone who was a prelate, someone whose word was very wise and could carry a qualified or relative majority. We have—we don't have—there is no one with the caliber of Archbishop Lefebvre who preached well, who led his society well, who helped friendly communities a lot, who was prudent, er who had experience and authority, who spoke in the name of tradition, who went to Rome and who represented tradition, who without—he almost got caught in '88 of course. And his protocols are—I find that it’s—it’s an error to reproach him for it. Er, so he went too far, he made errors, he was subject to making errors, he had unfortunate expressions, eh, like "experiencing tradition." Yeah. Yeah. Er, but he’s still a chief, a caliber, there, clearly above all we could er there. And then same, well Bishop Williamson I have not er there—himself and we won't have—we don't have a Bishop Williamson bis, there isn't even—we don't even have a Bishop Williamson Bis. No no no. Yet Bishop Williamson didn't pretend to be the chief of the resistance. He said "You are all a flock of cats, so I have no pretension of commanding you. You are ungovernable, it’s a complete mess." And he himself didn't believe in the idea of a seminary. Er, he himself didn't believe in youth, er that youth could have a surge and that the—vocations said to each—sure a vision quite pessimistic and well that’s understandable—pessimistic about the state of global youth, even not just French but global, and so we don't have a Williamson either to encourage us by his pessimism—nothing, there. So what—so there we are a bit in a situation as we could say chaotic to chaotic on both sides. So on both sides the faithful—either the organization of chaos by the Society of Saint Pius X—and so it’s the Society of Saint Pius X—it’s still a fine establishment. Yeah. With many devoted priests and then works that hold together, but we see that they lead us to chaos by their compromise. For example, their marriage tribunals, it’s not going at all. Their management of marriages or that goes—Ah well now, that's it, the marriages, they put the marriages back in the hands of the conciliarists. Of the conciliarists, if if, and they agree with the—near Christ the King on canonical affairs. Yeah yeah, he settles in fact affairs like that, supposedly so that it—so er, it’s an illusion. It’s the canonical bridge built by Abbé Gleize in hand. It’s him—it’s him the builder of the canonical bridge. It’s him who makes—makes Bishop Fellay tremble in his boots, who makes the canon law. Very interesting. So it’s the organization of chaos. That is the organization of chaos. But because then people are forced to have recourse to the Society for their children for schools. Which can be understood. That can be understood. The Society abuses this dominant position. We don't have the means to launch such works. Impossible. We don't have the critical mass, we don't have the finances, we don't have the critical mass to launch such works. There is a need for critical size and the Society has been installed for a long time and to face the French State that wants to put its hand on the innocence of children. Yes. There. Parents do what they can. Well good luck to those who do homeschooling and good luck to those who go educate their children in Russia, eh, who according to the—Why not traditional Catholics in Russia there and invites traditional Catholic families to go to Russia but it’s not—so there are many—I wouldn't say many but there are certain families who have already migrated there and but we also say that it’s difficult too in Russia there must be Mass, there must be Mass every 36th of the month. Well there, that's it. Yeah. So that’s also difficult. Yeah. Yeah.
So it’s the organization of chaos on the side of our friends in the Society. There. On our side it’s organized chaos. There. There. So chaos as an instrument of survival. Er, it’s besides—so chaos, one must understand. That is to say, we are rather a bit in—in bastions a bit there, isolated. So we see clearly that there are colleagues who do good work in their place, eh? So we see even in certain places the colleagues have flourishing work—making the resistance. Er, so what is better? The Titanic itself which hasn't yet sunk and it’s still warm inside, or the lifeboats that er—freeze on the—effectively. There, that’s it, it’s finally the alternative for Catholics today. So at what moment should I go to the lifeboat if I go too fast or there. So the resistance is still not comfort. It’s—No, it’s a combat and it’s difficult. There. Well, there are high places where I see, for example, the parish at Lourdes of the Dominicans in Lourdes, it’s very good. Abbé Rioult is doing very well. I imagine in Perpignan Abbé Bernabé has a nice little—too. There, that's it. Well you see in Belgium with—for us here at Saint-Ignan also, it’s nice. There, we advance little by little. Well there, Paris is really the black hole of the resistance for France. There is nothing. It’s a shame. Er, it failed. They bickered from the start. Er, well it’s not that, it’s that there is also a lot of difficulty finding a place too, places a bit correct or all that. There, the absence precisely of—of the—of the—of the critical size from the start. Yeah. Yeah.
