Friday, January 3, 2020

Time Magazine Loves Two Popes Propaganda Piece

Edit: even homophile Robber Baron didn’t like this movie on his Turd on Fire blog. As usual, Time puppets something false to be true. Of course, Robber Baron doesn’t go so far as to describe the scheming of his Old Liberal Bernardinian Patrons of the Sankt Gallen Mafia, against canon law, but he makes some interesting points.

Anyhow, you should probably not be shocked that the publication where Blair Kaiser got his break from Claire Booth Luce is a sly promoter of the progressivist agenda.

Of course the Bugmen and Pedos on Rotten Tomatoes love this film.

[Time] At the world’s oldest institutions, change is never something to be taken lightly. And nowhere is that more true than in the Roman Catholic Church, one of the oldest institutions in the world, where in recent decades the priestly leadership has faced a now-familiar debate: whether, in changing times, to adapt to new expectations or hold fast to the old ways. 
That debate is at the center of The Two Popes, a new film from writer Anthony McCarten (Darkest HourBohemian Rhapsody) and director Fernando Meirelles (City of God), now streaming on Netflix. Inspired by true events, the movie centers around Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio (Jonathan Pryce), the soon-to-be elected Pope Francis, and the aging Pope Benedict XVI (Anthony Hopkins). Their ideological and temperamental differences, and the theological debates that spring from them, drive the movie’s action as the leaders spar over the future of 21st-century organized religion. And though much of the movie is fictional, those very real debates have consequences far beyond the cloistered enclave of the Vatican, with the Church’s determinations on issues like celibacy among priests and the role of women in the Church having ramifications for the lives of the world’s more than one billion Catholics.
Here’s the true story behind The Two Popes
Edit: a brief check of the author’s twitter feed reveals him to be a bugman.

AMDG

4 comments:

  1. What’s a bug man ? Entomologist like Alfred Kinsey?

    ReplyDelete
  2. So the American pop culture hates Catholicism. This is news?

    ReplyDelete
  3. A bugger like Kinsey

    ReplyDelete