Thursday, 16 April 2026

Consistent, Insistent

JD Vance has now been rebuked by two Popes. That is quite something. No one tells Douglas Wilson, Brooks Potteiger, Paula White or Franklin Graham to “keep out of politics”. If the Pope should “stay in his lane”, then what about the Bible-quoting Pete Hegseth? But of course this is the Pope’s lane. If war and peace, death and life, are not the stuff of morality, then, oh, I cannot even be bothered to finish that sentence. The criteria for a just war are very specific, and they all have to be met, yet the war with Iran has met none of them.

Nor does it matter whether or not this was an extremely rare definition ex cathedra, protected by the charism of infallibility. Although there are several undisputed examples, there is no definitive list of such definitions, and in any case, your local bishop’s teaching is not his mere opinion. By that bishop’s authority, your parish priest’s teaching is not his mere opinion. And the Pope’s teaching is not his mere opinion, either. In the words of Bishop James Massa, Chairman of the Committee on Doctrine of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, “When Pope Leo XIV speaks as Supreme Pastor of the Universal Church, he is not merely offering opinions on theology, he is preaching the Gospel and exercising his ministry as the Vicar of Christ. The consistent teaching of the Church is insistent that all people of good will must pray and work toward lasting peace while avoiding the evils and injustices that accompany all wars.”

Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Feet of Clay?

Chris Damian writes:

Bishop Barron is in Catholic public discourse again because of President Donald Trump’s attacks on Pope Leo XIV. Following Leo’s recent anti-war comments, Trump lambasted the Pope in a Truth Social post, accusing the Leo of being “weak on foreign policy” and insisting he only became pope because of the President. Trump early the following morning also posted an image of himself depicted as Jesus.

In response, Barron called for an apology from the President, while at the same time praising the President as the greatest in his lifetime in “defending our first liberty.” President Trump, upon hearing of Barron’s post, said he would not apologize. He also that he thought the image, in which he is wearing a white robe and has glowing hands, was depicting him as a doctor. Catholic Vice President JD Vance in response to all this said that Pope Leo should “stick to matters of morality” and “let the president of the United States stick to dictating American public policy” (I personally find the word choice of “dictating” to be quite telling.)

Catholics across the political spectrum have raised concerns and given commentary about the President’s posts and Barron’s response. But this isn’t the only recent controversy involving Barron.

In December 2025, I was made aware that Bishop Robert Barron’s personal Facebook account was following a number of provocative pages, including one for “Brazilian male feet.” After validating that these were real pages and that the account did indeed belong to Barron, I shared these findings on Twitter. Surprisingly, the Word on Fire account, rather than Barron himself, provided a response.

Shortly before Christmas, a Catholic writer contacted me about an odd discovery. He had found that Bishop Robert Barron of the Diocese of Winona–Rochester had a personal Facebook account which followed pages for an account dedicated to “Brazilian Male Feet” and a couple of young muscular men who regularly posted provocative pictures and videos…

Word on Fire accused those raising concerns of seeking to “manufacture controversy where none exists.” The ministry stated that Barron’s account had recently been hacked and targeted for “digital fraud.” Of course, these two claims contradict one another, given that a controversy does exist about these follows and the alleged hack. (Insisting to those concerned that there are no concerns is a tactic one can easily trace back to the clergy abuse crisis.) Word on Fire did not provide any evidence of its claims, even though one can easily find a history of account logins, including suspicious access, via the Meta platform.

It is certainly possible that Barron’s account had been the subject of a hack. However, after Word on Fire provided its public defense of Barron and accusations of malice towards me and others, I was made aware of prior similar activity. An individual that I personally know shared screenshots of similar accounts followed by Barron as far back as January of 2024. This, along with the lack of evidence shared, raises significant doubt concerning Word on Fire’s claims. (And one again wonders why the ministry is tasked with the public defense of Barron’s personal accounts.)

According to this individual, Barron followed a number of accounts for young men who posted provocative images and videos, including “Sunshyne Smile,” “Niki Clip,” “Bright Bright,” “Tayo Ricci,” and “The young Jamaican trainer.” He captured screenshots of these follows at various points between January 2024 and May 2025 and shared them with a small group of other Catholics in his circles, trying to make sense of them.

(Some of these accounts seem to have either been deleted or changed since. Bishop Barron also appears to have deleted his personal Facebook page following the December controversy.)

Partly because of a fear of retaliation, not only for himself, but for others involved, the individual who shared all this with me asked to remain anonymous. He was willing to share the following:

“I took these screencaps in two sets, on January 6, 2024, and in May of 2025. The January screen caps were occasioned on the second of two occurrences, when I saw this account, purporting to be Bishop Barron, acting abrasively towards other Catholic figures I respect. The first one involved his making an aggressive and irresponsible statement towards a cleric I admire for his attempt to speak with candor, and this had happened some months prior. The second was his making a blithely dismissive comment towards someone I consider an important Catholic public voice.

Both instances had been accompanied with his not giving any opportunity, for those he impugned, to respond. It was, frankly, bullying behavior, and a weird behavior to see from a bishop aware of social media and the impact thereof.

This behavior was already offensive enough to see the first time, especially given that he was a bishop and the other cleric was not. So when I saw it happen the second time, I began to wonder whether it was even the Bishop, or instead some kind of overly aggressive social media rep.

This led me to look at the profile, where, with experience with Facebook, I found the likes and follows, which were normally not searched. It was on this occasion that I - accidentally, and with more than a little surprise - discovered a number of disturbing accounts in the likes and follows. I found accounts with the names ‘Niki Clip’, ‘Sunshyne Smile’, and ‘The young Jamaican trainer’, among others. At that time, I was concerned that this was not the Bishop's social media account, but a very bizarre scam account.

I made my concerns known to the person whom he had dismissed on the second occasion, on January 6th of 2024, only to learn that this was, in fact, the Bishop's account.

Obviously, this was a surprise and a scandal, but I am not the sort of person to want to air that sort of thing publicly and I am not a journalist, so, with that, I let it be.

