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Wednesday, April 11, 2018

Big-Note Sinner Explains Himself.

We get a lot of sinners in the Tavern. This place is a refreshment stop while they gather and imbibe some Dutch courage* before going to Confession, and they can mix it up with some Heroes and the occasional Saintly person at the bars, for hints on improving their chances. We get just a very few of the saints. But today we hosted and welcomed a fairly well known and perhaps infamous chap who is known for his particular sins. Mr Milo Yiannopoulos. 

Milo seems aware of his fate (as told by Mr Folau just the other day) and he too has been whacked unmercifully by the holier-than-thou mob baying beyond the Tavern's hedges. Just what the red bandana fellow would say about him I have not heard. But some 'Religious'  and Priestly folk who have a magazine in America are not prepared, it seems, to break the not-quite confessional seal and repeat what he told them.

Milo, though, likes to shout it about in his well-known provocative style.

Bearing in mind that I do not ask my customers to sit around the table comparing sins, and that I do not see m'self getting into a 'my sins are bigger than your's' game, I nevertheless poured him a pint and let his speak his mind.

Bear in mind too that I am a Tavern Keeper and I do not agree with all that my customers say and do. I pull pints, serve the tables and pray for them all. And to quote him "I’m sure he doesn’t deserve to have me hung around his neck as an admirer".

So, a bit about him as introduction, for he is not all that he seems. Milo Yiannopoulos, born Milo Hanrahan on 18 October 1984 is a British political commentator and writer. 

He is openly gay.

And a Catholic.

Yiannopoulos is a former senior editor for Breitbart News, who describes himself as a "cultural libertarian". He is a critic of feminism, Islam, social justice, political correctness, and other movements. Though often described as a member of the alt-right, he rejects this label, stating that there are many "points of difference" between him and the alt-right movement. 

Yiannopoulos was born and raised in Kent, England. After being expelled from Simon Langton Grammar School for Boys, he studied at the University of Manchester and Wolfson College, Cambridge, but failed to gain a degree from either. After university, Yiannopoulos initially secured a job at The Catholic Herald. He was interested in becoming a theatre critic. However, Yiannopoulos' break came with his interest in technology journalism while investigating the subject of women in computing in 2009 for The Daily Telegraph. 

The rest is very loud and vociferous appearances on social media and many venues in many countries, where he is regularly berated. He gives as good - and better - than he gets.

