Jul 9, 2020

Black Lives Matter vs. BlackLivesMatter.com

If you go to the Black Lives Matter web site, blacklivesmatter.com, and follow the "About" link at the top, and drop down to "What We Believe" , you can read:


We disrupt the Western-prescribed nuclear family structure requirement by supporting each other as extended families and "villages" that collectively care for one another, especially our children, to the degree that mothers, parents, and children are comfortable. We foster a queer-affirming network. When we gather, we do so with the intention of freeing ourselves from the tight grip of heteronormative thinking, or rather, the belief that all in the world are heterosexual (unless s/he or they disclose otherwise).

If you go to the [DONATE] button is in the top right of the same Black Lives Matter web page and hover over it, or click, you will goto the
... secure.actblue.com/donate/ms_blm_homepage_2019 web site.
The ActBlueCom website has that their mission:

Powering Democratic candidates, committees, parties,
organizations, and c4s around the country.


This year, 2020, ActBlue hass given $1Billion dollars to Democratic candidates for National office, such as Joe Biden, Bernie and Elizabeth Warren. It appears that BLM on a National Level is a fund raising mechanism for the DNC and Democratic Party.

Yet any criticism of BLM is met with immediate retaliation. Take for example Fr. Theodore Rothrock, (now former) pastor of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Catholic Church in Carmel, IN, who on Sunday June 28, 2020 posted some uncomfortable truths in his parish bulletin and homily.

You can read for yourself his exact words here:, to judge for yourself Father's removal by Bishop Dorherty of Lafayette , Indiana.
Interested Catholics can charitably contact Bishop Timothy Doherty at (765) 742-0275 to register their feelings on the matter.


Father Rothrock's exact words:
“This dialogue from Hamlet is taken from Act 3, scene 2 and is a response to Hamlet’s query: ‘how like you this play?’The line suggests a hidden agenda that is revealed in the objections, where the accuser is actually the perpetrator.
History is replete with examples of misdirection. In 2001 the Taliban destroyed the Buddhas of Bamyan, the 6th-century monumental statues of Gautama Buddha in central Afghanistan, claiming them to be pagan idols.

The world was horrified but did nothing about it. Despots and tyrants have always employed accusation and distortion to achieve all manner of mischief in an effort to shape and mold public opinion. Anyone currently doing business with Amazon could not help but notice the prominent banner headline from the internet giant touting their proud support for “Black Lives Matter.”

But do those black lives really matter to the community organizers promoting their agenda? Is “Antifa” concerned with the defeat of fascist right-wing nationalism or more interested in the establishment of left-wing global socialism?

The brutal murder of a black man in police custody has sparked a landslide of reaction to the alleged systemic racism in America. We are being told that the scars of race relations in this country are really unhealed wounds that continue to fester and putrefy; amputation is required!

Reforms must be sweeping and immediate to crush the rising wave of racism that pervades the nation and perverts the body politic. On the heels of the Covid sequestration, the bottled-up tension of an isolated population has exploded into riots and demonstrations that we have not seen the like in 50 years.

What would the great visionary leaders of the past be contributing to the discussion at this point in time? Would men like Fredrick Douglas and the Reverend King, both men of deep faith, be throwing bombs or even marching in the streets?

Would they be pleased with the murder rates in our cities or the destruction of our families by the welfare system? Would they see a value in the obliteration of our history to rewrite a future without the experience and struggles of the past? Would we tear down their monuments? Who are the real racists and the purveyors of hate?

You shall know them by their works. The only lives that matter are their own and the only power they seek is their own.

They are wolves in wolves clothing, masked thieves and bandits, seeking only to devour the life of the poor and profit from the fear of others. They are maggots and parasites at best, feeding off the isolation of addiction and broken families, and offering to replace any current frustration and anxiety with more misery and greater resentment.

The message of peace that comes to us in Christ is the gospel we carry in common with the Orthodox Churches and other Christians. We must stand in solidarity with our brethren across the world to oppose this malevolent force.

Black Lives Matter, Antifa, and the other nefarious acolytes of their persuasion are not the friends or allies we have been led to believe. They are serpents in the garden, seeking only to uproot and replant a new species of human made in the likeness of men and not in the image of God.

Their poison is more toxic than any pandemic we have endured.

The father of lies has not just been seen in our streets, we have invited him into our home. Now he is prowling like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour. Resist him, strong in your faith.”

5 comments :

JayG said...

Dem State Rep Vernon Jones: Do black lives matter to Black Lives Matter?
https://saraacarter.com/dem-state-rep-vernon-jones-do-black-lives-matter-to-black-lives-matter/

JayG said...

Deacon Harold Burke-Sivers audio podcast on Why Catholics Cannot Support the BLM Organization
https://www.deaconharold.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/The-Catholic-Toolbox-BLM-07-July-2020-audio.mp4

Deacon Harold's Web Site https://www.deaconharold.com/

JayG said...

Can Catholics support ‘Black Lives Matter’?
“Black Lives Matter” has become the rallying cry for a broad social movement. But there are also specific organizations which take the name “Black Lives Matter.” The largest and best-funded of those groups is the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation, which has a network of local chapters around the U.S. and in other countries, and operates the website blacklivesmatter.com.

The Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation promotes LGBT ideology and opposes the nuclear family.

The organization should be distinguished from the broader social movement for racial justice, said Deacon Harold Burke-Sivers, a black Catholic deacon of the Diocese of Portland, Oregon, author, and co-host of EWTN’s Morning Glory radio show.

“Marching to protest the inequitable treatment of black people by those in authority—that’s good,” the deacon said.

However, the policies espoused by the Black Lives Matter organization on family and sexuality constitute “a radical feminist agenda disguised as a movement for ‘Black Lives Matter,’” he said.

“No Catholic can support the national organization, whatsoever,” he added.

https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/can-catholics-support-black-lives-matter-92926

JayG said...

Bishop Dorherty of Lafayette, Indiana has clarified his statement the BLM Global Network:
“I support those who choose to demonstrate peacefully in favor of social equality, equity and justice,” Doherty of the Diocese of Lafayette-in-Indiana said in his latest statement Friday. “However, The Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation and Antifa promote beliefs and stances that directly contradict Catholic Church teachings.” He added that he has “never supported those who bring violence to otherwise peaceful demonstrations.”
https://spiritdaily.org/blog/news/bishop-hits-blm

JayG said...

The Occult Spirituality of Black Lives Matter
DAN BURKE
Crisis Magazine
https://www.crisismagazine.com/2020/the-occult-spirituality-of-black-lives-matter

Every Catholic should be concerned about and seek to remedy racial injustice wherever and whenever it occurs. Because black lives and black souls truly do matter, no faithful Catholic can align himself with an organization that conjures demons as a means to mitigate injustice. If you have been involved or complicit in any way, the next step is confession. Hopefully, you won’t need to see an exorcist.