Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Thoughts for Earth Day: Four Ways Climate Change Deniers Often Get The Better of the Media

 

WSJ  article from 2012 shows how free market spin has caused many to refuse to accept man-made climate change




According to recent surveys, while up to 3 out of 5  Americans now accept global warming is human-caused (anthropogenic global warming ), a significant number still attribute the source to "natural causes."  Or express uncertainty about the primary cause, i.e. the buildup of CO2 in the atmosphere.  Given the denier or climate change minimalist attacks have increased in recent years it is instructive therefore to examine some of the methods employed to grab media microphones and distort climate reality.


1) Sowing Uncertainty to Muddy the Climate Threat:

This is perhaps the biggest tactic in use and has to do with what has been called 'agnotology'.  This term,  derived from the Greek 'agnosis' - the study of culturally constructed ignorance- is achieved primarily by sowing the teeniest nugget of doubt in whatever claim is made (and as we know NO scientific theory is free of uncertainty).  Stanford historian of science Robert Proctor has correctly tied it to the trend of skeptic science sown deliberately and for political or economic ends .

The agnotologist and his ilk succeed once the following trope is emitted and embraced by the power structure:

There is still so much uncertainty, we shouldn’t invest billions to solve an exaggerates climate problem,’

But this is egregious on so many levels that it boggles the rational mind. First, any modern scientific pursuit must include uncertainty. Uncertainty is acknowledged every time I perform a measurement - say of the solar diameter- and express it with plus or minus kilometer values. It signifies that final measurement cannot be presumed free of measuring error which is inherent in all our physics, astronomy etc.

The matter of "too much uncertainty" is also the wrong way to look at the issue for any scientific model or measurement, because they can as easily UNDER-estimate a potential threat or occurrence as over estimate it. Let's take the case of city -busting asteroids which were the topic for discussion on one CBS Early Show several years ago, with physicist Michio Kaku.  Kaku reported that in fact we have had to readjust our estimates of asteroid impacts based on new observations. Where we once expected a city-buster (say one that could take out a city like New York) every 150 years, we now have to expect it such a killer every 30 years!


In a similar vein, the uncertainty attached to climate models could also be in the direction of under-reporting or under-estimating the full impacts. Thus, the uncertainty could well be such that the runaway greenhouse effect could erupt fifty to one hundred years earlier than previously thought. Or the rising of the sea level owing to melting Arctic (and Greenland) ice sheets could incept a 10m rise as opposed to a 3 m one. This is why uncertainties are expressed as plus and minus values at the end of the measurement.

My point is that the trope expressed above doesn't take into account that the uncertainty implies that the problem is more likely to be worse than expected in the absence of that uncertainty. 


2) Using 'Affordability' To Claim A Higher Priority Over Climate Change:

This tactic has come more and more into vogue given how the affordability metric has attained so much prominence since the Covid pandemic. (Which naturally caused a spike in prices for sundry goods on account of supply chain problems.)  A recent example is 
Greg Ip's recent WSJ climate piece ('The Climate Crisis Clashed With Affordability and Affordability Won)'. Ip writes:

"Why have climate alarmists suddenly gone quiet? The science and the economics haven't really changed. Carbon emissions are still rising and the climate is still getting warmer."

Ip isn't kidding on the matter of rising CO2 emissions and warming..  Over the past ten years, from 2015 to 2024, have been the hottest on record, with 2024 being the warmest year overall, according to scientific and weather organizations. This marks a significant shift, as all the warmest years in recorded history have occurred within this recent decade. So what gives? What's changed? Ip provides what he believes is an answer:

"What's changed is the politics. Climate warriors persuaded the public to take climate change seriously, but not to pay for it, especially after the cost of living shot up in the wake of the pandemic and Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The share of respondents calling climate and the environment their most important issue has dropped from 14% in early 2020 to 6% now according to Yougov. By contrast 25% describe inflation as the top priority."

But the point being missed here is that economics and pocketbook issues, pounded over and over in the media- no doubt aided by overemphasis and misalignment in many polls. Thus, affordability began to assume supremacy in Americans' minds over climate. Despite the fact climate onslaughts, i.e. floods, tornadoes etc. were driving much higher home repairs, fuel, food, other expenses. 

 The Yougov poll intentionally or not, has sown confusion, namely that higher prices and inflation trump climate instability. They do not.  Hence cannot be a more important issue objectively - i.e. in objective reality.

