The Real Enemy Within
AFTER attending the Tridentine (Latin) Mass for twelve years and attending various events and pilgrimages organised by the Society of St. Pius X (SSPX), I finally left the Catholic Church in 1997. Unlike many people who gravitate beyond a particular belief-system or who come to reject an ideological position of some kind, I have never attacked Catholicism in any way, shape or form and still retain a semblance of respect for some of its values and traditions. However, in the face of the growing hypocrisy that surrounds the perceived 'threat' of Islam it is becoming more and more difficult to remain silent.
During my time with the SSPX we adopted the theological position that whilst the Pope was not a heretic, he was still leading a church which has become increasingly more liberal since the early-1960s and the reforms carried out by the Second Vatican Council. Criticising the modern-day Church, therefore, is less about attacking Catholicism than simply coming to terms with the syncretism, ecumenicalism, financial corruption and widespread child abuse that marks its continuing slide towards apostasy. Whilst many people have applauded Pope Francis for his pronouncements on social justice and capitalist exploitation, in reality he is little more than a diplomatic mouthpiece for the globalist establishment. A shepherd, if you will, employed by wolves.
Returning to the matter of hypocrisy, therefore, I am referring to those Catholics on the Right who exaggerate the threat of Islam yet continue to follow a religion dominated by a man who kisses and bathes the feet of economic migrants and who encourages schoolchildren to embrace mass immigration. Islam may have its lunatic fringe, but its violent followers do not represent the overwhelming majority of Muslims themselves and the man who heads a liberal church with 1.2 billion adherents is a far more dangerous prospect for the ethnic and cultural values of Europe.


