Anonymous ID: 073929 June 1, 2023, 1:08 a.m. No.18933775   🗄️.is 🔗kun

| KJZZ

Scottsdale church: We did not host 'QAnon Shaman' event

An infamous Jan. 6 rioter known as the "QAnon Shaman" marked his release from a halfway home by speaking in north Scottsdale this past weekend.

7 hours ago

 

The Salt Lake Tribune

Bagley Cartoon: QAnon Quackery

search-menu. The Salt Lake Tribune Logo Top · SUBSCRIBE LOG IN SUBSCRIBE login icon. Bagley Cartoon: QAnon Quackery. QAnon Quackery | Pat Bagley.

10 hours ago

 

Metro UK

From witches to QAnon: debunking ‘satanic panic’ conspiracy theories

In the UK and beyond, there's a long history of claims of secret, Satan-worshipping cults that ritualistically abuse and sacrifice children.

16 hours ago

 

Raw Story

Trump-loving QAnon candidate with sketchy military record ends bid for Congress

J.R. Majewski, a controversial pro-Trump activist whose campaign for Congress imploded spectacularly in 2022, was all set to make another run for office…

17 hours ago

 

AZCentral

'QAnon Shaman' Jake Angeli says he's a new man – and he's got merch to sell you

Within hours of his release from a halfway house, the painted face of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot was hawking merchandise. God bless America.

18 hours ago

 

The Underground Bunker

You know you need these QAnon Shaman yoga pants, patriot

Some links to Q-related items today. Advertisement. The QAnon Shaman is out of prison, so of course he's now selling yoga leggings with his face on…

18 hours ago

 

AZCentral

State Sen. Janae Shamp shared QAnon slogans on Facebook

Shamp denied using a QAnon slogan for her recent COVID-19 hearing, but Facebook posts show she's shared QAnon content before.

19 hours ago

 

American Thinker

Making QAnon scary again

Globalists are reviving the QAnon bogeyman for the 2024 election, ignoring its interment after 2020. It was mothballed after successfully lulling..

21 hours ago

 

YouTube

QAnon Shaman Gets Released From Prison Immediately Launches Grift

QAnon Shaman Jacob Chansley is out of prison and now selling merch. Cenk Uygur and Ana Kasparian discuss on The Young Turks.

1 day ago

 

The Toronto Star

The QAnon Shaman is free, but his remorse for the Jan. 6 riot may still be behind bars

The QAnon Shaman is out of prison and eager to make some coin. On Jan. 6, 2021, when MAGA maniacs stormed the U.S. Capitol in an orgy of violence and mayhem…

1 day ago

Anonymous ID: 073929 June 1, 2023, 1:12 a.m. No.18933777   🗄️.is 🔗kun

HuffPost

Fox News' Juan Williams Bursts Out Laughing Over Donald Trump Boast

Fox News' liberal-leaning political pundit Juan Williams couldn't help but laugh on air at one of former President Donald Trump's more bombastic claims.

1 hour ago

 

CBS News

Investigators obtains audio of Trump discussing classified document, sources say

Jack Smith, the Justice Department's special counsel investigating whether former President Donald Trump mishandled classified documents after leaving…

2 hours ago

 

Axios

Trump-DeSantis feud turns vicious as surrogates level personal attacks online

Trump doesn't just want to defeat DeSantis — he's out to destroy his political career.

2 hours ago

 

Rolling Stone

Inside Trump and DeSantis’ Ugly Feud Over The Babylon Bee

Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis' teams are scrambling to secure online influencers, including The Babylon Bee.

3 hours ago

 

The Daily Beast

Trump Lawyer Gets Cagey When Asked About Secret Docs Tape

Trump lawyer James Trusty was questioned Wednesday about a CNN report claiming that federal prosecutors investigating the former president's potential…

3 hours ago

 

HuffPost

Ex-Trump Attorney: Prosecutors Have 'Their Foot On His Neck' In Obstruction Case

Ty Cobb, who served in the Trump White House, said new recording "eviscerates" Trump's already-weak defense.

3 hours ago

 

YouTube

Lordy! Special counsel reportedly has audio of Trump talking about secret document he kept

48K views 1 hour ago #msnbc #trump #jacksmith. Mary McCord, former principal deputy assistant attorney general for the National Security Division,…

3 hours ago

 

Newsweek

Report of Trump Recording Adds to Pile of 'Smoking Gun Evidence': Kirschner

CNN reported that prosecutors have obtained a July 2021 audio recording of Trump speaking about a classified Pentagon document in his possession.

3 hours ago

 

AP News

Trump returns to campaign trail in Iowa as GOP rival DeSantis makes case to New Hampshire voters

Former President Donald Trump returns to the campaign trail Thursday as his chief rival for the GOP presidential nomination, Florida Gov.