3) The degree of Consensus Among Climate Scientists Remains Under Reported

Alas, much denial and minimization of climate change has worked because too many Americans are not aware of the real consensus among real climate scientists that anthropogenic global warming is a FACT that must be acted upon. Perhaps the first researcher to scientifically and statistically establish this was science historian Naomi Oreskes - who first published an initial survey of global warming literature, entitled  “Beyond The Ivory Tower: The Scientific Consensus on Climate Change.”

Oreskes analyzed “928 abstracts, published in refereed scientific journals between 1993 and 2003, and listed in the ISI database with the keywords ‘climate change.’” She found that 75 percent of papers accepted the consensus view “either explicitly or implicitly,” while “25 percent dealt with methods or paleoclimate,” and took no position on AGW.  Remarkably, she found that none of the papers disagreed with the consensus position.  

Later studies have found a small sliver of dissenting views, but the more the consensus has been studied, the sturdier it appears, while the dissenting literature is dogged with repeated problems. For example, in Eos Transactions, Vol. 90, No. 3, p. 22 , P. T. Doran and M. Kendall-Zimmerman found that (p. 24)

the debate on the authenticity of global warming and the role played by human activity is largely non-existent among those who understand the nuances and scientific basis of long-term climate processes.”

In their analytic survey for which 3146 climate and Earth scientists responded, a full 96.2% of specialists concurred temperatures have steadily risen and there is no evidence for cooling. Meanwhile, 97.4% concur there is a definite role of humans in global climate change.


A 2010 paper, Expert credibility in climate change, reconfirmed the 97 percent consensus figure, and found that “the relative climate expertise and scientific prominence of the researchers unconvinced of ACC [or AGW] are substantially below that of the convinced researchers.” A 2013 paper, Quantifying the consensus on anthropogenic global warming in the scientific literature, examined “11,944 climate abstracts from 1991–2011” and found that “97.1 percent endorsed the consensus position,” while a parallel self-rating survey found that “97.2 percent endorsed the consensus.”

Despite that, an actual Mensa member, writing in a prominent Mensa Bulletin piece in 2010, actually posed these questions:

- Why does the media imply that the IPCC report reflects the consensus of thousands of scientists, when – as reported by CNN – there are dissenting scientists, like Richard Lindzen of MIT?

If there’s consensus, why on Dec. 20, 2007, did the U.S.  Senate Committee on the Environment and Public Policy issue a report that 400 scientists now believe the evidence doesn’t support that “consensus"?


Nemko interpreted “consensus” in these questions to mean 100% agreement, but this isn’t the case at all.  A consensus in the accepted English definition means the concurrence of an overwhelming majority.

By confusing the meaning of "consensus" these objectors seek to try to make the public believe the issue isn't settled when it is.  Our media needs to do much more to make this climate consensus known.


4)  Adoption of Climate Change Minimalization Using "Adaptation" Distraction


This tactic has been epitomized by none other than Bjorn Lomborg

Bjorn Lomborg - he of the now discredited "Copenhagen Consensus" -  has escaped a lot of media scrutiny.  This is perhaps because he knows how to shovel the B.S.  Namely offering "adaptation" as the "less costly" alternative to things like lowering fossil fuel consumption, say by using gasoline taxes.  Because the latter is so tied in with the affordability issues noted earlier, it often works. But it's a fool's errand.

Lomborg presents himself as a hard-headed climate realist (not outright denier) asking tough questions about the costs and benefits of climate policy. But he's more in line with a climate dilettante who cherry picks at will while invoking numerous strawman arguments on why the approaching climate catastrophe isn't the biggest crisis facing humanity. 

In one 2021 WSJ op-ed ('Climate Change Calls For Adaptation, Not Panic', Oct. 21 he more or less doubles down on his adaptation twaddle, writing:

"Adaptation doesn’t make the cost of global warming go away entirely, but it does reduce it dramatically. Higher temperatures will shrink harvests if farmers keep growing the same crops, but they’re likely to adapt by growing other varieties or different plants altogether. Corn production in North America has shifted away from the Southeast toward the Upper Midwest, where farmers take advantage of longer growing seasons and less-frequent extreme heat. When sea levels rise, governments build defenses—like the levees, flood walls and drainage systems that protected New Orleans from much of Hurricane Ida’s ferocity this year.   