Stand, sir and speak. Note though that I had ales to pour and didn't hear it all. You may need to follow the link to fill in what I missed.
The Catholic Magazine Interview with MILO They Refuse To Print
(A while) ago, I sent the following answers to questions I was asked by America magazine, a journal run by Jesuits.
They have chosen not to publish it, perhaps out of compassion, fearing too many of their aging readers would suffer heart failure. Or perhaps they couldn’t stand my tweaking of their most famous contributor, Fr. James Martin, notorious for equivocating over any Church teaching that might cause a stir at an Anglican garden party.
Amusingly, while the Jesuits struggled to decide if they could bear to publish my answers, one of the Church’s highest ranking Cardinals called out Fr. Martin by name as “one of the most outspoken critics of the church’s message with regard to sexuality.” 
That means my side in this dispute enjoys support from a black prince of the Church raised on a continent where martyrdom is common, while the other side’s champion is a white bourgeois man in whose life the worst threat is that the wine is a bit off this week. 
Ask yourself:  Which of these men would you want to have your side?
Q. Although you grew up Catholic, you now say and do many shocking things in your public career which seem to be at odds with your childhood faith. In what sense do you still consider yourself a Catholic? 
Plenty of saints were shocking, to say nothing of our Lord, who got in a spot of trouble for His shocking claims, as you might recall. I am certainly no saint, but I don’t think “shocking” is a helpful way of approaching the question of Catholics in public life. 
It doesn’t settle much to say that the current Pope is shocking to many Catholics, including me. 
Or to note that I’m shocked by supposedly Catholic politicians who make laws in flat contradiction to the natural law, which you need no faith to grasp.
In my case, do you mean it’s shocking that a Catholic like me is loudly worried about Islam, which has waged war on Holy Mother Church for more than a millennium? 
Or that I say Planned Parenthood’s abortion crusade amounts to black genocide? 
Or that I’ve supported Pope Paul VI’s criticism of artificial contraception so strongly that Hillary Clinton attacked me for it in her presidential campaign? 
Frankly, what’s really shocking is that a poor sinner like me has spoken out more on contraception than 99% of our bishops, who seem too preoccupied with diversity and climate change to talk about God. 
Maybe you mean it’s shocking that I’m always joking about my lack of chastity and my fondness for black dudes, but I still call myself Catholic. And I don’t see what’s so shocking about that, either. One of the most famous saints of all time, sixteen centuries ago, prayed, “Lord, make me chaste, but not yet.” 
Anyone who grows up in Catholic cities like New Orleans and Rome emerges pretty unshockable — and certainly wouldn’t be alarmed by me.
I think it was a visit to New Orleans that inspired Evelyn Waugh to make an observation I often quote:  
Protestants seem to think, I’m good, therefore I go to church, whereas Catholics think, I’m very bad, therefore I go to church.
 Waugh also said, when people asked how he could call himself a Catholic: 
"You have no idea how bad I’d be if I weren’t".
Sins of the flesh, let us remember, are at the bottom of the scale. The Church says self-righteousness is at the top. Therefore, I’m in a lot better shape than some of my feminist and establishment Republican enemies. To say nothing of Islam! 
In life, I believe in aspiration. If you’re a poor kid, aspire to rise economically. If you’re shy, aspire to confidence, so you can defend your views in public. 
And if you’re a wretched sinner like me, aspire to end up better than you are now. Miracles do happen! 
I am happy to report that many in the bar stood, cheered and raised their glasses. We hope for Divine assistance too.
Q. Where do you experience tensions with Catholicism in your life?
Who says any Catholic should lack tension stoked by his weaknesses? We Catholics are better at clothes, food, and parties. Why shouldn’t we be better at guilt, too?
Ho Ho Ho !
You don’t see me disputing the Church’s teachings on homosexuality. There’s no intellectual tension, because I wouldn’t dream of demanding that the Church throw away her hard truths just to lie to me in hopes I’ll feel better about myself. I love the truth, not lies, and I know no one’s feelings are the basis of truth. 
That’s why I don’t understand those Catholics — such as, if you’ll forgive my horrid impertinence, this magazine’s editor at large, Fr. Martin — who imply that if people don’t like what the Church says, maybe the Church is wrong or should apologize. 
The Church was founded on a rock and a cross, not on a hug.
Still, if you insist I talk about feelings, I’ve said before that I feel there’s something wrong with the fact that my lovemaking can’t produce the mini-Milo’s I’d like to have. How’s that for a subjective confirmation of the Church teaching that same-sex attraction is “objectively disordered” because it can’t lead to procreation?
Bottom line:  The Church says I’m not culpable for my temptations, but I shouldn’t sin. 
She’s right. And her founder said He came to heal those who knew they were sick, so I don’t despair.
Q. What was the best thing about your Catholic upbringing?
One good thing was hearing Mary praised for her motherhood. 
Whatever my own mother’s shortcomings, I learned that motherhood is the greatest vocation, and one that God banned all men from. That’s why I think it’s sad that today’s feminists, as Chesterton observed, despise motherhood and all the other chief feminine characteristics. 
The idea that men and women shouldn’t be different — shouldn’t have different interests, strengths, and ways of relating to Creation — is insane, and it’s empirical fact that trying to deny these differences makes all of us less happy.
Growing up Catholic also taught me the value of humility, even if that’s not exactly a forte of mine. This virtue is important for society, because it teaches us to be tolerant of a diversity of opinions, rather than arrogantly trying to silence people we disagree with. And it’s important for me personally, because despite my vanity, I know I’m not as smart as Thomas Aquinas or as good as St. Francis. 
There’s a great line from the novelist Flannery O’Connor, who liked to shock and troll a bit herself: 
“I’m not limited to what I personally feel or think; 
I’m a Catholic.” 
She meant the same thing Chesterton did in his famous quip, “Tradition is the democracy of the dead.” Political correctness gives us thin gruel and loneliness. The Church gives us a grand party with red meat and red wine.
Q. How do you pray?
On my knees.
Ahhh. My knees are getting old. I pray on my knees in church where a cushioned 'kneeler' is made available, but otherwise not while driving, walking, washing up, cooking, pouring pints etc. 
Q. Who are your role models, either living or dead, in the Catholic faith?
Pope Benedict XVI is still the wisest and most erudite man in Europe, though I’m sure he doesn’t deserve to have me hung around his neck as an admirer. 
He was also brave enough to declare publicly that Islam’s irrationalism is one of the world’s great problems. 
By the way, in the same Regensburg lecture he pointed out that secularists in the West are also dangerously unbalanced, because they’re as hostile to religion as Muslims are to rationality. I note that he credits my wild pagan ancestors in Greece for the West’s deepest rational roots.
My personal motto, “laughter and war,” comes from a passage in Chesterton’s Heretics. 
He should be the patron saint of Catholic journalists. 
And of course Hilaire Belloc was brilliant as a defender of the West. In the 1930s, when the Caliphate had collapsed and no one imagined Islam would ever come back, he prophesied that the West would again be threatened, because our superior money and technology can’t take the place of a devotion to your civilization.
I’ve already quoted St. Augustine, who had his own pelvic issues. I once tweeted out an illustrated page from his Confessions that began, “I will now recall my past foulnesses.” That’ll work for my memoirs someday, too.
Rabelais and the anonymous trolls who wrote the Carmina Burana are kindred spirits.
Q. What’s your favorite Scripture passage and why? 
I’m tempted to go for the easy Waugh line from Ecclesiastes:  “Vanity of vanities, all is vanity.”
Q. You recently self-published the new book “Dangerous” after Breitbart fired you and your original publisher withdrew the contract. How do you respond to critics who say you are “hateful” and “hurtful” to others?
The truth often hurts, as the Church has always understood. That’s one reason she so often shows us a Man in agony on a cross. I don’t delight in others’ pain, but I’m not scared into silence by the fear someone somewhere will take offense.
The fact that so many of us think hurting people’s feelings is the greatest evil says all you need to know about the decline of our civilization. If I’m wrong about something, don’t whine; show me evidence and make rational arguments.
Or tell a good joke! A big part of what I do is playing the jester, telling the powerful the truths they don’t want to hear. Maybe that’s what you meant about my “shocking” aspect. 
A friend who’s a brilliant medievalist at the University of Chicago (and who was just received into the Church this Easter, Deo gratias), likes to embarrass me by writing about me as a holy fool.
I say embarrass, but of course it’s a great compliment and I am happy to receive any kind of attention. 
Q. What does masculinity mean to you?
It means a willingness to expose yourself to enemy fire, whether or not you wear a uniform, in order to defend the good  
your family, your church, your country, your civilization. 
Now the men in uniform are much better men than I, but even I can do a bit to defend those things with the gifts God gave me.
Our Lord, as always, showed the way: He endured the horrors of the Passion to defend and redeem the whole world. I’m with Rod Dreher: 
Anybody who only preaches a namby-pamby God, and not the highly masculine God of Scripture, is leaving young men vulnerable to the monstrous false gods of race and ideology. 
Boys struggling to become men are always potential barbarians, because they hunger for masculinity but aren’t sure where to find it or how to productively express it. 
Our Lord revealed it to them, but too many in the Church keep masculinity hidden or the subject of shame.
Q. The Vatican has launched a commission to examine and overhaul the Holy See’s media communications strategy. If you could give any advice to Pope Francis about how to do journalism today, what would it be?
Stop talking. 
Q. Any final thoughts?
 Pray for me. I need it.