However, after some time had passed, and with more instances of concern in the news about the Bishop and Word on Fire, and as as Bishop Barron’s public criticism of various ideological targets became more and more difficult to ignore in anyone’s Catholic news feed, I began to be concerned that I needed to keep more of a record of what I had found in case it was still there, and in case it ever came out, since I had, in fairness, shared it with one other person, and these things can take on a life of their own. Because of this, in May of 2025, I went back to look and see if the profile was still there and still following these things.

On that occasion, I found all the aforementioned pages, and while these might have been present before, I would also find other likes and follows that had, at the very least, come to be since that time. Most notably, I have the screen cap of at least one instance of an account called ‘Bright Bright’, and that picture taken at that time, included a connected picture with that account that was anything but subtly homoerotic.

I did not share that, at that time, in any kind of public venue or to anyone other than the person with whom I had discovered the first instance, because I wanted to make sure I was correctly accounting for everything with a reputable witness of good character. I then did not share it with anyone else until the present.

Recognizing that I held on for these pictures at least since May of 2025, but also, in many cases, since January of 2024, and it is now February of 2026, I want to make it clear that the only reason I now provide these is because I do not wish to see Catholic voices speaking genuinity and truth impugned, by an organization professing to represent the Church and one of its shepherds, a successor of the Apostles, through a malicious lie about being “hacked”, or through the disparagement of those raising journalistic attention to the scandal, especially when Bishop Baron and Word on Fire cannot be anything but culpably aware that they are lying.

It is a sin to bear false witness. It is against one of the Ten Commandments. It is a sin and a recognized cause of injury in the Church to violate the good reputation of another, especially by disparagement in the public eye.

It is an absolute scandal to see both of these things occur out of the mouth of an organization representing a Bishop and having him, a public figure, as its chief officer. His Excellency has any number of strong things to say about others and his conviction about the truth and his missionary ethos, and perhaps some of them might be deserved, but none of them can be justified on the back of a lie, and Catholics cannot permit the witness of his office to be traded for a soup of lies.”

In my personal opinion, this entire debacle is just sad. A bishop I had so admired, and a ministry with so much promise, engaging in such ridiculous defenses of behavior that, in the grand scheme of things, isn’t that bad… In my own opinion, the cult-like defenses and refusal to learn from past failures are much worse than following a few provocative pages on Facebook. I believe Barron could offer much to the Church if he could learn a posture of humility and seek personal accountability for failures, whether administrative or otherwise. But his failure to do either makes someone I once admired come off as—if I’m being completely frank—pathetic. 

There is something connecting the odd cultures of masculinity cultivated by Barron, the interest in these sorts of social media accounts, the marginalization of the vulnerable (especially women working in certain Catholic institutions), a refusal to take accounting of personal and institutional histories and one’s responsibility within them, and the Bishop’s partisan preoccupations. A reflection on these and how to find integration could offer much to the Church. I would love for these reflections to one day come for Barron himself. I believe everyone is capable of change and growth. And so I’ll hope for that… one day.

The Challenge Is Far Greater


On Sunday, 12 April, Hungarian voters elected 199 members of the new Hungarian parliament. As an outgoing MP for the Greens, I had a particular interest in the historic event that ousted Fidesz and left the once-dominant party with less than one-third of parliamentary seats. The remnants of Hungary’s former opposition parties, including my own, were vanquished without a trace.

Viktor Orbán’s defeat was inevitable. For several years, his government has shown little interest in domestic issues. Instead, his efforts concentrated on foreign affairs and establishing himself as an international figure. There was nothing wrong with this. However, it should not have been pursued at the expense of other issues of far greater relevance to the Hungarian people.

Péter Magyar and his insurgent Tisza Party were able to refocus attention on the economy, healthcare and education. Promising well-functioning public services allowed him to broaden the scope of the campaign away from the perennial question of Hungarian politics – namely, are we an Eastern or Western nation? Orbán’s campaign floundered as attention shifted to bread-and-butter political matters. Fidesz offered no new narrative, no hope for Hungarians who wanted to improve their material circumstances. The recycled mix of familiar themes from past elections – the migration threat from 2018, and the war in Ukraine from 2022 – did not resonate with voters.

Orbán, perhaps recognising that his personal appeal was waning, sought to frame the election as a one-on-one contest between himself and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky. It didn’t work. Magyar, however, was incredibly successful in convincing voters that the election was a referendum on Orbán alone. It was this fundamental choice that allowed a heterogeneous group of 3.1million voters to unite behind Magyar.

Two other factors in particular contributed to Orbán’s defeat. One is the 16 years that he has been in power. Many of Magyar’s voters had barely begun their school years when Viktor Orbán became prime minister in 2010; more would have spent their entire youth or a significant portion of their working lives seeing him speak on television. He was playing in injury time, and Hungarians were ready for change. Boredom and familiarity can be just as lethal to a government as bad policy.

Another factor that dealt a severe blow to Orbán was the intense focus on sovereignty. The campaign demonstrated that Hungary is less an independent country than a testing ground for competing foreign interventions. Russia supported Fidesz and Orbán; the EU backed Magyar and Tisza. Things were brought to a head in the final days of the campaign, when it was revealed that Hungary’s foreign minister had leaked plans to Russia regarding Ukraine’s admission to the EU. It was a hammer blow to Orbán’s authority: one cannot preach national sovereignty and, at the same time, suck up to Russia.

Magyar’s victory has been represented as a win for centrists and even progressives. But this could not be further from the truth: the old opposition parties of liberals, leftists and greens have been gutted. They – we – never had a genuine chance of entering parliament. The same storm that swept away Fidesz’s majority destroyed the real opposition. Ironically, the promise to restore political pluralism in Hungary has resulted in the most uniform political landscape since the 1989 transition from Communism. The election has left parliament with three fiercely right-wing parties.