Nonetheless, many in the media push unrealistic projections of climate catastrophes, while ignoring adaptation. A new study documents how the biggest bias in studies on the rise of sea levels is their tendency to ignore human adaptation, exaggerating flood risks in 2100 by as much as 1,300 times. It is also evident in the breathless tone of most reporting: The Washington Post frets that sea level rise could “make 187 million people homeless."

Lomborg appears not to grasp adaptation to a  post tipping point climate change world is a non-starter -  for the simple reason human biology isn't designed to survive weeks without a reprieve from 120-130F day temperatures that only dip minimally at night. And for which most places do not have the luxury of air conditioning. e.g.

As I noted therein, 


Lytton, B.C.  reached a high of 49.6C (121.3F) on Tuesday, the day before its residents evacuated as raging wildfires devastated the town.  In Portland according to one official:

People were literally crawling to the Sunrise Center because it was so hot. They were vomiting, burnt and dehydrated 

And what of the power grid that supports it? We're informed now that the residents of Seattle and Portland are trying to get a/c for their homes - and orders are backed up.  But as one official pointed  out, 'Our grid is not designed for such intensive use of air conditioning.  The grid will be overloaded.."  


But this is typical of Lomborg in ignoring facets of climate change emerging at tipping points. One of which we are currently in.

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Markets "Whipsawed By War Shifts?' When Will They Learn They Can't Trust Trump's Trash Social Blabber?

 The introductory paragraph of the WSJ piece, ‘War Shifts Whipsaw Markets’ (April 13, Markets & Finance p, C3) tells you all you need to know on how Trump has been playing the markets for his own ends since he sprang the Iran war on an unprepared world.

"Trump has repeatedly whipsawed markets during the Iran war, most recently by announcing a cease-fire only to declare a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz a few days later. The changing pronouncements have spurred market volatility since the early days of his first term. There are some signs that subsequent market swings are diminishing. But the past few weeks have nonetheless exhausted even seasoned investors."

The accompanying graphs show the whipsaws and frequency thereof better than any words:





The above graphs also telegraph Trump's motives better than any words. We know he sees the markets as the primary gauges of any success - especially when he's started a totally unnecessary conflict in the Middle East against Iran.  Hence, each jump in the markets he can instigate is seen as a 'win' and we know he loves wins. 

 But get beyond the predictable jerking of the markets' chains, say to sober assessments of his Iran fiasco, and you get the real picture. Say columnist Gerard Baker's latest effort (WSJ, April 11-12, p. A15, 'For Now The Iran War Seems to be Failing'), writing:

"It isn't too soon to offer a tentative judgment on the president's biggest foreign policy action to date: ill-conceived, ill-planned, ill-executed and so far failing"

Which hits the mark on every point.  This farce was never planned, it was started on a freaking whim, a bet he could take down Iran and its regime as easily as he did the Maduro regime in Venezuela. It was a wild, cockeyed shot in the dark that had the marks of loss tattooed on it from the get go, (Recall here Sun Tzu's words in 'The Art Of War',  Every battle is won or lost before it is ever fought

Meaning, the outcome is inevitably determined by preparation, strategy and understanding of the situation before ever being fought. All of which are more critical than the actual fight. In this sense, Trump and the Trumpers lost the first and major battle even after taking out the top leaders of Iran's regime. They lost because they failed to factor in  how Iran - even after losing its main leaders- could still control the Strait of Hormuz and the flow of oil,  hence upending the global economy. So we see a major Trump miscalculation because he's been unable to face reality, i.e.


WSJ's Baker again:

"For those who dispute this and prefer to buy the administration's protestations of victory I'd suggest you listen to his own voice and that of his supporters. Especially the things you don't say when you are winning a war.  You typically don't threaten to wipe out the other side's civilization.  You don't threaten such villainy if you don't need to. You make that kind of desperate, deranged threat only if things aren't going your way.

And winning doesn't typically require a scapegoat, let alone a herd of scapegoats grazing in the hyperbolic pastures of presidential rhetoric. Only losers look for people and things to blame.... like the Europeans.  The same Europeans you said two weeks ago were unfit for combat."

Baker is basically spelling out in black and white why no one, no entity (including the markets) should believe a single word Trump spouts. He is just yanking the media and market chains to get his way. His "hyperbolic rhetoric" is sowing investors' irrational exuberance and certain grief - and losses - down the line.

As the main WSJ piece (about the whipsaws from Trump) goes on to note:

"The changing terms of Trump's ultimatums to Iran have also sparked sharp swings in the price of oil, which has rippled through other markets. Oil producers and energy-hungry industrials have even moved in opposite directions.

