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I had no idea JD Vance was Catholic

My whole life I grew up being taught anyone in the White House was Protestant, except JFK and Biden. No judgment one way or the other, just surprised.

by Anonymousreply 43April 26, 2025 12:00 AM

I'm pretty sure he's a convert.

by Anonymousreply 1April 25, 2025 1:08 AM

Also, he's a Hillbilly redneck, and they are even less likely to be Catholic.

by Anonymousreply 2April 25, 2025 1:08 AM

Converted to Catholicism at Thiele's instigation later in life - joining the horrid Opus Dei wing. It's a fratuernity of the most evil f*ckers the world knows.

by Anonymousreply 3April 25, 2025 1:09 AM

Poor Pope Francis. Can you imagine spending your last few hours on earth with a dirtball scumbag like J D Vance?

by Anonymousreply 4April 25, 2025 1:11 AM

The pope died after meeting with it. 🛋

by Anonymousreply 5April 25, 2025 1:13 AM

I figured that R3. But I bet I'll go to hell when I say I wish I had him alone in a hotel room for a few hours with a couple bottles of scotch.

by Anonymousreply 6April 25, 2025 1:13 AM

What would Flannery O’Connot make of him? He’s a character straight out of her fiction

by Anonymousreply 7April 25, 2025 1:14 AM

No way the meeting with Francis lasted for more than five minutes.

by Anonymousreply 8April 25, 2025 1:15 AM

I didn't know he was Opus Dei. Just like another traitor to our country.

[QUOTE]His espionage was described by the U.S. Department of Justice as "possibly the worst intelligence disaster in U.S. history".[2]

Until now.

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by Anonymousreply 9April 25, 2025 1:22 AM

One of God's warriors?

by Anonymousreply 10April 25, 2025 1:37 AM

[quote] My whole life I grew up being taught anyone in the White House was Protestant, except JFK and Biden.

So how old were you in 2020 that you were still being taught that?

by Anonymousreply 11April 25, 2025 1:48 AM

[quote] No way the meeting with Francis lasted for more than five minutes.

Vance’s office, I think, said no more than 15, so that means no more than five.

by Anonymousreply 12April 25, 2025 1:50 AM

Going straight to hell. Hansen recorded his sexlife with his wife, without his wife's consent, and shared the recordings with a buddy. 🤮

Where does stealing and lying and cheating figure in your faith?

by Anonymousreply 13April 25, 2025 1:54 AM

This is the best FMK meme ever conceived

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by Anonymousreply 14April 25, 2025 1:59 AM

Wait til OP finds out about the Supreme Court. He's gonna lose his ever lovin biblical mind.

by Anonymousreply 15April 25, 2025 2:09 AM

Papist!

by Anonymousreply 16April 25, 2025 2:11 AM

I'm a cradle Catholic. Every Catholic convert I have ever met is rightwing of the pope (and I'm talking rightwing of JPII and Benedict). They are doctrinaire to a tee. They have little, if any, understanding of the role of individual conscience or where faith may lead to empathy, understanding, and commitment to the least of our brothers and sisters.

JD Vance fits the mold. He looks for certainty and safety, whereas Catholic faith pushes you towards a constant journey to our better selves and, in turn, challenges our complacency.

by Anonymousreply 17April 25, 2025 3:13 AM

He converted 6 years ago just prior to his senate run. Prior to that Jaydeen Sahib was religously "fluid"

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by Anonymousreply 18April 25, 2025 3:52 AM

[quote] Prior to that Jaydeen Sahib was religously "fluid"

Much like his sexuality.

by Anonymousreply 19April 25, 2025 4:21 AM

Isn’t Mike Johnson also Catholic?