So why didn't it work in France? So there, that's it. It’s not just a question of size. There is—we didn't have a Gallic chief. We didn't have a Vercingetorix version, even not. Even if he lost his war. We didn't even have a Vercingetorix. We hoped for certain Abbots who had charisma, who had—of the—of the ascendancy to take the lead and and they didn't want to. They didn't want to because they themselves in fact told themselves "if I if I do something I am going to be all alone, I wait for others"—in fact everyone—it’s a look when one of the dogs is going to decide to do something. There. I—I remember colleagues who told me "I only move if Bishop Tissier moves. I only move if er—moves. Abbé—" it’s—it’s all that each—in fact so those who could have been chiefs who had the caliber to be chiefs er and well now it’s—it’s over. It’s over. There are some who and even some of our colleagues who are nonetheless in the resistance who could have been chiefs themselves didn't want to assume the position of chief. Yes. Er, they were themselves weakened and discouraged. Yes, possibly. And so, they didn't—so we have—and for us Gauls, it’s something terrible because it’s if we don't have a chief, yes, everything goes in all directions. And Bishop Williamson is misunderstood by France. Er, so the—I talked about it more—I talked to a faithful about it, I explained because already in France, there was a whole campaign already from the year 2000, eh, an er before where he was already publicly denigrated even we as priests. I didn't know well and they told us "Oh, Bishop Williamson is—is an apparitionist, he’s a revisionist, catastrophist there and all that." So so we were a little and in France, yes, he says too many things, he isn't prudent. So in France the—the French were finally all chilled. There. That’s why when Bishop Williamson left or was chased from the Society in France, there wasn't—there was no crying in the cottages while it was—it was a shame because a caliber all that—it’s a shame. Yeah and he himself didn't want to take the—didn't aspire to to that. I think he wanted each to continue to say the truth that each continue in his and then that each take his responsibilities. Yeah. There. It’s true that today as we said, he told many people "stay in the warmth" nonetheless. He told them "stay in the warmth, wait." He was—it wasn't easy because he himself you see—Yeah. "Is this thing going to hold?" Yes, he looked a bit at things, he waited a bit because precisely he he wanted to see if there were men, people who stood up. He, he struck his fist on the table in the meeting of priests at Albano. There, that's it. But at the same time, he said many people this summer even there should indeed stay in the warmth. Er and it’s a bit like Saint Benedict when he has a vocation, he he seeks to discourage—to discourage the—to put it to the test—to put it to the test. It’s a true will because er we freeze in the lifeboat what. There is—Ah well there is—there is a certain—not much to sink our teeth into all that and we don't know when the
Carpathia will arrive. Exactly. But well, you shouldn't stay in the Titanic for all that.