4 hours ago

Anonymous ID: 073929 June 1, 2023, 1:18 a.m. No.18933780   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Will Pope Francis Speak Out After Catholics Helped Pass Uganda’s Harsh New Anti-Gay Law?

June 1, 2023 by Robert Shine, Managing Editor

At least one diocese in Uganda has applauded the country’s president for signing a new law further criminalizing LGBTQ+ people, including adding thedeath penaltyas a sanction. Catholic politicians also were key to the law’s passage. Ahead of passing the law, LGBTQ+ advocates appealed to Pope Francis for intervention. Will he do so now?

 

Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni signed the the Anti-Homosexuality Act into law last week. While the country already criminalized homosexuality, the new law intensifies punishments, such as imposing the death penalty for so-called “aggravated homosexuality,” life imprisonment for any same-gender sexual activity, and possible forced conversion therapy. It could also target people simply for “promoting” homosexuality, which could impair not only LGBTQ+ advocates, but efforts to combat HIV/AIDS.

 

Several high-profile Catholics applauded the law’s passage. Fr. Pius Male, chancellor for the Archdiocese of Kampala, told The Monitor that the church was grateful that Museveni signed the law because Scripture is clear in opposing homosexuality. Anita Annet Among, the speaker of Parliament who is Catholic and helped shepherd the law, tweeted, “I thank my colleagues the Members of Parliament for withstanding all the pressure from bullies and doomsday conspiracy theorists in the interest of our country.” Charles Onen, a key legislator behind the law, is a Catholic and a former priest.

The effort to intensify anti-LGBTQ+ criminalization in Uganda dates back to 2009. A similar law was passed in 2014, but the country’s highest court struck it down on procedural grounds. Throughout that time, pro-LGBTQ+ Catholics have urged Pope Francis to condemn this effort through a variety of efforts, including New Ways Ministry’s #PopeSpeakOut campaign.

 

The pope’s words could have a significant impact given 40% of Uganda’s population is Catholic, the second-largest Catholic population in Africa. Indeed, when the Anti-Homosexuality Act passed the legislature this past March, Episcopal priest Rev. Kapya Kaoma commented that “only person who can make a difference now in Africa is Pope Francis.” Kaoma, who has documented U.S. Christians’ anti-gay efforts in parts of Africa, commented further to Religion Unplugged:

“‘The only solution to the plight of LGBT persons in Africa is Pope Francis. . .If Pope Francis would say that he doesn’t want any Roman Catholic priest, nor any Roman Catholic Bishop, to sign onto a law that criminalizes LGBT people in Africa, then the bill in Uganda dies. All the bills in Africa will die. His bishops, his priests are the ones championing the criminalization of LGBT people in Africa. . .Roman Catholic bishops are on the forefront of these bills.’

 

Ahead of Museveni’s signing, offering another perspective on the pope’s involvement was Graeme Reid, director of LGBT rights at Human Rights Watch. He wrote in The Advocate, citing Francis’ condemnation of criminalization laws at the beginning of this year:

 

“‘Being homosexual isn’t a crime,’ Pope Francis said. ‘We are all children of God, and God loves us as we are and for the strength that each of us fights for our dignity.’ He subsequently added that ‘Criminalizing people with homosexual tendencies is an injustice.’ And that ‘Criminalization is a serious problem.’ These are welcome statements from Pope Francis, renewing emphasis on existing Catholic Church doctrine that condemns violence, criminal penalties, and unjust discrimination based on sexual orientation. . .[Indeed,] Pope Francis himself could fall foul of this odious law.”

 

The reality is that after trying for nearly fifteen years, anti-LGBTQ+ Ugandan politicians and their U.S. Christian allies, have successfully imposed one of the world’s harshest criminalization laws, often with the support of prominent Catholics and church leaders. Frank Mugisha, Uganda’s leading LGBTQ+ advocate who is Catholic, commented on this new reality:

“‘There’s fear that this law will embolden many Ugandans to take the law into their hands. This law will put so many people at risk. And that creates anxiety and fear.'”

Pope Francis’ general condemnation of anti-LGBTQ+ laws, which he has repeated multiple times this year, is commendable. But the situation in Uganda, where leading Catholics are complicit in the passage of this inhumane law, requires a clear, specific, and forceful condemnation from the pope. Even if the Anti-Homosexuality Act is now law, it is not too late for Francis to try to reduce hostilities and mitigate harm, particularly from the vigilantism that Frank Mugisha foresees. The pope has an opportunity to save lives if only he would speak out.

https://www.newwaysministry.org/2023/06/01/will-pope-francis-speak-out-after-catholics-helped-pass-ugandas-harsh-new-anti-gay-law/

Anonymous ID: 073929 June 1, 2023, 1:26 a.m. No.18933785   🗄️.is 🔗kun

California has investigated Catholic priest sex abuse for years. Victims want answers on what they found

Investigation began in 2018, but still no official report

By John Woolfolk | jwoolfolk@bayareanewsgroup.com | Bay Area News Group

PUBLISHED: May 31, 2023 at 4:33 p.m. | UPDATED: May 31, 2023 at 4:44 p.m.

