The Unholy Alliance Between George Soros and Pope Francis
The
election of a liberal Jesuit to the papacy thrilled Democrats in the
United States, whose unholy alliance with the Catholic left goes back
many decades. Barack Obama, one of the pope’s most prominent supporters,
has long been a beneficiary of that alliance. The faculty at Jesuit
Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., ranked as one of the top
donors to his campaign.
In a grim irony, Obama, whose presidency substantially eroded
religious freedom in America, rose to power not in spite of the Catholic
Church but because of it. The archdiocese of Chicago helped bankroll
his radicalism in the 1980s. As he recounts in his memoirs, he began his
work as a community organizer in the rectory rooms of Holy Rosary
parish on Chicago’s South Side. The Alinskyite organization for which he
worked — the Developing Communities Project — received tens of
thousands of dollars from the Catholic Campaign for Human Development.
Obama was close to the late Chicago Cardinal Joseph Bernardin. A
proponent of the “Seamless Garment” movement within the Catholic Church
in the 1980s, a movement that downplayed abortion and emphasized
political liberalism, Bernardin was drawn to the socialism and
relativism of the liberal elite. He was so “gay-friendly” that he
requested that the “Windy City Gay Chorus” perform at his funeral. He
embodied Obama’s conception of a “good” bishop and one can see in his
admixture of left-wing politics and relativistic nonjudgmental theology a
foreshadowing of the rise of Pope Francis.
Cardinal Bernardin put pressure on his priests to work with Obama and
even paid for Obama’s plane fare out to a 1980 training session in Los
Angeles organized by Saul Alinsky’s Industrial Areas Foundation. The
conference was held at a Catholic college in Southern California, Mount
St. Mary’s, which has long been associated with Alinsky’s group.
This alliance between the Catholic left and the Democratic left
explains the honorary degree Obama received from Notre Dame in 2009,
even as he plotted to persecute the Church under Obamacare’s
contraceptive and abortifacient mandate. Notre Dame’s former president,
Fr. Theodore Hesburgh, who supported honoring Obama, had been close to
Monsignor John Egan, the socialist who started the Catholic Campaign for
Human Development and sat on Saul Alinsky’s Industrial Areas Foundation
board.
The unholy alliance also explains how the Democratic Party, despite
its support for abortion and gay marriage, won a majority of the
Catholic vote in Obama’s two presidential elections. At the 2012
Democratic convention in Charlotte, nuns such as Sister Simone Campbell
shared the stage with abortion activists from Planned Parenthood. A
liberal dean of a Catholic university, Sister Marguerite Kloos, even got
caught in an act of voter fraud that year, forging the signature of a
deceased nun on a ballot. As Thomas Pauken writes in The Thirty Years War,
“the radicalization of elements of the Catholic clergy turned out to be
one of Saul Alinsky’s most significant accomplishments.”
The election of Pope Francis was seen by Alinskyite activists as a
dream come true. “I think that Pope Francis is quite an inspiring
figure,” Al Gore said at UC Berkeley in early 2015. The former vice
president turned radical environmental activist called Pope Francis a
“phenomenon” and laughed at his liberalism: “Is the pope Catholic?” Gore
said that he is so “inspiring to me” that “I could become a Catholic.”
Leftists frequently turn up at the Vatican, often invited by one of
Pope Francis’s closest advisers, the socialist Honduran Cardinal Oscar
Rodriguez Maradiaga. Before the pope’s visit to the U.S., a group of
left-wing activists and officials from unions and organizations such as
the SEIU and PICO (an Alinskyite group founded by the liberal Jesuit
Father John Baumann) descended on the Vatican to confer with curial
officials about the trip. Around the same time, over 90 members of the
U.S. Congress sent Pope Francis a letter, urging him to focus upon
politically liberal themes. The leader of this group was Rosa DeLauro, a
Catholic who supports abortion rights.
In 2016, it was revealed through disclosures by WikiLeaks that the
billionaire socialist George Soros bankrolled much of this lobbying. He
spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in an attempt to shape the pope’s
visit to the U.S. According to the leaked documents, Soros’s Open
Society Foundation sought to create a “critical mass” of American
bishops and lay Catholics supportive of the pope’s priorities. The
documents made special mention of Maradiaga, a champion of PICO, as a
useful ally for ensuring that the pope’s speeches in the U.S. pushed
socialism
The hacked e-mails exposed the depth of the plotting:
Pope Francis’ first visit to the United States in
September will include a historic address to Congress, a speech at the
United Nations, and a visit to Philadelphia for the “World Meeting of
Families.” In order to seize this moment, we (Open Society) will support
PICO’s organizing activities to engage the Pope on economic and racial
justice issues, including using the influence of Cardinal Rodriguez, the
Pope’s senior advisor, and sending a delegation to visit the Vatican in
the spring or summer to allow him to hear directly from low-income
Catholics in America.
