CLAS[1-99]
This Video Will Get Donald Trump Elected
Waging war on the federal government IS sedition and treason, punishable by death.
Treason (U.S. Constitution, Art. III, Sec. 3)
Definition: Levying war against the U.S. or adhering to its enemies, giving them aid and comfort.
Proof: Requires two witnesses to the same overt act or confession in open court.
Penalty: Death or at least five years imprisonment and a $10,000 fine (equivalent to over $200k today).
Seditious Conspiracy (18 U.S. Code § 2384)
Definition: A conspiracy (agreement by two or more people) to overthrow, destroy, or by force oppose the U.S. government, or to hinder any U.S. law by force.
Focus: Often involves planning or taking steps (like disrupting elections) to stop government functions, as seen in the January 6 prosecutions.
Penalty: Up to 20 years imprisonment, fines, or both.
Key Difference
Treason is a constitutional crime involving direct betrayal, often against foreign enemies.
Sedition (specifically seditious conspiracy) is a statutory crime focusing on internal plots to overthrow the government or obstruct laws by force, making it a serious but distinct charge from treason.
Gathering evidence….
>>24036626
Grunting, cooing, sighing, vocalization without language induction grooming children before language acquisition.
plus olfactory, gustation.
Add chem/bio agency
Add radiological
Full sensory limbic subliminal
Cortical responses gaslight fear trauma
Subarachnid extracts
And? Lotus?
AI Overview
+5
Ignatius of Loyola: Founder of Jesuit order | Daily Sabah
Ignatius of Loyola (born Íñigo López de Loyola) was the Spanish soldier-turned-priest who founded the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) in 1534, after a life-altering leg injury in battle led to a spiritual transformation and devotion to Christ, becoming their first Superior General and authoring the Spiritual Exercises.
Key Details:
Origin: Born in Loyola, Spain, around 1491, he was initially a worldly knight seeking glory.
Conversion: A severe cannonball injury at Pamplona in 1521 forced a long recovery, during which he read religious texts, leading to his profound conversion.
Founding the Jesuits: He gathered companions, including Francis Xavier and Peter Faber, taking vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, forming the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) in Paris.
Actually a soldier.
Infiltration, not invasion.
AI Overview
+5
>Ignatius of Loyola: Founder of Jesuit order
>Actually a soldier.
>Infiltration, not invasion
AI Overview
+8
Jesuit liberation theology is a vibrant Catholic movement, strongly championed by Jesuit leaders like Pedro Arrupe, that interprets the Gospel through the eyes of the poor, emphasizing God's preferential option for the oppressed and advocating for social justice, human rights, and structural change to alleviate poverty and inequality, drawing from Latin American realities but facing Vatican scrutiny for its Marxist influences.
Key Principles & Characteristics:
Preferential Option for the Poor:
A core idea that God identifies with the poor and marginalized, making their liberation a central Christian mission.
Reading Scripture from the Bottom Up:
Instead of starting with doctrine, it begins with the lived experiences of the oppressed to reinterpret the Gospel's call to justice.
Praxis over Orthodoxy:
Focuses on "orthopraxis" (right action) as crucial, fostering a symbiotic relationship with "orthodoxy" (right belief).
Incarnation in the People:
Sees Christ present in the struggles and popular religious expressions of the poor, especially in Latin America.
Jesuit Involvement:
Leadership:
Figures like Arrupe defended Jesuits working in this area, seeing their activism as honoring Christ's suffering.
Key Figures:
Jesuits like Juan Luis Segundo and Jon Sobrino were prominent theologians.
Institutional Support:
Jesuit schools and universities became centers for this work, aiming for an apostolic impact by being a "church of the poor".
Pope Francis:
As the first Jesuit Pope, his papacy reflects a strong alignment with liberation themes, having been influenced by liberation theologians like Juan Carlos Scannone.
Origins & Context:
Latin America:
Emerged in the 1950s/60s, addressing vast wealth gaps and power imbalances.
Post-Vatican II:
Inspired by the Second Vatican Council's call for Church renewal and engagement with the world.
Controversies:
Marxist Influence:
Critics, including the Vatican, raised concerns about its use of Marxist analysis to understand oppression, fearing it distorted the Gospel.
Reinterpretation:
Some felt its focus on human experience led to subjective readings, while others saw it as a vital call to action against systemic sin, notes U.S. Catholic magazine.
Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org
Pope Francis
Papacy (2013–2025) Francis was the first Jesuit pope. This was a significant appointment because of the sometimes tense relations
The Counter Reformation
The Counter Reformation
The Protestant Reformation prompted the Roman Catholic Church to reform itself from the top down.