The markets had a particularly wild ride during a three-day period from March 7-9 when the president declared that Iran would no longer attack its regional neighbors, that the country was being considered for 'complete destruction' and that the U.S. might opt to take control of the Strait of Hormuz."

All bunkum, bombast and BS, but which had the markets hanging on every word despite the words being those of a desperate hack and liar, already aware of a war and economy he could not control.  Think of the old saw "the dog that caught the car".  That is where Trump is and has been since Iran sealed off the Strait of Hormuz. T0 put it bluntly, the stock market had no business rallying given Trump's bogus "ceasefire".

Will the markets finally halt Trump's jerking them around? Maybe, IF they can stop hanging on every syllable from his piehole.  Taking as 'gospel'  every piece of BS he puts up on his Trash Social - which itself isn't even an official venue a sober leader would use.

See Also:


And:


Excerpt:

Appearing on Sunday morning news shows, top officials in President Donald Trump’s administration confirmed the plan for the next round of diplomatic talks in Islamabad, Pakistan: Vice President JD Vance, whom Trump had tapped earlier this month to lead the U.S. negotiations, would be there again.

Even as United Nations Ambassador Mike Waltz and Energy Secretary Chris Wright were confirming Vance’s participation, however, Trump was telling the networks the opposite. Vance wouldn’t be traveling to Pakistan because of security concerns, the president told journalists from ABC and MS NOW in separate phone calls Sunday morning.

Trump’s remarks set off a scramble within the White House as officials worked to correct the commander in chief’s claims, telling reporters privately that Vance would, in fact, be leading the delegation to Islamabad.

The contradictory remarks highlighted a continuing challenge for the administration: On information as basic as who would attend high-stakes peace talks, as well as on broader questions of whether Iran has agreed to terms for a deal, Trump’s oscillating claims have led to confusion and required cleanup by his staff.


And:


Excerpt:

The United States and Israel launched their war against Iran on the argument that if Iran one day got a nuclear weapon, it would have the ultimate deterrent against future attacks.

It turns out that Iran already has a deterrent: its own geography.

Iran’s decision to flex its control over shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, the strategic choke point through which 20 percent of the world’s oil supply flows, has brought global economic pain in the form of higher prices for gasoline, fertilizer and other staples. It has upended war planning in the United States and Israel, where officials have had to devise military options to wrest the strait from Iranian control.

The U.S.-Israeli war has significantly damaged Iran’s leadership structure, larger naval vessels and missile production facilities, but it has done little to restrict Iran’s ability to control the strait.

Iran could thus emerge from the conflict with a blueprint for its hard-line theocratic government to keep its adversaries at bay, regardless of any restrictions on its nuclear program.

And:


Excerpt:

As stocks soared this week and oil prices dropped amid an apparent cooling of tensions between the United States and Iran, it may have left the impression that the energy shock that rattled the world would quickly fade, along with the risk of sending the global economy into recession.

The optimism may have been short-lived. On Saturday, Iran’s military announced it would reimpose restrictions on the Strait of Hormuz, throwing the critical waterway’s status into doubt.

The uncertainty highlights that beneath that surface, a starkly different reality is unfolding. It is defined by disrupted supply lines and damaged infrastructure, sparking increased concern among the people who produce, transport and depend on energy.

“The people closest to the industry are far more concerned about these disruptions and recognize the length of time it will take for things to return to normal — if they ever do,” said Gerry Morton, oil and gas co-chair at the law firm Baker Botts. “The further away you get from actually being involved in producing oil, the less you seem to be concerned about the physical reality and problems that are there.”

Even investors rushing to tap into market optimism warned in interviews that it masks deep, underlying problems that threaten a reckoning in the not too distant future.

That disconnect between what the market is signaling and what is actually happening is increasingly shaping the global economy. As investors and the trading algorithms they rely on react to headlines and hints of diplomatic progress, analysts warn they are overlooking red flags around what is coming in the weeks and months ahead. It has led some of the world’s leading economic voices to warn that complacency is misplaced, including the head of the International Energy Agency and officials at the International Monetary Fund.