I will sir. 

I hope all will. 

There are those who can absolve sins and those, like me, who cannot. 

But I can drink to your redemption.

I can drink to and pray for His Mercy to come down upon you to lift the yoke of your particular manner of sinfulness.

Pray that He lifts mine too, different but damaging to my soul as they are.

Off to Confession now Milo.

Pax Brother. 




PS. 
* It will be the very thin-skinned Dutchman that takes offence





5 comments:

  1. "And if you’re a wretched sinner like me, aspire to end up better than you are now. Miracles do happen! "

    You and me both Milo:(. I think this is your best piece yet..... You outdid yourself on this one. It really spoke to me. Keep it up good friend.....it requires a second read!

    TSG

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. He did well, didn't he. Mind you.... Milo is very much a self-designed persona. Just what is act and what is authentic we may see over time. But one could say that of many. :)

      Delete
  2. This deѕign is steller! You certainly know how to keep a resadeг entertained.
    Between your wit and your videos, I wаs almost moveԁ
    to start my own blog (weⅼⅼ, aⅼmost...HaHa!) Excellent job.

    I really loved what you had to say, and more than that, how you
    рresented it. Too cool!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Milo is pushing a specifically scripturally soken against perversion. He can’t cherry pick which bits of scripture he chooses to like and dislike and still call himself a Christian.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. To be fair, he condemns himself and knows it. His excuse of 'falling in lerve' does not cut it. It is very much like the multifaceted rude, nasty female ploy of claiming to 'follow my heart' or being 'swept off my feet', he 'could not help' himself.

      We all need Confession and absolution and far stronger will-power.

      Delete

Ne meias in stragulo aut pueros circummittam.

Our Bouncer is a gentleman of muscle and guile. His patience has limits. He will check you at the door.

The Tavern gets rowdy visitors from time to time. Some are brain dead and some soul dead. They attack customers and the bar staff and piss on the carpets. Those people will not be allowed in anymore. So... Be Nice..