@ABCCardinal@MarielaFretes2 As a Paraguayan, I feel deeply embarrassed by the image Senator Celeste Amarilla projects to the world. Her comments about the Kylian Mbappé case do not represent me or countless other Paraguayans.
@CelesteSenadora Si para defender una postura necesitas recurrir al insulto y a la burla confirma tu incapacidad para argumentar. La ignorancia es una elección.
@CelesteSenadora Qué curioso que alguien que presume de hacer ese tipo de gestos en el Senado crea tener autoridad para hablar de educación y respeto. Normalizar la vulgaridad no te hace valiente ni inteligente; solo demuestra el nivel del debate que eres capaz de sostener.
I’m no longer in public office, nor do I need to be paid to stand with a democratic ally.
I admire the Israeli people, who forged a nation out of the desert—a startup nation with the world’s highest VC per capita, the 2nd most publicly traded companies on @Nasdaq after the US.
‼️MY REACTION TO @McJuggerNuggets TURNING HIS ABORTION DECISION INTO CONTENT:
The one thing missing from the discussion was the person.
The child.
The human being at the center of it all.
And I couldn't stop thinking about something.
What would a person with Down syndrome think reading that tweet?
Having children is one of the most selfless acts a human being can undertake.
You are voluntarily accepting uncertainty.
The entire journey of parenthood is an exercise in loving someone whose future you cannot control.
That's the deal.
But somewhere along the way we've started treating children like consumer products.
We ask whether the child fits our plans.
Whether the child matches our expectations.
Whether the child will provide the experience we envisioned.
And when a diagnosis arrives that changes those expectations, the conversation often becomes about whether the child still meets the standard.
That isn't parenthood.
That's consumerism.
And then there is one final thing I can't shake.
The need to announce it.
Not to close friends.
Not to family.
To the entire world.
To a bunch of strangers online.
Maybe that's the part that disturbs me most.
Because we've entered a strange moment in our culture.
Every private experience must become content.
Every tragedy becomes a post.
Every intimate decision becomes engagement.
Every deeply personal moment becomes public consumption.
And I found myself wondering:
Was today the day that aborting your child became content?
As Christians, we believe every person is made in the image of God.
Every person.
Join me tonight in praying for both this couple, and the sweet soul that they sent to Heaven way too early.
NO white person alive today owned slaves. Teach your kids that.
NO black person alive today was born a slave. Teach your kids that.
Not all white people owned slaves back then. Teach your kids that.
Millions of white people fought and died to end slavery. Teach your kids that.
People should not inherit guilt from their ancestors. Teach your kids that.
People should not inherit victimhood from their ancestors. Teach your kids that.
You are responsible for your own actions, not the actions of people who lived 200 years ago. Teach your kids that.
America is not perfect, but it is not uniquely evil. Teach your kids that.
The West is responsible for some of humanity's greatest advances in freedom, science, medicine, and prosperity. Teach your kids that.
Loving your country is not racism. Teach your kids that.
Wanting secure borders is not racism. Teach your kids that.
Wanting safe communities is not racism. Teach your kids that.
Wanting merit over quotas is not racism. Teach your kids that.
Questioning political narratives is not racism. Teach your kids that.
People should be judged by their character, not their skin color. Teach your kids that.
History should be taught honestly, not used as a weapon. Teach your kids that.
A nation that teaches its children to hate their heritage will not survive. Teach your kids that.
Your country is your home. Protecting it is not something to be ashamed of. Teach your kids that.
You do not owe an apology for being born. Teach your kids that.
Never let fear of being called names stop you from speaking the truth as you see it. Teach your kids that.
Many of these individuals do not see these countries as their home. They do not feel loyalty to them, do not identify with their history, and have no intention of contributing to their future. They are not interested in serving, integrating, or becoming citizens in the fullest sense of the word. They are taught to view these societies as something to exploit: take the benefits, use the freedoms, leverage the welfare system, and demand more.
Their primary allegiance is often directed elsewhere ; to the Umma, to ideological, religious, and transnational causes that stand above national identity. As a result, every event becomes a potential spark: a football match, an election, an international conflict, a police incident, a cartoon, or a geopolitical controversy. The trigger itself is often secondary. What matters is the resentment, anger, and hostility that have been building underneath for years.
