Slate reports that Shia LaBeouf has said he is converting to Catholicism - and that it is in large part because of attraction to the Latin mass.
The article gives a fair summary of the reputation of the Latin mass for attracting Right wing reactionaries:
The traditional Latin Mass is at the center of an ongoing controversy in
the Catholic church: the small, conservative group promoting it claims
it is a beautiful and true expression of the faith, while more
progressive Catholics—and Pope Francis—see it largely as a breeding
ground for reactionary beliefs and conflict in the church. The TLM, as
it’s called by those who celebrate it, refers to the “extraordinary
form” of the Roman rite that makes up the rituals and prayers of the
Mass and which was in use until the 1960s, at which point the Second
Vatican Council took place and ushered in the “ordinary form” (Novus
Ordo, or NO).
The overwhelming majority of Catholics attend Novus Ordo Masses; indeed,
the overwhelming majority of Catholics today have likely never seen
anything else. But traditional Latin Masses have a small but highly
enthusiastic faction in the church. The main difference between the two
rites is in style and not substance: In the extraordinary form, priests
recite prayers in Latin instead of the vernacular; they celebrate the
Mass facing the altar, with their backs to the congregants; there are no
female altar servers. Proponents of the TLM describe it as solemn,
beautiful, ancient, mysterious, sacred. Traditionalists believe that the
Latin Mass is key to reviving the faith among young Catholics....
There’s
certainly nothing wrong with enjoying the Latin Mass. (With the caveat
that some traditionalist groups, such as the semi-legitimate Society of
Saint Pius X, incorporate fully outdated parts of the pre-Vatican II
liturgy into their worship, which can include explicitly anti-Semitic elements.)
In the interview, LaBeouf explained that he was drawn to the Latin Mass
because it was “immersive” and felt “almost like I’m being let in on
something very special.” Fair enough!
But the traditionalists who love the TLM can be deeply toxic.
“Trads” embrace traditionalism that goes beyond the language spoken in
services. Many of them reject the reforms of Vatican II altogether, and
stick to uncompromising positions on gay marriage, divorce, and the dress of
women and their role in society. Their extreme counterparts, the
radical traditionalists, or “Rad Trads,” often go further, idolizing the
crusades, making vile comments about Jews and Muslims, and spreading
conspiracy theories that decry the infiltration of the church by evil
forces and accuse Pope Francis of being an antipope or even antichrist.
The Rad Trad community flourishes on Twitter and Reddit and Discord,
trafficking in memes about the saints and feminists and monarchism.
These highly engaged traditionalists may be small in number (most Catholics are blissfully unaware
of the “liturgy wars,” as this debate is called). But they are well
represented among clergy, including bishops and cardinals. And over the
course of Francis’ papacy, their dissent has grown increasingly loud, to
the point that many liberal Catholics began to worry that the culture
wars in the church would lead to schism. The controversy came to a
climax last summer when, in an effort to crack down on the “division”
sown by the traditionalists, Pope Francis laid down strict rules for
when and where the traditional Latin Mass can be conducted. The outcry
that followed was intense.
Pope Francis has not backed down from his position; In June, he said
that those who “call themselves guardians of traditions, but of dead
traditions” were “dangerous” to the church. Traditionalist Catholics
have continued to claim to be martyrs.
And here's the biggest danger sign that LaBeouf is going "Rad Trad":
There’s another reason it seems LaBeouf knows exactly what side he’s
taking: he told the interviewer that he had sought guidance from Mel
Gibson in his conversion process. Gibson is not just an unabashed anti-Semite; he is also someone who speaks at traditionalist Catholic events, builds churches for disaffected orthodox Catholics, and makes friends with radical right-wing priests. (His father, Hutton Gibson, was a leading proponent of the idea that all popes since Vatican II have been antipopes.) In fact, in the interview, LaBeouf said that Gibson was the one who had shown him where to find the illicit Latin Masses.
So even the Wall Street Journal is putting up videos in which an increase in flash flooding in the USA is noted, and the connection with climate change and increasing temperatures is fully acknowledged:
I was only musing recently about the slow progress in making synthetic dairy milk, but here's an article talking about it, and how a company in Melbourne is working on it:
In Australia, start-up company Eden Brew has been developing synthetic milk at Werribee in Victoria. The company is targeting consumers increasingly concerned about climate change and, in particular, the contribution of methane from dairy cows.
CSIRO
reportedly developed the technology behind the Eden Brew product. The
process starts with yeast and uses "precision fermentation" to produce
the same proteins found in cow milk.
CSIRO says
these proteins give milk many of its key properties and contribute to
its creamy texture and frothing ability. Minerals, sugars, fats, and
flavors are added to the protein base to create the final product.
On the FBI’s list of documents seized from Donald Trump’s
Mar-a-Lago estate, item 1a is listed solely as “info re: President of
France.” For Trump, that has been a subject of intense — and tawdry —
interest for years.
Specifically, Trump has bragged to some of his closest associates —
both during and after his time in the White House — that he knew illicit
details about the love life of French President Emmanuel Macron, two people with knowledge of the matter tell Rolling Stone.