Neither I nor my party contested the election or actively participated in the campaign. Not that it would have made any difference. This election left no space for a small party committed to environmental issues and national sovereignty, not to mention more traditional left-wing social policies. Nor did we have any interest in importing the global ‘progressive’ agenda that has hollowed out green parties across Europe, distracting them from their original mission.

Hungarians are celebrating the end of an era. But for many of us, the question is not how to adapt to a new regime, but how to seize the opportunity to finally represent people and issues that were victims of both a careless government and an ineffective opposition.

This election has raised as many questions as it has answered. Moving forward will be difficult: Hungarians voted for change, but it was a change of personnel rather than policy. Orbán’s unflinching position on immigration and his strong cultural conservatism have proved to be overwhelmingly popular. Will Magyar be able to keep these in place, as he has promised to do, while resurrecting his country’s relationship with the EU? That will be the challenge.

But the challenge is far greater for Hungary’s small opposition parties. Viktor Orbán and Fidesz will be back. The same cannot be said of Hungary’s left-wing parties, which appear to have been driven to extinction by the weekend’s election results.

The real loser was not Orbán, but democratic pluralism in Hungary.

Conflation Matters

An outlet that required fealty to a foreign state ought not to enjoy Lobby access. Notably not in The Guardian, Owen Jones writes:

The Daily Telegraph is being acquired by a German-based media giant - and now its journalists are formally expected to support Israel. The culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, has cleared the takeover by Axel Springer SE. Its CEO, Mathias Döpfner, has written to Telegraph staff “outlining his commitment” to the paper. An employee at the Telegraph has sent me that letter. It is deeply revealing.

Döpfner insists that the values of the Telegraph and the publishing house founded by late tycoon Axel Springer - dubbed ‘Germany’s Rupert Murdoch’ - are aligned. They are, he says, “Freedom, free markets, individual freedom and freedom of speech.” He goes further. Axel Springer, he explains, is “guided by a clear editorial compass.” Its employees are rooted in its Essentials - “core values to which we are firmly committed.”

There is, he adds, “no such thing as neutral journalism”: only journalism that is “pluralistic and surprising, fair, and fact-based.” And yet, having invoked “freedom of speech” as a foundational principle, he insists these Essentials are not partisan - but rather “define a socio-political framework within which maximum journalistic freedom and intellectual independence can flourish.”

“We support the right of Israel to exist”

Döpfner then sets out those ‘Essentials’:

  • We stand for freedom, freedom of expression, the rule of law, and democracy.
  • We support the right of Israel to exist and oppose all forms of antisemitism.
  • We advocate the transatlantic alliance between the United States and Europe.
  • We uphold the principles of a free-market economy.
  • We reject political and religious extremism, as well as all forms of discrimination.

Note where “we support the right of Israel to exist” sits: second.

“Freedom” - within limits

Döpfner emphasises that editorial independence will be protected, including from pressure by politicians, celebrities, or advertisers. “I value debate in the spirit of pluralism and freedom of expression,” he writes. But the description of the Essentials is, frankly, Orwellian. It is not reconcilable to argue that these tenets create the conditions for “maximum journalistic freedom” while simultaneously requiring adherence to a political position on a specific foreign state. Out of 193 UN member states, only one is singled out in this way. No state has a “right to exist” under international law. Peoples have a right to self-determination - a right denied, in this case, by Israel’s illegal occupation of Palestinian land, and by subjecting its people to apartheid, colonisation and genocide.

 A Telegraph journalist put it to me bluntly: To be firmly told by our new parent company-to-be’s CEO that the second most important guiding principle is affirming the right of a country committing genocide and ethnic cleansing is more than a little concerning. It also raises the question of how any reporting from the paper can be considered factual if that is our core principle. As they note, this principle comes before any explicit rejection of discrimination.

What “Israel’s right to exist” means in practice

In practice, the phrase “Israel’s right to exist” has been repeatedly deployed by Israel’s cheerleaders across the West to justify Israel’s crimes - from occupation and colonisation to apartheid and, now, mass destruction in Gaza. It is also telling what is not said. The Essentials do not prohibit racism in general, despite later rejecting “all forms of discrimination”. There is no explicit rejection of Islamophobia, for example, or anti-Arab racism. Instead, “oppose all forms of antisemitism” is fused directly with “support the right of Israel to exist.” That conflation matters. Because we know that defenders of Israel have repeatedly blurred the line between antisemitism and opposition to the actions of the Israeli state. So how, exactly, might Axel Springer SE interpret “oppose all forms of antisemitism”?

“Free Palestine” is a “pro-Hamas topic”

There are very strong clues, let’s put it that way. The late Axel Springer himself declared: It is the task of our generation to stand firmly by Israel’s side, even if this causes difficulties for our policies elsewhere. He further added: The country does not need encouragement, but advocacy, wherever and whenever it can be provided – in the European Community, in the United Nations, in diplomatic relations, at work, in the family. He described this as a “German duty”.

In June 2021, when employees complained about the Israeli flag being raised at company headquarters, Mathias Döpfner responded: I think, and I’m being very frank with you, a person who has an issue with an Israeli flag being raised for one week here, after antisemitic demonstrations, should look for a new job. He was referring to demonstrations against Israel’s assault on Gaza that May. In October 2023, a Lebanese employee at Welt TV - part of the Axel Springer empire - was dismissed: he says it was after he challenged the outlet’s pro-Israel positions. Axel Springer SE refuse to comment on “individual personnel matters.”

In an internal email which was leaked that year, Döpfner reportedly summarised his political worldview with the phrase: “Zionism über alles” - “Zionism above all.” He has penned repeated pro-Israel polemics. “Will we stand with Israel against the enemies of freedom despite the risks, or will we allow fear and opportunism to prevail?” he wrote in October 2023, demanding “massive, unstinting political, financial and military support”. On a podcast for his employees, Döpfner claimed “a majority on Instagram, on other social media, and in particular on TikTok, took sides for the Hamas’ actions.” He argued that “an almost global wave of Anti-Semitism suddenly showed its ugly face”, which he described as a shock, despite knowing “that it is here and there, well hidden or presented in a politically correct manner as Anti-Zionism or “Woke-ism” or whatever.” And he said something deeply revealing about TikTok: “Concretely, more than 4 million posts until today have been published under the hashtag of #FreePalestine or other kind of pro-Hamas topics. And only 50,000 something, 53,000 posts basically standing by Israel.” “Free Palestine”, he argued, was a “kind of pro-Hamas topic”.