Lots of papists lying down with fundies it seems

by Anonymousreply 20April 25, 2025 4:29 AM

Catholic = No condoms

by Anonymousreply 21April 25, 2025 4:39 AM

R17, that's true, converts are always the most gung-ho.

by Anonymousreply 22April 25, 2025 5:18 AM

r17 BonniePrinceCharlie, have you put yourself on ignore? I can't see your post in the regular thread, only when I move my cursor over r17 in r22. The regular thread skips from r16 to r18.

by Anonymousreply 23April 25, 2025 11:00 AM

R23, I think if BPC put himself on ignore, it would only work for him. Have you accidentally put him on ignore?

by Anonymousreply 24April 25, 2025 11:30 AM

OP- You’re not going to tell me you had no idea he was DUMPY.

by Anonymousreply 25April 25, 2025 11:47 AM

He's not "in the White House," unless you mean to include everyone who has a job there.

by Anonymousreply 26April 25, 2025 12:53 PM

Dr Steven Hassan has done some interesting articles and videos about that organization

by Anonymousreply 27April 25, 2025 1:52 PM

That makes sense r17. I can see a lot of conservatives converting in the belief that it's really the rigid hierarchy bound by tradition and rules that they're looking for. Only to discover, that well yeah, it's been a little more complicated than that for 2000 years.

by Anonymousreply 28April 25, 2025 2:47 PM

[quote]I can see a lot of conservatives converting in the belief that it's really the rigid hierarchy bound by tradition and rules that they're looking for.

That might be true for Catholicism as a whole, but most of these conservative converts gravitate to forms of Catholicism that genuinely are rigid, doctrinaire and archaic. Integralism is the one to look into.

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by Anonymousreply 29April 25, 2025 3:08 PM

R28 - I’m a 60 y.o. cradle ex-Catholic and another factor is all the liberal Vatican II era priests I grew up with have died off, and been replaced by conservative imports from Africa & India. In the pews most of the more liberal Cultural Catholic types like myself left the church fully behind during the disgusting sex abuse era - we don’t even bother with the Twice -A-Year -Catholic Christmas / Easter thing anymore So the US church is a much much more conservative institution than it was 20 - 40 years ago.

by Anonymousreply 30April 25, 2025 3:09 PM

R30 is very spot on with the American Catholic Church culture moving to the right. They lost a generation of liberal thinkers within the institution. Francis represents the passing of the generation for good. Who is coming after him will surely be dreadful.

by Anonymousreply 31April 25, 2025 3:17 PM

From the NYMag piece above:

When J.D. Vance converted to Catholicism five years ago, he came into contact with what the Associated Press recently called “a Catholic intellectual movement, viewed by some critics as having reactionary or authoritarian leanings.” Vance has called himself a “postliberal” Catholic in the past and has endorsed policies and tactics favored by adherents of the label, such as purging the administrative state and his rhetorical promotion of “pro-family” policy. (His actual legislative record on this subject leaves much to be desired.)

His rise as a national figure has carried relatively obscure ideologies closer to political power, including what the AP called a “subset” of postliberalism, known as integralism. What is integralism, then, and could it influence our would-be vice-president? As held by prominent thinkers like Adrian Vermeule of Harvard Law School, integralism imagines a future when the state may punish the baptized for violations of ecclesiastical law. Kevin Vallier, a professor at philosophy at the University of Toledo’s Institute of American Constitutional Thought and Leadership, and the author of All The Kingdoms of the World, spoke with me about Vance, integralism and the political order that integralists seek to create.

[bold]Sarah Jones: I wanted to start by defining our terms. Briefly, could you tell me what is integralism and how it differs from views held by prominent conservative Catholics like J.D. Vance or someone like Leonard Leo?[/bold]

Kevin Vallier: J.D. Vance is friends with many of the leading integralists, so it’s not entirely clear to me how far away he is from thinking that this would be the best system of government. It’s just unknown. He’s called himself a Catholic postliberal, which, in my view, is less radical than a Catholic integralist. But he’s been to one of their conferences as a speaker.

Integralists think church and state should be integrated for the entire common good of the people, not just in this life but also the next. But the way that it works is that the Church is the primary mode of social organization that’s guiding people into the next life. In certain cases, the Church can deputize the state to help enforce some of its spiritual policies.