And:


And:


And:


And:

Solutions To Prime Modulus - Congruence Problems

 1)  Write four additional equivalences for the mod 7 residues (2 already shown)

Solution:

Already given:

1   ÷  2 = 4(mod 7) 

And:

1   ÷   2 (mod 7) 

So we add:

1   ÷   3 = 5 (mod 7) 

1   ÷   5 = 3 (mod 7) 

1   ÷   6 = 6 (mod 7) 

1   ÷   7 =0 (mod 7)   (Impossible)

2)  Consider the p = 5 prime modulus portrayed as shown below in clock form:


Write four equivalences for the mod 5 residues. Can these be written in the form for the mod 7 cases in Problem 1? Why or why not?

Solution:

Four equivalences from the table:

1   ÷   2 = 1· 3   3 (mod 5)

1   ÷   3 = 1 ·2   2 (mod 5)

1   ÷   4 = 1 · 4   4 (mod 5)   

2   ÷   3 = 2 ·2   4 (mod 5) 

 These cannot be written in the same form (as Littlewood's) for the mod 7 cases given there is no counterpart for 4 x 2 = 8  1 (mod 7).   I.e. from the mod 5 multiplication table we see no entry: 3 x 2 = 6    1 (mod 5)

This is because the commutative and distributive laws are not consistently obeyed by groups.


Monday, April 20, 2026

Why Trump Is Batting On A Losing Moral Wicket In His Battle With Pope Leo

                       It's no contest between Pope Leo and a proven traitor and amoral madman



Jesus said 'blessed are the peacemakers but Woe to those who manipulate religion and the very name of God for their own military, economic, and political gain, dragging that which is sacred into darkness and filth. The world is being ravaged by a handful of tyrants”- Pope Leo Thursday

"The argument Leo is making is not based on a tactical foreign policy disagreement. Rather it is a moral argument he is making against Donald Trump and Trump is going to lose a moral argument every time." - Alex Wagner, on Deadline Whitehouse, MSNOW, Thursday, April 15)

" A man who has lived a completely amoral life, who lacks even basic decency and integrity, and revels in cruelty. He has not the intellect or temperament to be President and is a genuine threat to our democracy. The cowardice of Republicans in not constraining him is unforgivable." - NY T comment

The self-idolatry of Trump  - either depicting himself as Christ or claiming "divinely ordained power"   - has been supercharged since being compared to Jesus Christ by an evangelical minister named Paula White. White, who also heads the 'White House Faith Office', famously described Trump as a latter-day Jesus - using a batch of analogies - at a WH Easter luncheon.  She actually said:

 “Mr. President, no one has paid the price like you have paid the price. You were betrayed and arrested and falsely accused. It’s a familiar pattern that our Lord and Savior showed us. 

A further WSJ article ('Christians Stunned By Pope Slam', 4/14) noted:

"Other spiritual advisors like Paula White publicly framed the president's authority as divinely ordained."

The blasphemous comparisons and attributions began soon after the attempted assassination of Trump back in July, 2025. Indeed, as soon as Trump did his fist pump, e.g.


It became emblematic for his presumed "godhood". Thereby a freak happenstance (a lucky last minute head turn) transmuted into his firm belief that "divine providence" rendered him beyond criticism and above the law. Solidifying this lunacy in the brains of his followers and especially the White Nationalist Christian theocrats salivating at making him their new god. In the words of one Reep Rep stooge (Pete Sessions (TX)) who spouted in a CNN interview last Thursday: "He is as close to the Second Coming as one could want!"

 The adoration swiftly went to Trump's mangled brain whereupon his god complex was hatched and has metastasized like a tumor.  Only a few days after Paula White confirmed he was like Jesus, he vowed - like the god of the Old Testament - he could incinerate Iranian civilization. A couple more days and his AI image of himself as Christ went up (which he tried to fob off as being a "doctor" -believing we're all as dumb as his supporters). Then a couple more days he attacked Pope Leo after the Pontiff earlier made gospel-based remarks about the folly and ungodliness of the Iran war - especially attempts to invoke divine will for the cause of bloodshed, i.e.

"God will not listen to prayers from those whose hands are full of blood."

The pope did not name specific political leaders but  steadily sharpened his criticism of Trump's war in ensuing weeks, repeatedly calling for an immediate ceasefire.  Leo especially enraged the Trumper war criminals when he said:

Brothers and sisters, this is our God: Jesus, King of Peace, who rejects war, whom no one can use to justify war. He does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war, but rejects them.”

All this has led up to the current bitter divide which has seen Trump, the reincarnated 'father of lies' issuing a stream of them such as:

"Pope Leo wants Iran to have nuclear weapons".