Conflating antisemitism with critique of Israel

When Israel launched its first war on Iran last June, Döpfner declared it was “surprising that Israel is not being celebrated worldwide for its historic, extremely precise and necessary strike.” Instead, he claimed: the public response is dominated by anti-Israel propaganda. The intelligence and precision of Israel’s actions are not admired but are instead used here and there to perpetuate blatantly antisemitic stereotypes. This attitude is characterized not only by racist undertones, but also by a strange self-forgetfulness. In other words, he directly conflated critique of Israel’s war with antisemitism. A few months ago, he quoted claims about atrocities committed on October 7th which included: “A first responder testified before the Knesset that he had seen the severed skulls of three children.” The claims that Israeli children were beheaded have been comprehensively debunked.

He went on to write that: justified criticism of decisions made by an Israeli government is mixed with deep-rooted hatred of Jews and that, as a result, instead of an obvious global wave of compassion and solidarity, a global wave of cold-heartedness and increasingly aggressive anti-Semitism has emerged. The piece further criticised the German government - Israel’s most loyal European defender - for “massively” restricting arms sales to Israel. Tellingly, he said that decision meant that “From now on, unconditional support for Israel’s right to exist is effectively subject to conditions.” He described the recognition of Palestinian statehood “as a reward for the barbarism of Oct. 7.”

Last October, Al Jazeera published an investigation into German tabloid Bild, a cornerstone of Axel Springer SE, headlined ‘The Story of Israel’s Propaganda Machine Specializing in Anti-Palestinian Incitement’. Al Jazeera reported that the newspaper had suggested that a Palestinian journalist killed by Israel was a “terrorist”, denied famine in Gaza, and published a lengthy report it claimed had been found on the computer of late Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar. It transpired that the document was old, not authored by Sinwar, and had reportedly been leaked by Benjamin Netanyahu’s office. The newspaper, reported Al Jazeera, had also “consistently demonised pro-Gaza demonstrators in Germany, labelling them as “mobs”, “Israel-haters”, and “anti-Semites”.” Bild has described student protesters in the US as “Judenhasser-Studenten” (“Jew-hater students”) - even though they included Jewish students.

What happens to Jewish critics of Israel in Germany?

We should also note the atmosphere in Germany, in which antisemitism is widely conflated with critique of Israel, to the extent that Jewish people there have been repeatedly denounced, deplatformed, and arrested. Alex Springer SE’s outlets have repeatedly singled out Jewish critics of Israel. Die Welt newspaper argued that Jewish American photographer Nan Goldin “misused the opening of her retrospective at the Neue Nationalgalerie to level serious accusations against Germany and Israel – supported by pro-Palestinian activists.” Another article attacked Deborah Feldman, a Jewish American-German writer who has spoken out about how the German government ignores “the way dissenting Jews in Germany are being thrown under the same bus as they are in Israel.”

A piece in Bild said of her: Her political views are close to conspiracy theories: in Germany, one is not allowed to say what one wants, the police are infiltrated by right-wing extremists, and the Federal Republic is preventing peace in the Middle East (anti-Semitic subtext: because it obeys the all-powerful Israel lobby). This is roughly the worldview of the author, who years ago also had a Netflix hit with her autobiographically inspired bestseller Unorthodox. In other words, falsely suggesting a Jewish writer holds antisemitic views because of her opinions about Israel.

Rewarded by Israel

Last October, the Israeli President Isaac Herzog presented Döpfner with the Israeli Presidential Medal of Honor - alongside Miriam Adelson, the Israeli-American business tycoon who donated $100 million to Donald Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign. Israel’s justification for Döpfner’s award was that he “is a brave voice against antisemitism and a staunch supporter of Israel. He has demonstrated unprecedented solidarity with Israel during the current war.”

Herzog incited genocide back in October 2023, when he declared of Gaza: “It’s an entire nation out there that is responsible. It is not true, this rhetoric about civilians who were not aware and not involved. It is absolutely not true.” Notably, Axel Springer SE has a business empire in Israel. That includes acquiring Israeli classifieds platform Yad2 for €165 million in 2014. Yad2 is involved in Israel’s property market, and reportedly advertises properties in illegal settlements in the illegally occupied West Bank.

What this means for the Telegraph

To be clear, the Telegraph has already had a partisan pro-Israel orientation, publishing multiple pieces justifying Israel’s genocidal onslaught against Gaza. But this takeover embeds pro-Israel bias into the newspaper’s very fabric. Its new owners are zealously pro-Israel, and have repeatedly conflated antisemitism with critique of Israel. They claim that “freedom of speech” is a core value. The truth is that Israel’s supporters in the West have launched the biggest assault on free speech since the height of McCarthyism. We can see where the Telegraph’s new owners stand on that.

The Pope Versus The President


The recent war of words between President Trump and Pope Leo XIV is probably as close as we moderns will get to a bygone age when emperors clashed with pontiffs. The rift first emerged soon after Leo’s election to the Petrine Office, when old Twitter posts resurfaced in which a pre-papal Robert Prevost had criticised Trump (and Vice President JD Vance). It deepened when the Pope instructed the US bishops to speak up for migrants caught in the dragnet of Immigration and Customs Enforcement. And things came to a head this month, when Leo described Trump’s threat to erase Iranian civilisation as “truly … not acceptable”.

Trump responded with a long Truth Social rant, in which he slammed the Roman pontiff as “WEAK on crime”, as if he were addressing the Democratic mayor of a coastal city, and fulminated about Leo’s opposition to the Iran War. He followed that up with an AI-generated image of himself as a Christ-like figure, miracle-healing an ailing man; the image was later deleted, even as Trump maintained that it was supposed to portray him as a “doctor” (the internet didn’t buy it).