When that anger erupts, stores are looted, cars are burned, public spaces are vandalized, and entire neighborhoods are held hostage by chaos. The message is unmistakable: "We are here, we are angry, we do not respect your institutions, and we are taking over."
This phenomenon did not emerge overnight. It is the product of decades of unfiltered mass immigration, failed integration, ideological indoctrination, grievance narratives, identity politics, years of appeasement, separatist communities, radical preachers, and religious and social environments that encourage alienation rather than belonging. Too many young people have been raised to see the West not as a civilization worth defending, not as a place that welcomed them, gave them opportunities, and should be called home, but as an enemy to be resisted.
Europe faces a profound civilizational challenge. The question is no longer whether there is a problem. The question is whether there is still enough time, and enough political courage, to address it. In some countries, such as France, Belgium, and the United Kingdom, the damage may already be far more advanced than many are willing to admit.
@CP24 Terrific.
Now lets never forget the reprehensible piece of shit people - like the lady below -- who went out of their way to obstruct the search.
https://t.co/FV8t6mpOD6
This immigrant came to Canada at age 12, escaping the Islamic regime in Iran.
He was blown away by the peace, the Santa Claus parades, the kindness, and the freedom.
Now he’s watching newcomers bring the exact same poisonous ideology and division he fled — refusing to assimilate, demanding changes, and disrespecting the country that gave them a new life.
His message is crystal clear:
Blend in.
Mind your own business.
Hand out candy on Halloween.
Celebrate Christmas.
Respect women.
Or go home.
He even says he’ll be the first to buy the plane ticket.
This is a powerful reminder from someone who actually chose Canada — and loves the Canada he came to.
We need more voices like his.
Watch the full video 👇
#cdnpoli #Immigration #AssimilateOrGoHome #CanadaFirst
Meet the hidden heroes, The Grey Nuns. During the Irish famine in 1847 thousands of starving Irish immigrants washed up on Montreal's docks dying of typhus. The doctors fled, the priests hesitated and a mob tried to throw the sick into the river. Yet forty Catholic nuns walked in instead. They carried dying children in their arms, they nursed strangers and thirty of them caught the disease. Seven of them died, but they saved thousands yet nobody remembers them.
🇬🇧 “If I criticize a Jew, I'm antisemitic.
If I criticize a Muslim, I'm Islamophobic.
And what are you, if you criticize me?
What are you if you try to replace me?”
He has a point
Awwww😩😩😩❤️❤️, Cardinal Onayeikan and his brother priests singing in a restaurant in Rome 🇻🇦 I think, is the most beautiful thing you'd see today.
How is it that priests know how to sing so well????
Why do Bishops dress like this?
First of all, no, this is not a yarmulke. It’s called a ZUCHETTO, which means “little pumpkin”. It originally designed to keep the head warm, but also to serve as a reminder of spiritual protection. The color signifies ecclesiastical rank: black for priests, magenta for bishops, red for cardinals, and white for the pope.
Next, there is the MITRE. Its shape represents the tongues of fire which rested on the head of the Apostles, the first bishops of the Church. The two peaks, front and back, represent the Old and New Testaments, united on the Bishop’s head to highlight his responsibility to teach Scripture, and the lappets on the back: the spirit and the letter of the law.
Bishops also and always wear a cross on a chain over the chest, known as the PECTORAL CROSS. At Mass, the cross is attached to the Cordone, green and gold ceremonial chord. Historically, these often contained relics of the saints (is Pope Leo cross contains relics of Saint Augustine and Saint ) and the crosses that many people wear around their neck today actually derive from these pectoral crosses.
On the right hand, the bishop wears his EPISCOPAL RING, given to him at the time of his consecration. It symbolizes spiritual marriage of the bishop to the Church and of our fidelity to her even unto death.
Finally, we have the CROZIER. This staff is carried in procession or whenever the bishop walks from one place to another during the liturgy. It’s reminiscent of a shepherd’s crook, and serves as a reminder that bishops are to be shepherds who care for their flock and keeps them united within the fold of Christ, the Good Shepherd.