Or so precisely well let's talk a bit about this little work of the Company of Mary there because well it’s developing nicely—anyway it’s—there, but we are going to receive our 8th priest in a few months, there, Abbé Andrew Kim who is currently with Bishop Ballini in Ireland; very kindly Bishop Ballini accepted to ordain and to release er at the same time which nonetheless is all to his honor. Yeah, it’s not because he’s a very intelligent seminarian and in my opinion will be—so he will be destined for Korea—to Japan—to Japan—to Japan, there, and then he’s going to—he’s going to relieve me of the classes of moral theology, it interests him. Very well. There, I don't want to force him to do difficult subjects like canon law and all that. Yes. So he will take moral theology, a few self-courses, he will finally bring some space. So it will relieve you nonetheless in your—well as—But then at the same moment where I find myself with a serious, intelligent professor, I have only one seminarian left. So there, it’s a bit the—there but well there are nonetheless perhaps vocations that are profiling at the level of Vietnam and and of the Philippines perhaps or so it’s—we will continue, eh, but well it’s a relief for me because I was always—prayed of each month I had to go to Korea and return straight to the seminary to resume the courses which are tiring and and wearing, so there, so that’s an 8th priest er and so two in France and two in India at the Priory of the Holy Rosary in India. Yeah. And we will be four of the Company of Mary in the Philippines plus the Philippines, there is Father Jan who is himself a Carmelite but associated in a fairly close geographical way with us. So eight priests only—it’s a small the Company of Mary—it’s a small thing, small thing and there which merits the—there and then in—there in 3 years perhaps an additional priest an Australian of Philippine origin. Yeah. And then all those we occupy elsewhere. Perhaps Father Lois who is very tempted by progressivism, poor man, but who has ceased to say the modern mass so and who wants to engage. So I’m going to bring him the constitutions, all that. He’s going to go read it, he’s going to see if he agrees er and then and then there. The essential is to want to progress, to want to advance in—there, a bit like we do with Abbé Carton. Yeah, that’s it. There. So it’s well, certain er encouraging developments in the missions in Asia where we truly have a lot of work to do. There is—there is a lot of response in the innumerable missions in the Philippines. How many—how many missions? So 40 missions. 40 missions. Well, we have only four groups where they are around 50. Yeah, that’s it. It’s enormous. There are only four groups—are the others, they are groups of 30 even 10, 15 but that you serve then on a monthly basis once a month. So 40 so in total 40 groups that you group so there we are already four priests in the Philippines and so very often on Sunday we say three masses and the people contrary to France are much less stiff than in France, they accept mass at 7:30 in the morning on Sunday or mass in the evening on Sunday and the monthly mass and the monthly mass—so it's—and that’s a bit the tragedy in France, it’s that people if they don't have their Sunday mass it’s over, we you—we don't have the competition the Society of Saint Pius X at the same level. There, and the Society of Saint Pius X does as little as possible in Asia. They concentrate the priests on their priorities and they don't open missions. They even closed small groups or they try to discourage small groups. There was even a mission the priest presented himself to hear confessions but not to say mass. So there, they were flabbergasted. "Ah, I don't have the permission to say mass for you." Oh yes, it hasn't repeated eh? Ridiculous but there is—there is no tongue for the small groups of "Rikiki" and they deliberately leave the small groups to us and that—that doesn't bother them—Well well listen well there eh? It’s—they are kind, they are kind but they aren't interested.
And for Africa then, so you have a little bit of er—that doesn't concern the Company of Mary. Abbé Onoda isn't interested in joining us, he doesn't want to be part of an organization but he shepherds the studies of the Nigerian seminarians. He himself has a seminarian in Libreville. Er, so he isn't all—he ceased—he isn't all alone completely abandoned—no that's it that's it, he made attempts I believe in Kenya all that which didn't so much succeed, finally not so much—it's he—there were—there were follow-ups anyway of colleagues, of priests but well it’s not easy easy, they are—it’s difficult yeah and then perhaps in certain other African countries but it’s in Nigeria where there is—and they are very supported by certain Australian faithful financially er in Africa.