Superficially, this is a disagreement between an unprecedentedly tactless president, on one hand, and the sovereign of a tiny city-state who also happens to be the spiritual leader of some 1.4 billion people, on the other. With his ill-defined Iran War petering out, Trump is lashing out wildly — including at the pope, whom he views as just another politician and, therefore, fair game for the sorts of insults he might fling at (say) the “Palestinian” Sen. Chuck Schumer or the “failing” New York Times.

But one needn’t accept the maxim that all conflicts are theological to notice the deeper theological dimensions of this one: the apparently considered decision of Leo XIV to cast off the hawkish brand of conservative Catholicism that once bridged Washington to Rome. In doing so, the Pope has forced an uncomfortable choice on conservative Catholics: do they stand with the successors of Peter, who’ve imposed increasingly stringent moral limits on warmaking? Or do they stick with a Republican Party that can’t do without wars in the Middle East, even under its supposedly populist guise? The more fundamental problem behind these questions: how should Catholics relate to a country that is presumptively sceptical (at best) of apostolic or historic Christianity?

Back in the Seventies, and especially in the Reagan-Bush years, the Catholic conservatives supplied one answer to this persistent set of problems: they furnished highbrow Catholic justifications for Republican foreign and domestic policy; presented Catholicism as, in essence, “safe” for the Right’s conception of American order; and even sought to remake Roman thought in the American image.

The impulse was understandable. A century earlier, America’s protestant majority scoffed at the Catholic Church for its pompous, “foreign”-language liturgies; spurned the extra-biblical reasoning of Catholics, with its admixtures of pagan and heathen philosophy; and treated with suspicion a group whose highest loyalty lay with a man in a funny hat in Rome. Those were the days when The Atlantic would publish editorials stating forthrightly that a “loyal and conscientious Roman Catholic could never be the US president, for the simple reason that Catholics are beholden first to the man in Rome” (this was in 1927, and the presidential contender in question was New York’s Al Smith).

Things began to change mid-century. That was when the Catholic Church found common cause with American power in the face of a common foe, Soviet Communism. Alongside Mainline Protestantism and Reform Judaism, Catholicism came to form one of the pillars of a stolid cultural consensus. It was left to the Catholics, for example, to draw up Hollywood’s censorship codes: no mentions of abortion; bad behaviour must always be shown to lose by the end of the plot, and so on.

A pivotal figure in this transformation was John Courtney Murray, a Jesuit priest and Vatican II peritus, or expert, who attempted a reconciliation between the faith and the American civic religion of liberal nationalism. Murray argued that when the popes in the 19th century condemned “liberalism”, they had in mind the high-handed, militantly anticlerical liberalism of Continental Europe, and not the American model, which emphasised pluralism and comported with Catholic notions of natural law.

Murray’s manoeuvre wasn’t without precedent. In the early 19th century, a gathering of the American Catholic bishops in Baltimore had declared that the Founding Fathers had “built better than they knew”: meaning, that although the framers of the Constitution may have been inspired by erroneous liberal doctrines, they had in practice brought forth a regime in which the Church could survive and even thrive. And so it did, throughout the 19th century, notwithstanding the assaults of Know-Nothings and the Klan, but especially in Murray’s day — a high watermark for the American Church in terms of vocations, educational and philanthropic expansion, and sheer cultural influence. Murray said, in effect: They knew and built well.

The conservative Catholics I speak of here are best seen as Murray’s intellectual heirs. These, to be clear, weren’t traditionalists. The “trads” stuck to the old-line anti-liberalism, and some of them fell into schism in reaction against the reforms of Vatican II. The Murray-ites, by contrast, sought to synthesise the faith with American (neo)liberal order, and to help strengthen that order with Catholic scaffolding.

Thus, in his 1982 book, The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism, the writer Michael Novak brushed aside longstanding Catholic anxieties about market systems to herald a brand of Catholic neoliberalism. Much as Murray had distinguished (good) Anglo-American liberalism from (bad) Continental liberalism, so Novak argued that the popes’ concerns about market society had been limited to the “industrial tyrannies” of the 19th century. These were far from the “equal opportunity and open social mobility” that supposedly characterised “later” capitalism, ensuring that it was free of coercion.

Novak, however, merely recapitulated the shop-worn arguments that the previous Leo pope — Leo XIII — had confronted in Rerum novarum, his landmark 1891 encyclical that inaugurated modern Catholic Social Teaching. In Leo XIII’s time, too, defenders of the unrestrained market insisted that the elements of choice and consent meant that no one was coerced under capitalism. Leo disagreed. Given the lopsided distribution of power and wealth generated by markets, “the richer class have many ways of shielding themselves… whereas the mass of the poor have no resources of their own to fall back upon.”

The “freedom” touted market fundamentalists in his time — and by Novak nearly a century later — was thus illusory. Real freedom and justice, Leo XIII taught, would be found in “united action” of the kind promoted by “workingmen’s associations”, and by the government promoting “balance in the social body” between labour and capital.

Novak barely mentioned organised labour in The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism; when he did, it was to lament the corruption of union leaders. Of course, there have been corrupt union leaders. It was shocking, all the same, for a book on Catholic political economy to offer such a pinched account of labour and its rights.

In translating the Catholic tradition for Reagan-era America, Novak rendered it perfectly inoffensive. There was nothing wrong with an individualistic system that couldn’t be fixed with more individualism, bootstrapping enterprise, and a robust “public moral culture” — a pet phrase of the Murrayites. Yet in their telling, the culture or morality was completely innocent of political-economic and other structural dynamics. They were loud about restricting abortion, as Catholic doctrine insists, but refused to notice how a ruthless, efficiency-maximising order might come to treat the unborn (and the disabled and the elderly) as disposable. More than any other sector of elite opinion, they contributed to the development of a conservatism that would police the bedroom, but never the boardroom.