And the former president even claimed that he learned about some of
this dirt through “intelligence” he had seen or been briefed on, these
sources say. ...
In his musing on Macron’s alleged indiscretions, Trump was light on
details and specifics, according to the sources. And as a notorious
gossip peddler for decades, it’s difficult to know if any of what he
says is grounded in reality. “It is often,” one of the sources says,
“hard to tell if he’s bullshitting or not.”
In his new book, philosopher William MacAskill implies that
humanity’s long-term survival matters more than preventing short-term
suffering and death. His arguments are shaky.
When it comes to making veiled threats dressed up as dispassionate observations, I see that this rodent has learned at the feet of the master.
In fact, Trump himself posted this video last night on Truth Social.
Graham isn’t wrong. If Trump is indicted, “riots in the streets” are
plausible. But it’s one thing to say that as an analyst and another to
say it on television as a well-known, influential Trump crony. Why, if I
were a cynic, the clip below might look to me like a U.S. senator
dangling the prospect of violence to try to influence a decision by the
Justice Department on whether to charge someone. Imagine one of John
Gotti’s goons musing in an interview about people getting hurt if the
boss is charged. Then imagine electing that guy to the Senate.
Graham is correct that Trump should be held to the same standard as Hillary Clinton.
If he mishandled classified information no more recklessly than she
did, he should walk. But we don’t know yet whether he did and neither do
any of the would-be rioters. I understand why some were offended by Joe
“The Uniter” Biden describing parts of Trump’s base as “semi-fascist”
but if we’ve reached the point where a sitting senator is hinting at
mass violence if his caudillo is charged and all of us look around at
each other and think, “Yeah, that could definitely happen,” maybe we
shouldn’t feel so offended.
He ends on a strong note:
It should not to be too much to ask cretins like Graham to accept moral
responsibility for the worst excesses of the populism with which they’ve
aligned themselves. If he wants a caudillo, let him make the case for
having a caudillo. Blaming the Justice Department for riots on “look
what you made me do” grounds is weak sauce even for a weakling like him.
I wish they wouldn't do video thumbnails of Kara's skinny body, but still - it's interesting to see what a luxury cruise to the North Pole does for entertainment when they get there:
One other thing: I suppose I expected the ice to be a little thicker, even in summer. I mean, yeah, submarines can break through it, so it can't be too thick. But still, it seemed there was more open water around, and ice that was easily broken, than I expected.
Also, if you watch the video, you will probably understand why I find this couple cringey at times - they kiss and tell each other they are "so proud of you" in about every second video.
Devotion to unsanctioned Catholic folk saints is one of the fastest
growing religious movements in Latin America and is surging in the U.S.,
experts say.
The big picture: Some Latinos who feel alienated by Christian traditions are turning to saints not sanctioned by the struggling Catholic Church for spiritual guidance around love, crime and money.
Details: Catholic
canonization of saints often takes years of thorough reviews of
miracles performed and of the figure's contributions. Believers say
unsanctioned saints offer divine assistance to steal gas, move a drug
shipment, cross a border, or bless an LGBTQ+ romance.
They're gaining devotees in Mexico and the U.S., said Andrew Chesnut, the Bishop Walter F. Sullivan chairman in Catholic Studies at Virginia Commonwealth University.
The funniest unofficial saint would have to be this one:
Santo Niño Huachicolero, a perversion of the Roman Catholic image of Santo Niño, depicts the Christ child with a can of gasoline and a hose.
He's the patron saint of gas thieves who ask for help to avoid arrest, prevent fires and protect their families from a different kind of flame
When will China’s population, the world’s largest, peak? It’s a point
that demographers say is fast approaching. The country’s health
department announced this month that the population will peak and then
begin to shrink in the next three years. Others think it could happen
much sooner.
“The turning point is right around the corner,” says
Yong Cai, a demographer at the University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill. “I won’t be surprised if population decline is reported at the end
of this year.”
After years of falling birth rates, the National
Health Commission wrote in an article published online in early August
that China’s population growth has slowed significantly and will start
to decline between 2023 and 2025. According to an estimate published last month in a peer-reviewed Chinese journal, Social Science Journal1,
Wei Chen, a demographer at Renmin University in Beijing, concluded
that, on the basis of national census data released in 2020, China’s
population might have already peaked in 2021 (see ‘Projected peak’).
I still think this research attracts less attention than it deserves:
People’s ability to remember fades with age — but one day,
researchers might be able to use a simple, drug-free method to buck this
trend.
In a study published on 22 August in Nature Neuroscience1,
Robert Reinhart, a cognitive neuroscientist at Boston University in
Massachusetts, and his colleagues demonstrate that zapping the brains of
adults aged over 65 with weak electrical currents repeatedly over
several days led to memory improvements that persisted for up to a
month.
Previous studies have suggested that long-term memory and
‘working’ memory, which allows the brain to store information
temporarily, are controlled by distinct mechanisms and parts of the
brain. Drawing on this research, the team showed that stimulating the
dorsolateral prefrontal cortex — a region near the front of the brain —
with high-frequency electrical currents improved long-term memory,
whereas stimulating the inferior parietal lobe, which is further back in
the brain, with low-frequency electrical currents boosted working
memory.
