Anonymous ID: 94019c May 9, 2023, 9:06 a.m. No.18820406   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0561 >>0652 >>0917 >>1040 >>1104

>>18820392

>he could have

Shoulda, woulda, coulda.

 

>Western Alliance.

 

Western Alliance Bancorp (WAL) is a bank holding company, which offers business and personal banking and related financial solutions through its subsidiaries. Its offerings include deposit services, lending, international banking, treasury management and online banking solutions.

 

https://www.westernalliancebancorporation.com/

Anonymous ID: 94019c May 9, 2023, 9:21 a.m. No.18820445   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0450 >>0458

>>18820422

> the government would have to

KEK

 

Sounds like xactly what they wanted. What you're splaining Lucy, is Klaus' 2023 you'll own nothing, and be happy. shit. Universal income. Flat rate. Digital Pay Prisons

Anonymous ID: 94019c May 9, 2023, 9:29 a.m. No.18820469   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0496 >>0603

>>18820433

>just a meme for normies

Normies, typically aren't on the Same Social Media Spots, where said Meme's, would Wake anyone up.

This is where Anon's are a touch much out of alignment with reality themselves.

Twatter ISN'T waking up shit.

Look around outside Social Media.

 

Only base shit off real life interactions. Nothing from Social, TV, Radio etc.

If you don't see it IRL, it's nothing more than entertainment.

Anonymous ID: 94019c May 9, 2023, 9:36 a.m. No.18820490   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0561 >>0652 >>0917 >>1040 >>1104

Ousted Caritas chief denounces Vatican 'power grab'

 

VATICAN CITY (AP) — The Vatican’s main charitable organization, Caritas Internationalis, is hoping to open a new chapter this week after Pope Francis fired top managers over bullying complaints. But the recently ousted head is fighting back, claiming the Vatican engaged in a “brutal power grab” fueled by a “colonialist” attitude.

 

The drama is playing out as the Caritas General Assembly meets May 11-16 to elect new leaders following more than a decade of turmoil and a damaging sex abuse scandal in central Africa. The gathering is a key step in Francis' efforts to renew the Vatican-based confederation of 162 national chapters that is one of the most visible aid groups in the world.

 

In an extraordinary display of papal power, Francis last November fired the Caritas secretary general, Aloysius John; the Caritas president, Filipino Cardinal Antonio Tagle; and Tagle's vice presidents, the treasurer and ecclesiastic assistant. The Holy See said an outside investigation had found “real deficiencies” in management that had affected staff morale at the Caritas secretariat in Rome.

 

There was no evidence of financial wrongdoing or sexual misconduct. But former employees described a toxic workplace environment under John, where staffers were bullied, harassed and humiliated. Several quit, giving up sought-after, income tax-free Vatican employment rather than remain in abusive conditions.

 

When they began complaining internally in 2021, the Caritas board investigated but declined to take action. The complaints continued, prompting the Vatican to step in and launch an independent, external inquiry. The results led to the Nov. 22 papal decree removing Tagle and the Caritas leadership and naming temporary administrators to govern until elections this week.

 

John said nothing at the time of his ouster. But on the eve of the assembly to elect his successor, he has broken six months of silence and penned an eight-page open letter to the Caritas network in a bid to tell his side of the story. The Associated Press obtained a copy of the letter, as well as an accompanying one from John’s predecessor that similarly blasted the “brutality” of the sackings.

 

In the letter, John insisted that Caritas was functioning well and was in good financial shape when he was fired, and said he had sought the independent inquiry so he could better support staff who had complained. He said the Vatican’s decision to fire him was “made in haste, with incredible violence and very poor public communication,” and had “discredited the church and one of its jewels, Caritas Internationalis.”

 

“It is a brutal power grab,” he wrote of the takeover by the Vatican's development office.

 

John, a French citizen of Indian descent, framed his ouster in racial terms. He said Caritas leaders from wealthier “Northern” regions had wanted to impose their will on the confederation and had never wanted a Caritas leader from the “South.”

 

In response, Caritas Internationalis said it has spent the past six months on a “journey of renewal and communion” based on Francis’ decree calling for a reform of the organization. Francis recently approved new statutes for Caritas Internationalis that will be presented to delegates at the meeting starting this week.

 

“We are preparing for it to be a time of joyful encounter, of sincere dialogue and mutual listening, aimed at building together the future path of fraternal cooperation, at the service of the poor and the most vulnerable,” Caritas said in a statement to AP.

 

The hope is that the new elections will close out a deeply problematic chapter for Caritas Internationalis that dates back a decade, including the Vatican's abrupt decision in 2011 not to allow the secretary general at the time to seek a second term because she wasn't promoting Caritas' “Catholic identity” enough.

 

More recently, John’s 2019-2022 tenure was problematic from the start. He failed to initially win a majority of votes in the Caritas election, even after other candidates dropped out or were prevented by the Vatican from running.

 

Though he eventually won the vote, John didn’t have a strong mandate to lead and was immediately plunged into a crisis over a sex abuse scandal in the Central African Republic dating from the term of his predecessor, Michel Roy.

 

more

https://www.yahoo.com/news/ousted-caritas-chief-denounces-vatican-090224563.html