Novak and his confrère played an equally important role in applying a Catholic veneer to GOP belligerence in the twilight years of the Cold War and, especially, in the wake of 9/11. Toiling in Right-wing think tanks, and later clustered around the religious journal First Things, they attacked a “presumption against war” that had taken hold among the Catholic bishops, as the writer George Weigel put it. Read that again. Weigel was unhappy that the successors of the Apostles — followers of the author of the Sermon on the Mount — had developed an undue presumption against war.

Weigel’s deeper critique, in fairness, was that the Church’s just-war tradition must be viewed as a public normative framework for the upkeep of peace, understood as the “tranquility of order”, rather than the mere absence of conflict. Under such a framework, he argued, the determination of a just war can’t be reduced to a check list or a matter of private conscience alone (since the public magistrate is under obligation to his public to secure them against threats).

Perhaps this had some salience in the Eighties, when Weigel first floated his hawkish theories. He did so in response to a statement of the American bishops that called for nuclear disarmament and the reconsideration of Washington’s first-use posture, while declaring nuclear attacks on cities to be immoral. Such statements, Weigel warned, ignored the reality that nuclear deterrence can make war less likely. More than that, they risked collapsing the Catholic position on war and peace into an outright pacifist one, and that couldn’t have been right: if the Church has cultivated a just-war tradition over centuries, it must follow that some wars are … just.

But by the early post-9/11 years — when Weigel had reached the apogee of his influence, thanks mainly to a blockbuster biography of John Paul II — his position had hardened into an undue presumption for war. In a 2004 essay for First Things, the author contended that the same “presumption against war” had also animated the “many warnings of catastrophe from religious leaders that preceded the … the most recent Iraq war.”

The “most recent Iraq war” was in reference to George W. Bush’s misadventure, which indeed proved catastrophic, and for which Weigel, Novak, and First Things founding editor Father Richard John Neuhaus campaigned vigorously. Their efforts even reached the Apostolic Palace, where they repeatedly sought a papal blessing for the war. John Paul II refused. More than that, the pope in the lead-up to the Iraq invasion urged world leaders to “extinguish the ominous smoldering of a conflict which, with the joint efforts of all, can be avoided”. Afterwards, his successor, then-doctrinal chief Josef Ratzinger (the future Pope Benedict XVI), insisted: “It was right to resist the war and its threats of destruction.” And on another occasion: “There were not sufficient reasons to unleash a war against Iraq.”

Weigel would go on to gripe about the American bishops over their supposedly insufficient enthusiasm for the Iraq War. Just-war theory, he asserted in the early days of the Iraq War, “lives more vigorously … at the higher levels of the Pentagon than … in certain offices at the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.” This made it seem as if the bishops were in rebellion against the magisterium — subtly eliding the fact it was Weigel himself who dissented from John Paul II’s and Ratzinger’s stance against the war.

In years to come, Weigel would explicitly criticise a magisterial document — Saint John XXIII’s 1963 encyclical, Pacem in Terris — for insufficient hawkishness and an overly expansive account of human rights. The cohort represented by Novak, Weigel, and Neuhaus — only Weigel is still alive — thus nurtured a conservatism with clear purposes: to safely position Catholicism within the matrix of GOP hawkism and neoliberal political economy; to clear the air of any lingering doubts that the faith might pose a moral challenge.

The populist uprisings that erupted on both sides of the Atlantic beginning in the mid-2010s offered the chance for a rethink. The scale of voters’ discontent with the pre-populist consensus was an index of the intellectual opportunity. Why not reach deep inside the Church’s repository of ideas for sources of renewal? And indeed, there were some gestures in this direction. I should know. It was right at this moment of flux that I entered the Catholic Church. Having launched my career within conventional, Weigel-style conservatism, I was at first unsettled and then enrapt by the possibilities: new journals; a new-old language for discussing culture and society; group manifestos outlining new politics; the thrill of iconoclasm.

This was still, technically speaking, the world of conservative Catholicism: the same tweed jackets, the same boozy galas, the same literary coordinates, the same closet cases. But in those years, they — we — were permitted to question free trade and call ourselves “pro-life New Dealers” or “anti-abortion Catholic socialists” or even “integralists”. We could even admit that George W. Bush’s wars had turned out disastrously and that “domestic reconsolidation” should be the order of the day, as current First Things editor R. R. Reno repeatedly did.

Yet, with about a decade in the rear-view mirror, it’s doubtful that a true renewal will arise in these quarters. Although today’s Catholic conservatives have differences with the Weigels and Novaks, the mould those men cast has finally proved too rigid to reshape. Too many of the figures in this sphere spent the past decade opposing Pope Francis, thoroughly alienating the late Argentine pontiff from the Right. This, when Francis’s critiques of Enlightenment rationality and soulless capitalism might have fortified their mental armories. That attitude habituated yet another generation of conservative Catholics to bend their faith to GOP imperatives, rather than the other way around. Hence, the convert Vice President JD Vance’s recent demand that Pope Leo “stick to morals” — as if his boss’s talk of erasing a whole civilisation didn’t implicate the gravest moral concerns.

Further proof: afs of this writing, more than 48 hours after the fact, First Things has yet to raise a critical peep about Trump’s anti-Leo harangue. More significantly, Reno was quick to defend the Iran War in just-war terms, even if with much less enthusiasm than Weigel mustered for Iraq. “When Trump announced ‘major combat operations’ against Iran,” Reno wrote, “he was not so much declaring war as recognizing the failure of the most recent tacit ceasefire.” Which is only a slightly more highbrow version of the Fox News talking point that “Trump didn’t start a war; he ended one.”

Likewise, many of the Catholic Republicans in my social networks appear more anxious about their relationship with the party, the White House, and the conservative world in the wake of the Leo spat than they are about the honour of the Roman pontiff. Indeed, MAGA Republicans are alienated from Roman authority to a degree that would have been unthinkable to the Murray-ites in their heyday.