See the video:   Trump claims Pope Leo says Iran can have a nuclear weapon

Which Lawrence O'Donnell - on his Thursday night show - condemned as one of the vilest.

NY Times WH reporter Katie Rogers further described Trump's reactions:

"In a 12-hour span this week, President Trump promised that the war with Iran was ending soon. He picked a fight with the pope on social media. He posted an illustration of himself receiving an encouraging hug from Jesus Christ.  Now, Mr. Trump is showering Truth Social with Jesus memes and threats and endorsements."

Of course he is, because he needs to deflect - to spin that he is not truly a vile, tyrant traitor madman but actually a 'friend' of Jesus. In his demented mind. He is no friend of Jesu no matter how many times he spurts out babble and memes, because as Leo proclaimed, Christ never slaughtered innocents - such as Trump has done, whether blowing up fishing boats off the coast of South America, or school children outside Tehran.

What makes this altercation with the Pope different from all the other Trump fights is that he cannot post or bully his way out of it.  This is because the maniac is not going up against a person but an institution.  As Katie Rogers wrote:

"Isn’t getting into a fight with the Vatican during the middle of a war — and during a midterm election year when the main topic of discussion is the high cost of living — a little extreme, even for Mr. Trump?"

Indeed it is, but when a psychopath acquires a good complex, this is what happens. He then is convinced he can outright challenge the leader of Christendom's largest religion. (Probably also because 55% of deluded Roman Catholics voted for him in 2024).

But soon after his inauguration and the first felon president began mass deportations with  ICE raids on immigrants, the fracture with the Church began.  This was after Pope Leo XIV questioned whether the “inhuman treatment of immigrants” is consistent with being pro-life. Then this year, on Easter, he said, “Let those who have the power to unleash wars choose peace!” 

Then on Friday 2 weeks ago Leo posted a message that anyone who is a disciple of Jesus Christ “is never on the side of those who once wielded the sword and today drop bombs.”

By Sunday, wannabe "Jesus" Trump apparently heard enough and  unleashed a lengthy post accusing the pope of being “WEAK on Crime, and terrible for Foreign Policy.” The orange fungus also posted a picture of himself as a Christ-like figure, though that was taken down after it generated a backlash.  But Trump in his papal obsessions has not let up, even blabbering that "Leo was elected only because he was an American, and they thought that would be the best way to deal with President Donald J. Trump.

But the infernal sociopathic fool is still missing the point. Right after Leo was elected, seven cardinals — six Americans and Cardinal Christophe Pierre,  were asked if he had been selected to serve as “a counterweight” to Trump. While Cardinal Joseph Tobin of Newark noted that Leo “is not one to back down if the cause is just,” the group said no: 

In choosing the new pope, their conclave was thinking about the future in terms of the unity and strength of the Roman Catholic Church, not designating a foil for Trump.  But since Trump's psychotic universe is limited only to his own ego and grievances, he measures all comments, events and actions as referred to himself. We call it a psychotic embolism, e.g.

by Bandy X. Lee | April 15, 2026 - 5:19am | permalink

`

As James Grimaldi of The National Catholic Reporter put it in his NY Times piece 'Trump Has Pope Derangement Syndrome'.

"Pope Leo’s statements aren’t partisan barbs; they are expressions of his understanding of the Gospel and Catholic social teaching."

Or as Alex Wagner framed it last week Thursday on Deadline Whitehouse:

"Trump thinks he is at war with a person, but it's actually an unshakeable faith. He thinks he's in a food fight with a guy from Chicago, but that's not how millions of Roman Catholics are seeing it. U.S. Catholic Bishops spent the last three election cycles trying to move voters to Trump, and now they are taking Leo's side against him."

But given Trump is no gospel or theology specialist he reduces all gospel remarks to personal attacks, especially given he already likely feels a sense of guilt for all the lives he's butchered indiscriminately Hence, Trump’s maggot brain flared up after Pope Leo – speaking in Cameroon- said the world is  “being ravaged by tyrants”.

Meanwhile, Trumper buffoons like Pete Hegseth have tried to summon the troops to war using fake bible quotes taken from the script of the Quentin Tarantino movie Pulp Fiction, e.g.

Did Pete Hegseth Quote FAKE 'Pulp Fiction' Bible Verse At Prayer Service?