An integralist regime doesn’t necessarily have to be at all violent or super oppressive. It just depends on what the Church directs the state to do. Still, we’re looking at heresy laws. We’re looking at apostasy laws. If someone leaves the faith, there’s some kind of penalty. If you teach heresy, and you’re condemned by the Church and so by the state, something happens to you. You distribute banned and heretical books, something happens.

[bold]Jones: Can we fit integralism under the broad rubric of Christian nationalism, or is it somewhat distinct?[/bold]

Vallier: Christian nationalism is usually very Protestant, and also, integralism is not nationalist. Christian nationalism to me is like bargain-basement integralism. Integralists are very intellectually sophisticated. Christian nationalism, frankly, I think it began as a way for the right to troll the left four or five years ago. It was kind of to scare Democrats. So it doesn’t really cohere intellectually very much, which is why you hear Marjorie Taylor Greene talking about Christian nationalism, but you have Catholic theologians talking about integralism.

by Anonymousreply 32April 25, 2025 3:20 PM

[bold]Jones: Obviously, integralism is not a new idea, so when did its resurgence begin, and why did it begin?[/bold]

Vallier: The story’s pretty interesting. There was an informal group of American intellectuals who were thinking of these things before Trump — some of whom considered themselves on the left, and some of them considered themselves on the right. They opposed everything they thought of as liberal. They opposed theological liberalism, any kind of looser, more ecumenical or less miraculous understanding of religious texts, political liberalism in terms of stressing the dignity of the individual and sharply limited government, along with the market economy and the separation of church and state.

The right-wing people wanted to bring Catholicism back to public life and even some control on the grounds that it would have better family policy in many cases. When Trump was elected, though, it really divided them because the Catholic left were less extreme on church/state stuff, but they really just thought Trump was as un-Catholic as a leader could be. The right-wing integralists thought that Trump was a way of destroying liberal elites and hoped that is what he would do. They just didn’t see much social progress unless there was a new elite.

I’ve been told that by 2020 any semblance of left-wing integralism was gone. The right-wing integralists spent a large amount of time building connections with Viktor Orbán, whom they’re very big fans of. He’s a Calvinist, but because he’s enforcing cultural Christianity in some way, they think that’s better than nothing. He’s trying to grow families. So the history, like any early radical sect, is full of strong, crazy personalities and weird fights and stuff.

by Anonymousreply 33April 25, 2025 3:21 PM

[bold]Jones: It’s a small community, as you note in your book. [/bold]

Vallier: Yes, it is. It’s weird because you would think it would have no influence at all. Catholics over 50 tell me that this is a joke. There’s nothing to it. But then I meet all these Catholic graduate students at different universities, and they’re super excited about it. Maybe they’re not fully integralists, but their friends are, and they’re like, “Oh, I don’t know what to think.” It’s in the air. I had a blast last year just going to different students all over the place and talking to them about it.

But the biggest thing I think that will change things is that there are lots of priests that are becoming integralist and that can really matter because people go to their priests. A lot of these younger Catholic priests, if they say Latin Mass, they’ve got growing churches. This isn’t a dwindling church somewhere. So they’re influencing people. They’re shaping minds and spirits and so on. So that could matter, but it’s very hard to know how much it matters.

It ebbs and flows. I thought last year, the only way that integralism was going to have a future after all the infighting was if J.D. Vance became VP nominee, and then he did.

by Anonymousreply 34April 25, 2025 3:21 PM

[bold]Jones: You go over this at length in your book, but could we discuss how integralists propose capturing the state and enforcing their agenda?[/bold]

Vallier: What Vermeule gets is that you’re not going to be able to do this with a small government. You’re going to need a very powerful executive branch, and you’re going to need a very powerful administrative state. Then the question is just going to be how you prepare a large pluralistic society to submit to a religion that they don’t all share. So the first thing you have to do is you have to think you know that liberalism will collapse.

While liberalism is collapsing of its own weight, you get the right reflective, deeply committed Catholic people into those bureaucracies, into the judiciary, into the executive. It’s like, history will hand you this opportunity. You have your small group. They’re training their own people. They’re ready to go.