“Their results look very promising,” says Ines Violante, a
neuroscientist at the University of Surrey in Guildford, UK. “They
really took advantage of the cumulative knowledge within the field.”
Memory boost
Using
a non-invasive method of stimulating the brain known as transcranial
alternating current stimulation (tACS), which delivers electrical
currents through electrodes on the surface of the scalp, Reinhart’s team
conducted a series of experiments on 150 people aged between 65 and 88.
Participants carried out a memory task in which they were asked to
recall lists of 20 words that were read aloud by an experimenter. The
participants underwent tACS for the entire duration of the task, which
took 20 minutes.
Record monsoon rains were causing a "catastrophe of epic scale",
Pakistan's climate change minister said on Wednesday (Aug 24),
announcing an international appeal for help in dealing with floods that
have killed more than 800 people since June.
The annual monsoon is essential for irrigating crops and replenishing
lakes and dams across the Indian subcontinent, but each year it also
brings a wave of destruction.
Heavy rain continued to pound much of Pakistan on Wednesday, with
authorities reporting more than a dozen deaths - including nine children
- in the last 24 hours.
"It has been raining for a month now. There is nothing left," a woman
named Khanzadi told AFP in badly hit Jaffarabad, Balochistan province.
"We had only one goat, that too drowned in the flood ... Now we have
nothing with us and we are lying along the road and facing hunger."...
Zaheer Ahmad Babar, a senior meteorologist office official, told AFP
that this year's rains were the heaviest since 2010, when over 2,000
people died and more than 2 million were displaced by monsoon floods
that covered nearly a fifth of the country.
Up
to a foot of rain fell across parts of central Mississippi on
Wednesday, leading to life-threatening situations and numerous rescues.
The intense rain swept away portions of a highway, while floodwaters partially submerged cars and trees....
The highest totals seen in the past day or two are at least 1-in-200-year or 1-in-500-year rainfalls, rare events that have only a 0.5 to 0.2 percent chance of occurring in any given year.
A
full analysis may show some locations end up with an even rarer
rainfall. This flooding event could be the sixth 1-in-1,000-year
rainfall in recent weeks in the United States. In other words, it has a
0.1 percent chance of happening in any given year. Increased moisture
availability in a warming world is a factor in these events.
I think the Biden student debt forgiveness decision is being very disproportionately attacked from the Left. (See the Washington Post editorial on it, for example.) I doubt it will have as dire an effect as some are claiming.
I mean, I would like to see the Left get as agitated by Republican moves that are much worse.
"....the telephone sanitisers, account executives, hairdressers, tired TV
producers, insurance salesmen, personnel officers, security guards,
public relations executives, and management consultants."
Updated to the present day, I sure know that this category would now be at the top of the list:
As I said to friends recently, and perhaps a bit meanly, because I actually do admire so much of their work on Youtube, it would also be full of crackshot video editors under the age of 30.
Perhaps I should throw in drone operators too (again, despite my actually liking their contributions to travel vlogging - it's just that there is so much of it now I'm starting to feel the number needs culling.)
I also keep having an urge lately to tell the two travel vlogging couples that I like to watch (The Endless Adventure - a very likeable couple, and that Kara and Nate - the somewhat irritating pair into "personal challenges" but who are OK some of the time) something like this: "Look, you're in your early 30's now, you've had a lot of fun travelling the world and getting paid for it, but unless you stop and have a child, you're going to miss out on the simpler, domestic pleasures of life. Don't do that for the sake of 'the next big travel adventure'." I mean, they both say "we're not sure if we are ready to have a child yet, or if we will", yet they seem to like their relatives' kids, and they are leaving the child bearing decision to that dangerous point in life at which many couples find they can't easily get pregnant even if they want to.
Speaking of drone shots, here's another ridiculously attractive one of yet another Chinese temple built where no sensible person would build:
Google kept trying to get me to watch a short Youtube about a Buddhist parable, so I did today, and quite liked it:
The only problem is: why so specific with 83 problems? Reminds me a bit of the Answer to Life, the Universe and Everything being 42. (Actually, in the parable, there are 84 problems, and half of that is 42. A connection?)
I also can't see where the parable is supposed to have originated. Quick Googling indicates in not in any old Buddhist material, and some say it sounds kind of Zen, but I wouldn't have thought it should be hard to track down a source, if it's relatively modern. Maybe I try again later. It's one of my current 83 problems...
I was only criticising Matt Damon as an actor earlier this week, but now he has turned up on my Twitter feed with a simple, plausible explanation for why movie studios are so risk averse in the type of film they make now:
The example he gave was a movie that might cost $25 million to make (a very modest one, then) will have a publicity and distribution budget of another $25 million, so $50 million all up, and revenue has to be shared with the cinemas, so it needs to make more than $100 million to turn a profit.
The only thing I continue to be puzzled about is that I thought that digital projection was going to save heaps of money in terms of physical distribution. Why hasn't that translated into making smaller, riskier films worth trying?
Anyway, I should add that Damon doesn't appear to be in any way dislikeable in real life: my only problem with him is I don't find him a very convincing actor.