In the e-mails, the Soros operatives make it explicitly clear that they view Pope Francis as a propagandist for their causes:
At the end of the day, our visit affirmed an overall
strategy: Pope Francis, as a leader of global stature, will challenge
the “idolatry of the marketplace” in the U.S. and offer a clarion call
to change the policies that promote exclusion and indifference to those
most marginalized. We believe that this generational moment can launch
extraordinary organizing that promotes moral choices and helps establish
a moral compass. We believe that the papal visit, and the work we are
collectively doing around it, can help many in our country move beyond
the stale ideological conflicts that dominate our policy debates and
embrace new opportunities to advance the common good.
After the meeting, they rejoiced at the success of the meeting,
informing John Podesta, the chairman of Hillary Clinton’s campaign:
Our visits were dialogues. We conveyed our view that the
Pope is a World leader of historical significance; that his message of
exclusion, alarm over rising inequality and concern about globalized
indifference is important for the U.S. to hear and see animated during
his visit; and that we intend to amplify his remarks so that we have a
more profound moral dialogue about policy choices through the election
cycle of 2016. In our meetings with relevant officials, we strongly
recommended that the Pope emphasize — in words and deeds — the need to
confront racism and racial hierarchy in the US…
Conversations that were originally scheduled for thirty minutes
stretched into two hour dialogues. As in our breakfast conversation with
Cardinal Rodríguez, senior Vatican officials shared profound insights
demonstrating an awareness of the moral, economic and political climate
in America. We were encouraged to believe that the Pope will confront
race through a moral frame.
Further disclosures from WikiLeaks confirmed the plotting of
Democratic officials to infiltrate the Catholic Church in order to
“foment revolution” beneficial to their radical causes. In 2012, in the
midst of Catholic backlash over Obama’s contraceptive mandate, John
Podesta received a note from Sandy Newman, president of Voices for
Progress.
“There needs to be a Catholic Spring, in which Catholics themselves
demand the end of a middle ages dictatorship and the beginning of a
little democracy and respect for gender equality in the Catholic
church,” Newman wrote to Podesta. “I don’t qualify to be involved and I
have not thought at all about how one would ‘plant the seeds of
revolution,’ or who would plant them.” Podesta replied that the
Democrats had set up Catholic front groups to plant those seeds: “We
created Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good to organize for a
moment like this. But I think it lacks the leadership to do so now.
Likewise Catholics United. Like most Spring moments, I think this one
will have to be bottom up.” Podesta was wrong. It would come from the
top down, as the following year Francis rose to the papacy and began
politicizing the Church in the exact manner that the progressives had
envisioned. Indeed, Podesta would later encourage Hillary Clinton to
enlist the pope’s leftism in her campaign. In one hacked e-mail, he
advised that she send out a tweet to “thank him for pointing out that
the people at the bottom will get clobbered the most by climate change.”
Podesta and his aides also discussed how they could exploit Pope
Francis’s support for Obama’s Iran deal. Podesta was sent a report in
which Christopher Hale of Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good
proposes getting bishops and cardinals to lean on senators temporizing
about the deal.
In another e-mail, which underscores how the media and the Democrats
teamed up to enlist Pope Francis in their politics, a liberal columnist,
Brent Budowsky, counsels Podesta: “John, HRC should get ahead of the
progressive curve before the pope’s trip to the U.S. in September, which
will be big deal for a week, saturation coverage, heavy progressive
populist, impact after he leaves affecting the trajectory of the
campaign. Here’s my take, written more in news analysis style……Brent” In
the attached column, Budowsky writes, “The visit of such a popular pope
will almost certainly give a lift in principle to Democrats and
liberals who cheer Francis and rededicate themselves to the values and
visions he stands for.”
Pope Francis has been influenced by The Pedagogy of the Oppressed,
a book that sought to spread Marxism among the peasants of Latin
America. The Alinskyite left in America regards that book as a classic.
The author of the book is the late Paulo Freire and Pope Francis has
made a point of visiting with Freire’s widow. The meeting was set up by
Cardinal Hummes, the Brazilian whom Francis credits with inspiring him
to name himself after St. Francis. Pope Francis “considered the meeting
with me because of the writings of Paulo, because of the importance of
Paulo for the education of oppressed people, poor people, black people,
for women, for minorities,” Ana Freire said.
This article is excerpted from George Neumayr’s new book, The Political Pope.
Source: https://spectator.org/the-unholy-alliance-between-george-soros-and-pope-francis/