Those men were solidly in the ecclesiastical mainstream, especially during the reign of John Paul II, even if they couldn’t bring him onside over the Iraq War. And they took pains to align themselves with papal and conciliar teaching, while carefully distinguishing away the inconvenient bits (just as liberal and progressive Catholics sometimes do). The characteristic MAGA posture, by contrast, is open rebellion, importing the populist and paranoid style into their relations with the Church: “not my pope!” “Leo is a communist!”

Again, all this is at least partly understandable as a sort of compromise formation for Catholics caught between Rome’s claims and American order. But is the compromise as necessary today as it was in the 20th century? Mid-century Catholics like Murray, after all, were responding to a highly coherent American order whose counterpoint was Communist totalitarianism. Today’s American order, by contrast, is far more messy and internally incoherent.

Is it necessary to compromise with a pro-Israel hawkism that that faces a negative-47-point favourability deficit among men under 50? Doesn’t it make sense, rather, to offer a Catholic conceptual framework and practical cooperation to rising progressive forces whose economic and geopolitical vision is more congenial to Rome’s? Why should disagreements on some issues prevent such collaboration, when differences with the Right didn’t prevent the formation of an alliance that lasted some 70 years?

Leo can’t force a rethink of the Iran War in Washington. But he has already sounded the death knell for Catholic conservatism of the kind which flourished in the late 20th century and, especially, the post-9/11 years; and which still guides a narrow but influential corridor of Right-wing Catholic punditry and the donors who maintain it. It’s up to American Catholics to figure out how to replace the old compromise.

Cumulative Disruption

Four and a half thousand miles from the White House, the mere whiff of Donald Trump has brought down a Prime Minister who had first held the office 19 years before Trump's first Inauguration. But Péter Magyar is going to disappoint someone, whether the voters who had thought that he was Viktor Orbán without the Orbán, or the international backers who had thought that was just an act, or both. 

Disappointment is normal. Ask María Corina Machado or Reza Pahlavi. All that Trump had wanted in Venezuela was to control where its oil went, and an even more hardline Chavista offered him that, so that was all the regime change that he wanted, needed, or would tolerate. And all that Trump has wanted in Iran has been to take a cut of the tolls that he would like to see levied on the Strait of Hormuz, plus any other available revenue, so if an even more hardline Khomeinist, the son of the previous Supreme Leader, offered him that, then that would be all the regime change that he wanted, needed, or would tolerate.

Venezuela remains a dictatorship, as will Iran. But the dictator in Caracas did not join Javier Milei and Kevin Roberts in crossing the Atlantic to address last February's Make Europe Great Again rally in Madrid, alongside Viktor Orbán, Marine Le Pen, Geert Wilders, Matteo Salvini, Andrej Babiš, Martin Helme, Krzysztof Bosak, and the host, Santiago Abascal. Nor will the dictator in Tehran reimpose the SAVAK in his capacity as an absolute monarch from a dynasty that existed to make even the Mountbatten-Windsors look blue-blooded. And nor will the Iranian dictator be one of the already forgotten old Islamo-Marxist terrorist allies of Saddam Hussein in the PMOI/MEK.

But if Orbán's Hungary was a dictatorship, then how have the voters just removed him? It was not in Hungary that MPs voted a few hours ago to empower the Police to ban recurring protests, the only kind that had ever achieved anything. As ever, a Labour Whip cast the proxy vote of Dan Norris despite his not having the Labour whip. Norris was himself a Whip with Ivor Caplin and with Phil Woolas, to whose canonisation it was a wonder that Norris and Caplin did not turn up. In the front row was the Director of Public Prosecutions who had decided, in March 2011, that Woolas's having been banned from elected office had constituted "sufficient punishment" for his breach of the criminal law, so that there would be no charge. That DPP is now the Prime Minister who was banning protests based purely on their frequency or persistence in a particular area. There is no such ban in Hungary.

As for issues of media freedom there, Lisa Nandy has just exercised her quasi-judicial role to approve the takeover of the Telegraph by Axel Springer, because that is the law in Britain. You need the Government's permission to acquire a newspaper. It is all very well to say that your titles were editorially independent when you appointed the editors. Occasional disagreements are one thing, but when did an editor last go rogue? When did the Telegraph or the Mail endorse Labour? Rupert Murdoch's papers turned Labour when he did, and they turned Conservative again likewise. It was not that Murdoch exerted pressure. He employed editors who shared his outlook. Of course he did.

Axel Springer's outlook is unbridled global capitalism, extreme social liberalism, the European Union, its military alliance with the United States, and uncritical support for the State of Israel. That is a coherent ideology, and if you think that it would not be a good fit for the Daily Telegraph, then you have possibly never read it, and certainly never met almost any of its writers. Exactly the same is true of The Guardian. In my direct experience, it is quite the game in certain parlours to present seasoned journalists from other English-speaking countries with comment pieces from The Times, the Daily Telegraph and The Guardian in blind tests, and to revel in their inability to tell which was which. The cues are essentially tribal, especially about class. If you do not pick up on those, then they could all be written by the same person.

Tuesday, 14 April 2026

Mandatory Reading

The Epstein Class was out in force today, to give lavish obsequies, in the presence of the Prime Minister and apparently on the public tab, to the race-baiter and Gurkha-hater, expenses cheat and electoral fraud, Phil Woolas. Andy Burnham promised to name the tramline from Oldham to Old Trafford "The Woolas Line" after this racist crook, and eulogists included the only British member of Donald Trump's Board of Peace, as well as John Mann, who was utterly and deservedly obscure until he made himself the foghorn of the theatrical outrage when, admittedly inelegantly, Ken Livingstone had dared to mention that of which, this very day in Israel, Ofer Aderet writes:

In May 1941, Eliyahu Golomb, founder and de facto commander of the Haganah, the pre-independence army of the Jews in then-British Mandatory Palestine, spoke in a small forum: "I have information… about suspicion regarding a group of Jews who have connections with the enemy," he said. At the time, during World War II, the enemy he referred to was the Germans. "According to the information, there is a man who contacted the Germans. This man is known; his name is S," he added.

