Anonymous ID: 6c79b3 March 17, 2020, 8:34 p.m. No.8457925   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7936 >>8520

7 Things You Didn't Know About St. Patrick

before the day is done, let’s cheer to Saint Patrick

 

Besides the familiar figure of a bishop clutching shamrock and crozier, how well do you know the man behind the dyed beer, rowdy parades, and wearin’ of the green? Here are seven things that may surprise you about Saint Patrick (ad 387–460).

 

We don’t know his name. When the pope authorized Patrick to evangelize Ireland, he prophetically named him Patricius, or “father of his people.” But a few guesses notwithstanding, nobody knows for sure what he was called before then.

 

He was well traveled. Born in Roman Britain, Patrick was abducted by Irish pirates as a youth and sold into slavery to a chieftain near Antrim, Ireland. Patrick labored as a shepherd for six years, until he was admonished by an angel to escape. He would come back to Erin twenty-four years later after having visions of Irish children pleading for him to preach them the Gospel. But before that, Patrick traveled from one end of the Continent to the other. In fact, his biography reads like a Forrest Gump tale (minus the mental disability), with the saint repeatedly encountering the who’s who of contemporary Christian Europe. He studied with St. Martin of Tours, prayed in the famous island monastery of Lérins in the south of France, was ordained a priest by St. Germanus of Auxerre, was consecrated a bishop by St. Maximus of Turin, and was given his commission to convert the Irish by Pope St. Celestine I. Celestine gave him the job, by the way, because the first missionary to Ireland had fled in terror.

 

He had a hard life. One St. Patrick’s Day, my wife and I decided to read the holy bishop’s autobiography, expecting sentimental stories of shamrocks pointing to the Trinity and of snakes grateful to leave dank bogs for warmer climes. We were in for a shock. When he returned to Ireland, Patrick did not have it easy. The Irish were notoriously difficult to reason with; at least a dozen times, local chieftains and Druids had Patrick and his companions beaten, robbed, and enchained. Even after his ultimate triumph over paganism, Patrick ended his days counting his losses and bitterly responding to his critics, who apparently were legion. Patrick’s autobiography, incidentally, takes its name from St. Augustine of Hippo’s famous Confessions, but going from Augustine’s Latin to Patrick’s is like shifting from a sporty Maserati to an old Ford Tempo.

 

He will be around on doomsday. After fasting and praying on a mountain, Patrick was given divine assurances that just as the original apostles will be judges of the twelve tribes of Israel (Matthew 19:28), he will be appointed judge of the entire Irish race at the end of time (drunken Micks the world over, beware). What is more, seven years before Judgment Day, the sea will cover Ireland to save its people from the tribulations of the Antichrist. When climate change submerges the Emerald Isle, start the clock.

 

He is the patron saint of Nigeria. Have you seen the T-shirts with a shamrock that say, “Kiss Me I’m Nigerian”? St. Patrick patronizes Nigeria thanks to the Irish missionaries who brought the Catholic faith to that African country in the nineteenth century. It is also the reason why, after the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland, Nigeria consumes more Guinness than any other nation, beating out fourth-ranked U.S.A.

 

He should be the patron saint of surfers and water-skiers. There are a host of colorful stories about the saint. According to one, Patrick was transporting a large altar stone from the Continent to Ireland when the captain denied passage to a leper. Patrick threw the stone into the sea, commanded it to float, and instructed the leper to sit on it. Leper and stone then cruised safely behind the ship.

 

He is the inspiration of a toast. Although historians believe that whiskey was developed by Irish monks in the twelfth century, there is a legend that Patrick used this “water of life” (the meaning of the Gaelic uisce beathe or “whiskey”) to teach a lesson in Christian virtue. During one of his missions, Patrick came across an innkeeper who gave him a glass of whiskey that was far from full. Patrick told the man that a devil was living in his cellar and causing him to be stingy, and that the only way the man could banish the fiend was by filling each glass to its brim. When Patrick returned later and saw that each cup was full, he proclaimed the devil duly exorcised. This story is honored on St. Patrick’s Day with the custom of Pota Pádraig (POTT-ah PAH-drig) or “Patrick’s Pot,” drinking a full measure of whiskey.

 

https://townhall.com/columnists/michaelfoley/2020/03/17/draft-n2564624

Anonymous ID: 6c79b3 March 17, 2020, 9:14 p.m. No.8458332   🗄️.is 🔗kun

FDR at Yalta, and why Joe Biden's mental acuity matters

 

On August 18, 1944, Senator Harry S. Truman met President Franklin D. Roosevelt for lunch at the White House. Truman had just been nominated to be Roosevelt’s running mate that year, and the two men dined on the White House lawn and chatted about the upcoming campaign.

 

Truman had not seen the president for over a year and was shocked at Roosevelt’s haggard appearance. He noticed that FDR was so ill that he couldn’t even pour cream into his coffee. Despite seeing direct evidence of Roosevelt’s poor health, Truman told reporters afterwards that Roosevelt “Looked fine…He’s as keen as a briar.”

 

Truman was lying. Roosevelt was a dying man, which was evident to everyone who saw him. But during the 1944 campaign, a conspiracy of silence reigned about his health. Roosevelt had a physical in the summer that showed he had high blood pressure and was suffering from congestive heart failure, but the results were kept from the public.

 

With the assistance of a compliant media that was overwhelmingly sympathetic to FDR, the issue of Roosevelt’s ability to serve four more years never materialized as a serious campaign issue.

 

Seventy-six years later, history is repeating itself. Any neutral observer can see that Joe Biden’s mental acuity is a serious question mark. Biden's public appeareances repeatedly provide evidence of cognitive decline. He is easily confused, he stumbles over his words, and at times he seems not to even know where he is. Now that Biden will almost certainly be the Democratic nominee, questions about his health should be front and center. But instead, the liberal media is circling the wagons and trying to create a narrative that it is immoral or conspiracy-mongering even to raise the issue.

 

The actual conspiracy is the one by the media to dismiss any inquiries into Biden’s capacity to serve as president. The same thing happened in 1944. Refusal to confront Roosevelt’s diminished capacity would later have serious and dire consequences. In February 1945, a dangerously ill Roosevelt traveled to Yalta to meet with Winston Churchill and Josef Stalin to discuss the future of post-war Europe. At Yalta, FDR effectively surrendered Poland and most of Eastern Europe to the Soviets. During the conference, Roosevelt lacked the stamina to keep up Stalin, and the agreements they reached reflected the poor state of FDR’s health.

 

Yalta should serve as a warning to what can happen when a president is materially unfit, physically or mentally, to serve in office. Biden’s health should and must be an issue, if not the key issue during the campaign. We mustn’t let history repeat itself.

 

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/op-eds/fdr-at-yalta-and-why-joe-bidens-mental-acuity-matters