Hegseth channels his inner Tarantino with fake Bible verse from Pulp Fiction | Trump administration | The Guardian

Citing this idiocy on Deadline Whitehouse last Friday, Anthea Butler - Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Pennslyvania- observed that it's reduced our nation to laughing stocks around the world. This is given that Hegseth and Trump's crusade is now apparent as a "myth making exercise based on cultural wars fomented mainly by the Religious Right,"  Basically, using fake quotes, movie lines and myths to wage a war that makes them all look stupid."

Alex Wagner put it more brutally on the same program:

"This gang of clowns is going up against a thousand year old line of theological discourse and thought."

And no match for the Pope who speaks actual biblical verses not fake ones from movie scripts. This is why Prof. Butler believes it will cost Trump the Catholic vote in the midterms, with the rank and file of those misled 2024 Trump voters now saying:

"This is not what I voted for."

Meanwhile the rest of the word is wondering how a country that talks so much religion can actually know so little about the actual bible. Or as Prof. Butler noted:

"I just hope all those soldiers and others with heads bowed during Hegseth's fake bible reading didn't seriously believe it was real, or they were really praying."

But they may well have, given Hegseth at least knows how to make a big act out of whatever he says or does.  A performative puppet of Trump's. But he chose the wrong person to go up against in Pope Leo XIV.  So did buttbrain DJT.

It was Prof. Anthea Butler, indeed, who first pointed out that Pope Leo's articulation of the gospel truths from his readings were not directed at Trump personally, but for the laity's benefit. But Trump took them personally because: a) He take everything personally as an attack given his sociopathy, and b) knows next to nothing of the gospels himself.


See Also:

by Robert Reich | April 17, 2026 - 5:36am | permalink

— from Robert Reich's Substack

`

You’ve got to hand it to Pope Leo, who used a speech today in Cameroon to express “woe to those who manipulate religion and the very name of God for their own military, economic and political gain, dragging that which is sacred into darkness and filth.”

I can’t imagine who Leo was talking about, can you?

In case there was any doubt, the pope added: “The world is being ravaged by a handful of tyrants, yet it is held together by a multitude of supportive brothers and sisters.”

The tyrant in the Oval Office has been trying to portray his war in Iran as a “just war” backed by the will of God and Jesus Christ. Pope Leo disagrees. Jesus, he says, “does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war.”

» article continues...

And:

Opinion | The Pope Bedevils Trump - The New York Times

Excerpt:

President Trump has been rampaging around the globe like Grendel at dinner time, a rapacious, feral creature. Who could stand up to him?

The soft-spoken, humble Leo, who strives to unify, squared off against the bombastic, solipsistic Trump, who strives to divide. And watching the saintly pope school the amoral president is a blessed sight.

On Easter Sunday, Trump blasted out one of his assorted threats to destroy Iranian civilization, crudely appending the phrase “Praise be to Allah.” Leo called the existential extortion “truly unacceptable,” a transgression against moral law.

Trump escalated. He posted a meme of himself as a Jesus-like figure healing a sick man and he attacked the Holy Father on social media with sinful aspersions, saying the pope is “WEAK on crime” and “I don’t want a Pope who thinks it’s OK for Iran to have a Nuclear Weapon.”

Leo, who’s Chicago-tough, hasn’t backed down. On X, he said: “God does not bless any conflict. Anyone who is a disciple of Christ, the Prince of Peace, is never on the side of those who once wielded the sword and today drop bombs.”

He reminded the authoritarian, Strangelovian president that he should be promoting peace through dialogue and multilateralism.

“Too many people are suffering today, too many innocent people have been killed,” Leo told reporters, “and I believe someone must stand up and say that there is a better way.”

In a puerile fit of apparent retribution on Thursday, Trump canceled an $11 million federal contract with Catholic Charities in Miami to house and feed migrant children coming to America alone. (Even my Trump-indulging sister found that disgusting.)

It’s hard for the president to give the pope the respect that he deserves because Trump clearly thinks that he’s the Messiah.

And:

Pope Leo Continues Feud with Trump: 'World Being Ravaged by Tyrants'

And:

Opinion | Trump Needs to Get Over the Pope - The New York Times

And:

YouTube videos:

‘He thinks he's smarter than the POPE?: Nicolle and Tim Miller ROAST JD Vance over Vatican beef

Pressure Builds as Trump Doubles Down Against the Pope

FURIOUS Pope STRIKES BACK at Trump after DEATH THREATS!!!