Learning Objectives
Discuss the religious and political developments associated with the Counter-Reformation.
Key Terms / Key Concepts
Council of Trent: council of the Roman Catholic Church set up in direct response to the Reformation in Trento, Italy
Ignatius Loyola (1491 – 1556): the founder of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits)
The Counter-Reformation
The Protestant Reformation resulted in large areas of Europe defecting from the Roman Catholic Church. However, many Christians in Italy, Spain, and France, for example, remained loyal to the Catholic church. Some church reformers wished to end corrupt practices in the Roman Catholic Church, while still supporting the institution. For example, Erasmus of Rotterdam (1466 – 1536)—the Dutch Humanist—and the English Humanist Thomas More (1478 – 1532) were both vocal critics of corruption and abuses within the Roman Catholic Church, but both refused to abandon this church. In fact, the English king Henry VIII executed Thomas More on the charge of treason when More refused to reject the Pope as the head of the Church. Eventually reform did take place within the Roman Catholic Church in the 16th century as a response to the defection of so many Christians to the Protestant churches. Historians refer to these reforms as the Counter-Reformation or the Catholic Reformation.
Since the Roman Catholic Church possessed a strict hierarchical structure, sweeping reform within the church could only be implemented from the very top of the hierarchy by the Pope himself. Pope Paul III (Alessandro Farnese, r. 1534 – 1549) was an unlikely reformer. He belonged to a powerful, aristocratic family in Central Italy; he had become a Cardinal in the church through nepotism since his older sister, Giulia was the mistress of Pope Alexander VI. Pope Paul III summoned the Council of Trent in1545to address the issue of church reform. Earlier Popes had resisted summoning such a council for fear that that a church council could limit the authority of the Papacy within the church. The Council of Trent convened for nineteen years until 1563. The members of the council debated whether to adopt the reforms proposed by Martin Luther or to affirm support for existing church practices and doctrines. In general church leaders from northern Europe at this council tended to support Luther's ideas, whereas church leaders from Spain and Italy were more conservative and wished to see no changes in practices and doctrines. In the end the conservatives were victorious in this debate. The focus of reform, therefore, in the Counter-Reformation was on ending abuse and corruption within the church rather than adopting new doctrines or practices. For example, the Council of Trent affirmed the belief in Purgatory and in papal indulgences but condemned the selling of indulgences as a fund-raising scheme. The Council also sought to purge the church of uneducated, corrupt priests by requiring priests to receive more education and training.
https://oercommons.org/courseware/lesson/87869/student-old/
Called the Sacred Roman and Universal Inquisition when it was instituted in1542, the congregation was initially a tribunal exclusively for cases of heresy and schism, but soon its responsibilities were expanded to include “everything relating directly or indirectly to faith and morals,” according to the congregation’s website.
Of the many people examined in the early days, the one mentioned most often is Italian scientist Galileo Galilei, who was found “vehemently suspect of heresy.” St. John Paul II issued a declaration in 1992, recognizing the error of Galileo’s trial.
The Index of Forbidden Books was originally entrusted to the Inquisition until it became its own congregation for three centuries until 1917 when its duties were again handed back to the Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office — the Inquisition’s new name after it was reorganized by Pope Pius X in 1908.
It was again reformed in1965by St. Paul VI and renamed the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. The Index of Prohibited Books was also abrogated.
https://www.americamagazine.org/faith/2021/02/02/vatican-office-doctrine-inquisition-239898/
AI Overview
Vatican II at 60: A timeline of key moments | Catholic News …
The Second Vatican Council (Vatican II) was the 21st ecumenical council of the Catholic Church, convened by Pope John XXIII (and concluded under Pope Paul VI) from1962 to 1965, aiming to update the Church for the modern world throughaggiornamento (bringing up to date)
>Somaliland
FAWXsnooze with the antiShemitism…
The Times of Israel
https://www.timesofisrael.com
Israel becomes first country to recognize breakaway …
1 day ago — Israel on Friday became the first country to recognize the Republic of Somaliland as an
https://www.timesofisrael.com/israel-becomes-first-country-to-recognize-breakaway-somaliland-as-independent-state/
>1- Their unequivocal rejection of Israel’s recognition of the “Somaliland” region of the Federal Republic of Somalia on 26 December 2025, given the serious repercussions of such unprecedented measure on peace and security in the Horn of Africa, the Red Sea, and its serious effects on international peace and security as a whole, which also reflects Israel’s full and blatant disregard to international law.
PEACE IN THE MIDDLE EAST
Homs to ISIL
Crap snacks?