"S" was Avraham "Yair" Stern, leader of Lehi, the pre-state underground militia also known as the Stern Gang. He had split from the Irgun because he believed the struggle against the British should continue even during the war.

"The police are already talking about a Jewish 'fifth column,'" Golomb added, referring to the British police.

Golomb's remarks were recorded in real time in a Haganah intelligence document filed under "Contacts with the Axis." The file was kept in the IDF archives and later transferred to the State Archives. About three years ago, Haaretz requested that it be declassified. It was recently scanned and uploaded.

Reviewing the file provides insight into material collected by the Haganah, and later by the Shin Bet and the IDF, regarding Lehi's attempts to establish ties with the Axis powers, Italy and Germany.

The idea of recruiting Nazi Germany to help liberate Palestine from British rule was conceived by Stern, who advocated uncompromising violent resistance to the British. His position contradicted that of most of the Jewish community, which had suspended its struggle against Britain in favor of fighting Germany.

Fighters of Haganah, the pre-independence army of the Jews in then-British Mandatory Palestine, during a patrol. "The police are already talking about a Jewish 'fifth column,'" said Eliyahu Golomb, founder and de facto commander of the Haganah, referring to the British police.

One document describes Stern's ideology as follows: "With the outbreak of World War II… Stern argued that there is no better time for a war of independence than during wartime. Britain's forces are tied down… and it would be possible to overcome them. The question of orientation seemed simple to him.

"The Jews are a party in the war and therefore cannot be neutral. Britain betrayed the Jewish people and will never allow the establishment of a Jewish state. On the other hand, Germany has no special interest in Palestine, and since the Nazis want to cleanse Europe of Jews, nothing is simpler than transferring them to their own state."

The document further states that Stern believed "it is possible to reach a practical agreement with the Germans… negotiations should be opened, and Jews of Europe should be recruited into a special army that would fight its way to Palestine and conquer it from the British. The Germans, he argued, would agree because it would rid them of the Jews while also removing the British from the Near East."

Another document notes that Stern believed there were two schools of thought in Nazi Germany regarding the Jewish community in Palestine. One advocated closeness with the Arabs and supported the leadership of the Mufti of Jerusalem, Hajj Amin al-Husseini, because it viewed the Jewish community there as "more dangerous than any other Jewish community, since it was endowed with aggressive qualities and a desire for freedom."

The other school of thought, according to Stern, supported strengthening the Jewish settlement by bringing Jews from Europe, believing they would be grateful and would assist Germany.

The file tracking Lehi's contacts with the Axis powers also includes a document written in 1949. Its anonymous author claimed that he clarified with Stern, in real time, the "ideological foundation" of his position. According to the author, Stern said:

"We will manage somehow with the Germans after they conquer the land, just as the Soviets managed with them when necessary."

Additional documents state that Stern aspired "to seize control of all of Eretz Yisrael by force with the help of a foreign power," and that "it is clear he seriously considered becoming a 'Jewish Quisling,' with the aid of a foreign power." The reference is to the Norwegian prime minister who collaborated with the Nazis and whose name became synonymous with treason.

Lubenchik sought "to prove to Axis policymakers that it would be worthwhile to designate Eretz Yisrael as that place of concentration, thereby gaining the friendship of the Hebrew people, who would enlist for this purpose in the war against England."

These plans were not merely theoretical. Historical research documents several attempts by Lehi envoys to contact German officials. One resulted in a document proposing "active partnership" with Germany in the war, based on "shared interests between German policy and Jewish national aspirations." It also suggested that a Jewish state would form an alliance with the German Reich.

These contacts did not succeed, but the Haganah monitored them closely.

The file also records additional remarks by Golomb in 1941 in two closed forums: "There is no doubt there was an attempt to contact the Germans, and it is possible they promised something, perhaps an internal Jewish police force." He added that the British government had obtained material that could be used politically against the Jewish community. "Several Jews were arrested, suspected of connections or attempts to connect with Italians or Germans, most likely with the Germans."

Golomb also referred to an internal Lehi pamphlet explaining the ideology: "Britain is a traitor. Who decided the opposing side must necessarily be against the Jews? In any case, Jews must conduct independent politics and connect with whoever is worthwhile."

At the same meeting, Zalman Shazar, who would later become Minister of Education and President of the State, was also present.

"I spoke with someone who read that pamphlet, and he conveyed its contents to me," he reported. "The Nazis are indeed against the Jews, but their hatred is directed at the Jews of the diaspora. There is no opposition in the Nazi program to a Judenstaat (a Jewish state)."

The file also mentions Naftali Lubenchik, a Lehi member who was sent to meet with German representatives. A document written in 1951 states that he believed "the Axis does not seek the physical destruction of the Jewish people, but rather their expulsion from Europe and their concentration in one place…"

It further states that he sought "to prove to Axis policymakers that it would be worthwhile to designate Eretz Yisrael as that place of concentration, thereby gaining the friendship of the Hebrew people, who would enlist for this purpose in the war against England."

Lubenchik died in 1946 in Eritrea, where he had been exiled by the British. He is commemorated on the Yizkor memorial site as one of Israel's fallen. The site notes that his contacts with the Germans were intended "to save the Jews of Europe and concentrate them territorially in the Land of Israel."

The file also includes statements by two Lehi leaders supporting attempts to establish ties with the Nazis.

Natan Friedman, later known as Natan Yellin-Mor and a future member of the Knesset, wrote in 1943: "Germany has not yet been defeated and may still become our ally."

Israel Eldad who, according to the Lehi memorial website, was "a member of the Lehi central committee and its leading ideologue and public intellectual," was quoted in 1949 as saying: "Yair acted rightly, and he was justified in doing so in seeking an ally against Britain, just as the Soviet Union acted in its own interests when it allied with Nazi Germany in order not to be abandoned by Britain."

Lehi's contacts with the Nazis ultimately came to nothing. Stern himself was killed by the British in 1942, and in the end, as one of the documents in the file states, "nothing came of it."