So especially the phenomenon this year is the newcomers er in particular the Redemptorists of Papa Stronsay. Oh yes. So I wasn't very aware and you told me no indeed so they made a declaration and they and and they gave this declaration the doctrinal position of the resistance. That is to say no Vatican II. Yeah nothing of—no reform issuing from Vatican II etc. And so er the text is satisfying. Er so er and so these Redemptorists are currently where in Italy? Er they are in three places. They are in Scotland, in the United States and then in New Zealand. Ah okay. So I think there. And their biggest the biggest piece is in New Zealand because it’s from New Zealand where they have 2 to 300 faithful where they succeed in recruiting for the continuation of the order. Er so they succeed in recruiting vocations and I think it’s their their success which was suspicious in the eyes of er plus of Francis and of Leon and so the the bishop turned against them. Yeah. So would they have joined us if the bishops had left them alone? Probably not. So that’s why some say well—Ah yes but what do you want, if one reacts because one is—one is mistreated, well it’s normal, it’s a bit like the three in Australia, it’s a revealer—that reveals that at heart they are nonetheless well-disposed to accept, that's it, they want to defend trad—but the same phenomenon with three a group of three priests in Australia and like the Redemptorists they addressed the Society, they were led—I believe the Redemptorists must have known the answer in advance but these three had addressed the Society. Yeah. Er like certain other priests. Yeah. And the Society led them. For example, Father Louis in Japan, he learned to say mass by Abbé Onoda of the Society of Saint Pius X a few years ago. Yeah. And at the moment where he was expelled from the diocese of Yokohama, he addressed the Society of Saint Pius X. Er, which told him "No, you are sick and all that." While we know very well that it’s the Japanese government that pays for his his dialyses, his medical fees. So the argument doesn't hold. But the Society doesn't want to take care of this priest. Yeah. So the Society was capable of teaching him to say the traditional mass. So they do that quite often. There are quite a few priests of the Society who teach certain progressive priests to say but the Society doesn't want to engage in organizing these priests against the conciliar church. Ah there, that's it. Ah there, against the existential church in fact. One—one doesn't want trouble with—There. So we’ll perhaps help you a little. Yeah. But you manage and you are—you aren't with us in a deep way so as not to create an opposition. Yeah. Okay. That is—so the Society doesn't want to get wet, she—because she is she is implicated with the dioceses. At least, it’s one of the of the signs er to people that she is implicated. Well, when she does pilgrimages, for example, everything is done in perfect agreement. Er there you tell me that the local bishop had come into the pilgrimage—Well yes, for example at Pontmain there, not if it’s this year. So, he came, Bishop Dupont came into the—faithful were in the process of eating—of the Society of Saint Pius X all that—well-received of course and then there but what is sad in the affair is that in the bulletin of the Val-de-Sèvre of the end of the year Society of Saint Pius X, we see him in a photo there—the bishop—well we have the same phenomenon in Asia so we are—so when they do activities, things, they are very well with the diocese and there is all the more so in Asia the Filipinos are nice, they are polite and so the—Ah yes, you are er a weird animal and all that. Yes, welcome and all that. Yes. So we truly see this this collusion. So the Society has lost this this mission because it’s even in our constitution eh, to help priests in difficulty. It was the vocation of the Society of Saint Pius X at the origin and even the priests who were unfaithful. Even the priests who were er there. While well, in the resistance, Gideon's army, we nonetheless have quite a few priests who have baggage or well we help them, precisely we help them. We don't put their head under water, certain priests. Yeah. Er for there are certain priests, there are doubtful cases, we don't know but well the Society never wanted to determine by trial what they were about. We—we don't truly know how to go about it with these cases and so there are cases that aren't resolved.
So there, it’s this second part, the status of the resistance. So in France it’s not great. We never took off. We could have taken off, it’s the missed opportunities. Er but the rest of the world, there is nonetheless a lot of vitality in the rest of the world. For example, I—we come back from Ireland, Ireland is very well managed by Mr. Ballini. Apparently, I—I saw Ireland. So I—I’m going to put a little so as not to discourage the listeners regarding France. What is going to happen is that the the French, well we’ll talk about it a bit er the in the Society of Saint Pius X are mostly under the illusion of the future of the Society. There. In fact, they are that the Society is going to consecrate. They say "It’s going to consecrate, it’s good, things have continued as before." So once they realize that things are not going to go as they think, well, one can think that they will perhaps at that moment tell themselves "Ah, perhaps yes," but year after year, one has always hoped for something that would make a flip in the Society and it never happened. Yes, but there they will indeed be in front of a wall. There. No more bishop, no more—Well, they will have to have a Schneider to do—Ah, they have a Schneider, they have a ritualist.