So getting there requires a large state. It requires the intellectual discrediting and collapse of liberalism and having the right place and the right time for a new elite to take things in as integralist direction as possible as they can, hopefully with relatively little bloodshed.

by Anonymousreply 35April 25, 2025 3:22 PM

[bold]Jones: It doesn’t seem like they’re necessarily planning some civil war where they take over and crush dissent violently in the streets. But is it possible to do what they want to do without engendering violence in some way?[/bold]

Vallier: Well, the engendering is the key because it depends on who controls the levers of government. If it’s still controlled by the left, or however you want to think about it, yeah, it’s going to require bloodshed. So they’re not going to say, “Yeah, let’s do that.” I don’t think these are bloodthirsty people. I think some of them are mostly nerdy intellectuals, then some of them are really politically obsessed nerdy intellectuals.

There are two groups of people. There are people who want to argue theology all day. I like them. They’re weird, but I like them. Then there are people who are obsessed with politics and are hanging out in Hungary, making sure Orbán has an audience with DeSantis and all this kind of stuff. They’re the first ones to really grease those wheels. They like Orbán because they can see him as destroying the elite power of the Hungarian left, although Orbán’s benefited tremendously from the left being completely fragmented there, and so he can create a coalition that wins fair and square.

So I don’t think they’re eager to hurt people. I just think they believe today’s society, and liberal society generally, is just so profoundly corrupt that you’re just not going to make life better for people without what they call a postliberal order. You’d have to fundamentally change the terms on which a modern society operates. They’ve told us almost nothing about how that is, as opposed to banning some stuff.

by Anonymousreply 36April 25, 2025 3:22 PM

[bold]Jones: What would religious freedom look like under an integralist regime?[/bold]

That’s actually one of the most complicated questions, and it’s one of the ones that got integralism started in the first place. The quick answer is you have to have religious freedom for the unbaptized. You can’t force them into the Church. But if they are baptized, if they’re members of the Church, then they’re subject to the Church’s jurisdiction, which means that in an integralist state, of which all the baptized were members, the Church could direct the state to control but usually to punish the baptized for culpable sins.

Thomas Pink, a philosopher emeritus at King’s College London who’s its chief intellectual but perhaps rejects its politics, has said integralism isn’t going to happen. People disagree too much now. You can’t get the kind of uniformity that you would need for this kind of ideal society.

But you can imagine a very Catholic society. Then people know a lot more about Catholicism, and they know what’s bad about defecting from it. In those cases, you could punish them. The same way that in some Muslim countries, where Christians and Jews are people of the book, and so they’re to be tolerated. At least in principle. But if you’re Muslim, then the policies can apply to you. Now, there are modern Muslim societies. There are much more conservative ones. So I’m not talking about a general tendency of Islam. I’m just saying if you’re trying to get a sense for this, with integralism you’re going to use coercion against your co-religionists to keep them on the straight and narrow. That’s the main kind of coercion that would be introduced.

by Anonymousreply 37April 25, 2025 3:22 PM

[bold]Jones: I’m curious about their view of racial and gender equality.[/bold]

They’re fine with racial equality. Most of the time they’re trying to deflect worries about antisemitism, which is complicated. Gender, on the other hand, is completely different. They reject LGBT equality in every way that one can. They’ll say, “Look, there are certain gender roles that are appropriate.” Most of the new right factions have this masculinist component.

They would definitely get rid of same-sex marriage. They would ban pornography of every kind. In many cases, they are associated with very patriarchal views of marriage. They don’t talk about that a lot, but it’s there.

by Anonymousreply 38April 25, 2025 3:22 PM

One can simply read the article.

by Anonymousreply 39April 25, 2025 3:33 PM

True, R39, but some are simply lazy.

by Anonymousreply 40April 25, 2025 4:48 PM

Neither did I, OP.

by Anonymousreply 41April 25, 2025 11:42 PM

Neither did Jesus

by Anonymousreply 42April 25, 2025 11:57 PM

With only two kids, how can one call JD a "practicing Catholic"? Did he get the snip, or did she?

by Anonymousreply 43April 26, 2025 12:00 AM
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