 

After Pennsylvania authorities issued a bombshell report in 2018 detailing widespread sexual abuse of children and coverup in the Roman Catholic church, California’s attorney general invited victims here to share their stories. The next year, the state subpoenaed half of California’s Roman Catholic dioceses.

 

What California authorities have learned since remains a mystery.

And for victims of long-ago abuse seeking justice in the courts while the state’s dioceses increasingly seek bankruptcy protection, the silence is a growing aggravation — especially as other states, notably Illinois and Maryland, recently issued their own reports, revealing a devastating past of abuse by hundreds of clergy of thousands of children.

 

“The public deserves to know what you have already uncovered,” SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said in a letter Wednesday to California Attorney General Rob Bonta. “We urge you to release a report, or at least a preliminary report, about what you have found concerning child sexual abuse in the church in California.”

 

Bonta’s office did not respond Wednesday. The attorney general’s office, which was under Xavier Becerra when the subpoenas were issued in 2019, has for years declined to confirm or deny that an investigation of sex abuse in the Roman Catholic Church is underway.

 

Like California, the Illinois and Maryland attorney general also began their investigation of Catholic clergy child sex abuse after the 2018 Pennsylvania report, which found more than 300 clerics in multiple dioceses had abused more than 1,000 children over 70 years.

 

On May 23, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul — who, like Bonta, took over an ongoing probe begun by a predecessor — released a nearly 700-page report on Catholic clergy child sex abuse. At the time its investigation began, only two dioceses had identified 103 credibly accused priests. The report found 451 Catholic clerics and religious brothers had abused at least 1,997 children across the state’s dioceses.

https://www.mercurynews.com/2023/05/31/california-has-investigated-catholic-priest-sex-abuse-for-years-victims-want-answers-on-what-they-found/

 

If the other investigations are any basis for speculation… California is going to be a big badda boom.

Anonymous ID: 073929 June 1, 2023, 1:26 a.m. No.18933786   🗄️.is 🔗kun

On April 4, Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown released a report on an investigation begun in 2018 that found 156 Catholic priests and others associated with the Archdiocese of Baltimore had sexually abused more than 600 children over 80 years, often continuing after victims reported the abuse.

 

Similar probes by other state attorneys general, including in New York, are pending. New York did sue the Diocese of Buffalo in 2020, alleging it protected accused priests by quietly removing them from ministry. Last October, Attorney General Letitia James reached a settlement requiring that diocese to report complaints of clergy sexual abuse through a court-ordered compliance program for five years.

The shocking breadth of the Catholic Church’s sex abuse scandal began to surface through lawsuits and law enforcement reports across the country and around the world in the 1980s and 1990s, before erupting in 2002 following reports in the Boston Globe about widespread clergy sex abuse in the Archdiocese of Boston.

 

Later that year, U.S. bishops adopted the the “Dallas Charter” for the protection of children, revised several times since, committing to a “zero tolerance” policy for priests credibly accused of abusing kids, and requiring mandatory reporting to civil authorities.

But dioceses are still confronting waves of litigation over decades-old abuse of children who are now in late middle-age — by clerics who have since died or retired long ago. A California law, AB 218, signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom, allowed older victims to file civil claims over a three-year period from 2020 through 2022 that otherwise would be barred by the statute of limitations.

 

The law has led to a torrent of lawsuits filed not only against the Catholic Church and other religious organizations, but also youth programs, from sports leagues to the Boy Scouts. According to SNAP, nearly 1,600 cases have been filed against the eight dioceses in northern California, which are being handled in Alameda County Superior Court.

The alleged abuse in those claims involves more than 300 California parishes and 30 parochial high schools. While seven of the eight northern California dioceses have published their own lists of credibly accused clergy, totaling 299 people, SNAP said that the wave of recent lawsuits suggests the total number is likely to be triple that.

 

Several California dioceses are seeking or considering bankruptcy protection in federal court — Santa Rosa and Oakland have done so, the San Diego Diocese says it will file in November, and Sacramento is considering the option. Bishops say it will produce the fairest settlement of the hundreds of lawsuits they face while allowing dioceses to continue their ministry work.

 

But SNAP argues the move is aimed at limiting public exposure of how the church handled victims’ complaints, and ultimately, the size of payouts. To that end, the advocacy group argues that a report by the attorney general would benefit abuse victims.

“Survivors will be shortchanged if (dioceses) go bankrupt,” said SNAP treasurer Dan McNevin, a former Corpus Christi Church altar boy in Fremont who received part of an Oakland diocese settlement in 2005. “And all of us will be shortchanged because we won’t get the full information about what went on.”

https://www.mercurynews.com/2023/05/31/california-has-investigated-catholic-priest-sex-abuse-for-years-victims-want-answers-on-what-they-found/