Wonder Beast—the Society accepted the principle already. So, they can no longer refuse. If Rome says "We give you a bishop, er, a conservative bishop." There. And they hope that the Pontifical—has a good traditional bishop. There. And that Rome will do nothing, say nothing. That is a bit in the thought of these of these priests in France who imagine that things are going to go in that direction. Now that is an illusion because the 1988 consecrations are a challenge to the secular Republic. It’s a challenge to the system. Oh well it’s a challenge because it’s the first time—it’s the first time in the history of the modern church—modern church post Council of Trent where a bishop is named without the endorsement of the prince. Er without endorsement—because before the French Revolution, the Christian prince had a word to say. Yeah. And Napoleon reinforced the control of the nomination. It’s the Concordat of—all the good bishops got ejected. There. Er to guarantee to the the secular Republic the the nomination. And that’s why when there was the separation of church and state with Saint Pius X—finally after—Saint Pius X named bishops, regained control of the bishops. But after obviously this thing there—after we reconciled—the the Republic did a backtrack and reconciled to recover the nomination of bishops here. When Bishop Dupont was the bishop of Laval, eh, I am sure on Laval, when Bishop Dupont was named, he immediately thanked the state authorities—he owes his post—Ah, he owes his post to the ministry of cults. So for that we say that why? Because precisely the Society in France is in a in a in this case in fact. If they want to choose a bishop who is like in '88, they are going to alienate the Republic, the Republic, the ministry of cults, the cultural, the insurances and so a control—control all the real estate of—to talk about it again, they have been scanned or because that’s interesting, they had er—so they aren't simply held by canonical affairs, by the canonical bridge, by the compromises—the declaration of April 15, the erosion, the teaching in the seminaries and the the triumph of the liberal environment inside the Society, they are also held regarding—Ah well it’s very clear. Fact of their size. Can we really reproach them for it because they have such a large size? Well no, it’s logical. It’s logical eh? That’s why Williamson doesn't want large size. He doesn't want large size. He doesn't want a large entity because juridically one is much more—one gets trapped. One is forced to compose necessarily so as not to have police controls or warnings, er threats and all that, to see all the all the investment of the faithful, the work of the faithful year after year evaporate on a well simple a ministerial decision and there, so it goes fast eh? And what explains besides what happened with the story of Covid, the vaccine and all that, I think that the authorities of the Society say "if we are in contradiction with the civil authorities er, we close our chapels." And yes it’s it’s logical eh? So er yes, that’s what we were talking about, the status of tradition. So we a bit anticipated precisely there, we a bit anticipated the the what is the state of tradition in general. There.
So, tradition—so we will start by the head, eh? We will talk about the Pope. Head, of the Pope. Well, he is "lisse" (smooth). Leon the—he is smooth, he normalizes er it’s a a he is a fierce radical like Francis. Yes. So in his nominations of bishops, in his nominations of bishops, he is absolutely Luciferian in his nominations of bishops. It’s atrocious everywhere in the world. We even had the bishop of Sebu who is the—who was the bishop of Tagbilaran Bohol. Yeah, pro-LGBT and all that, all the letters of the alphabet. He gets off the plane at 10:00 in the evening and he is greeted by a dragon dance er because there are all the LGBT of—because Sebu is a den of of LGBT. The Philippines are—it’s the first country LGBT homo of the of the earth. They have 11% of ɧoɱosɛҳųαƖs in the population on parity with Thailand. Oh yes. And so Sebu and Manila are of er foyers, foyers of of—so and there is an advanced infestation of the Philippine clergy er by ɧoɱosɛҳųαƖity. So at his descent from the plane, well poof, there was an earthquake of magnitude 7 in the name of Sebu. There. Oh yes, that name there. Ah yes, okay. Yeah. And we at the seminary, we—at 10:00 in the evening, we—I felt it for a minute, it jiggled well. It reminded me of the the previous earthquake at Bohol er that I had felt in the same way with the er the aftershocks of the earthquake magnitude 6, 6 and a half, eh? And it was the same bishop who was bishop of the island of Bohol—earthquake. Yeah. So there. All that. So the knights had made a pilgrimage a few days before. Yeah, he goes into the the church of the pilgrimage, a beautiful church built by the Spanish. And the the there was a progressive priest in the process of preaching and said "it’s a privilege of sinning, it’s our compared to God, it’s our privilege of sinning." Oh incredible. Yeah. They said to themselves "that's not good, that." It’s the freedom of—the theory of Pope Francis. Theory of Pope Francis is that is that God loves the sinner as a sinner. As a sinner. It's—it's good. There. So Leon in his nominations, that we can say it’s not—it’s the—and it was him who made the promotions—posts—at the time of Francis already. So it’s only continuing, there, because he was at the capital post, what is called the congregation of bishops. So it’s a post that one doesn't notice but it’s a capital post er so it’s so imagine even if you have a Christian prince, Rome would seek to impose a Freemason. Before, we said "the Republic proposes a brother mason, the pope propo