On 22.8.2023. 15:37, Peter Nyikos wrote:
> On Tuesday, August 22, 2023 at 12:10:29 AM UTC-4, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
>> On 22.8.2023. 4:42, Peter Nyikos wrote:
>
> Note how all the following were on the same PM, once you account
> for the time zone difference. You should really consider slowing down
> your responses. Harshman cannot be expected to do that. He is just
> as quick to reply to me as he is to you. It is I who am responsible
> for a much slower overall pace between us.
Sorry, but I don't do that (adjusting my behavior).
Again this Soviet Union. You see me through Hungarian eyes. Yugoslavia
had nothing to do with Soviet Union. In fact Stalin wanted to kill Tito,
and Tito was very against Soviet Union. Tito made pact with the West to
defend himself against Stalin. During the time of Tito West was
glorified, this is from where my love for West comes, we were raised in
a sense that West is free and democratic, while Soviet Union is all the
worst. There was a saying "Bear entered a store, he didn't say 'Good
Day', bear get out of store, you didn't say 'Good Day'." So, I was even
more surprised hearing this religious teacher bashing on the West.
When I was kid I was excellent in physics. The model of Big Bang never
looked alright to me. It has no sense, it isn't based on anything
(except "Red Shift" but Red Shift also looked very suspicious to me).
Just like the question "Who made God.", the same question you can ask,
what was before Big Bang? All this has absolutely no sense, it doesn't
answer any question, it just postulate a dogma, nothing else.
>> Ok, lets start with clearing misconceptions about my uprising,
>> regarding Catholicism. My mother was strong believer. She had some
>> problems with communists in her life, so she never raised us in
>> Catholicism and nationalism, so, she, although being strong Catholic,
>> kept it for herself.
>
> And rightly so: there was danger for her if your "Sunday school teacher"
> [see what you wrote below] had asked you for details about what she
> had told you about her faith.
No, there was no such a danger. It is just that she was very cautious.
She didn't teach me about religion, about Croatian nation, about
anything. I mean, everybody was celebrating Christmas and everything, it
wasn't such a big deal in Yugoslavia. Some very stern communists would
ridicule this, but this wasn't an official politics, this were
exceptions, nothing else, it was the private view of those stern
communists, nothing more than that. But my mother was very cautious,
because she lived in the worse times (my mother was 40 years older than
me), in the time before Tito left Stalin, when Tito was mass murderer.
But when I was alive, this wasn't such a big deal.
>> We (me and my two twin sisters) went to Catholic
>> Sunday School. Here children go by the age of 8. I didn't go at that age
>> because my mother wanted me to go along with my sisters (for obvious
>> reasons, you say that there 5 % pedophiles,
>
> No, only about 1%: note what I said about the word "pedophile."
Well, my mother wanted me to go to Sunday School with my sisters, she
knew why.
> But this was about Catholic priests. You didn't have one in the schools,
> so what was your mother afraid of? bullies? Your sisters were safe
> from the male ones, by the codes of behavior in those days,
> and could have been witnesses to any bullying you may have suffered
> on the way to school. Or even attacked a bully themselves if they
> attacked you -- being beaten by girls would have been too much
> humiliation for them, no?
I believe you got it wrong, Sunday School (religious school) wasn't in
public schools, it happened in church, on Sundays. It was in big church,
with priests and nuns in there, and this religious teacher wasn't
appointed by public officials, this was a guy tied to church, appointed
by church. The only difference was that he wasn't a priest, he was
laymen, but very religious laymen. Or, at least, this is what he was
supposed to be, and this is how he was introduced to us. He had nothing
to do with communist party. Actually, he was, probably, a Stalinist, and
church acted in agreement with Stalinists. But the official politics
prosecuted Stalinists.
>> this are just the proven ones),
>
>
> Ever since the scandal broke in 2002, all charges are thoroughly
> investigated, with the burden of proof on the accused rather
> than the accuser, as in the case of Cardinal Pell.
> There is plenty of money to be had in lawsuits, plenty of incentive
> to make false accusations. So I see no reason to think that the
> number was higher than that.
Hm, you are selecting one case, a case from not so Catholic country,
which has proper jurisdictional system, freedom of press, and all other
freedoms. In proper Catholic countries the numbers were enormous.
> >so I started to go by the age of 10 (when my sisters were 8). At
>> that age I was old enough to understand things, and smart enough to pick
>> up the logic of it. I was eager to find out what it is all about. I
>> presumed that the basis of it are 10 commandments. We had Sunday School
>> in one of the more known church in Zagreb, St.Peter's Church, in Vlaska
>> street, very close to the center of the town. But the teacher wasn't a
>> priest, ti was a layman. So, I was eager to pick up the logic behind it,
>> and I was shocked when the guy said, "We will not talk about 10
>> Commandments, you have it in catechism (small white booklet), you can do
>> it at home by yourself.". Frankly, I got the impression that the guy
>> wouldn't be able to name all 10 Commandments if somebody would ask him
>> to do it.
>
> I think you are right. Was there any reason to think he was a
> Catholic at all?
I wrote above, he was brainwashing children against the West. This
wasn't Tito's politics. When Tito left Stalin he imprisoned the
prominent Stalinists onto island called Goli Otok (Naked Island). But,
in fact, every communist was actually Stalinist, even Tito was hardcore
Stalinist before he left Stalin. So, he couldn't imprison every
communist, because he ruled with those communists. So, Stalinism was
always somewhere in the background, and when Tito finally died
Stalinists took power again. Tudjman was a Stalinist, and Catholic
church was supporting him with everything it had.
This teacher was just a stupid chicken, nothing more. And this was the
only occasion that she did such a thing. She was just kissing ass of the
rulers, and communism was concurrent religion to Catholicism, so she
was, like, on communist side (as opposed to Catholic side), nothing more
than that.
> > And this was the only
>> occasion when anybody said anything against Catholic religion.
>
> What did she say about your belief in God?
She just said that I am too young, nothing more. I didn't have any
problems because of that, and she didn't dislike me because of that. It
was just a clash of concepts, nothing more.
>> I was never raised to be against communism also, but it was obvious,
>> from a faces she made, that my mother doesn't like it at all. Of course
>> I had strong feeling for justice since I was a kid, and I noticed how
>> bad communism is, very early. I didn't like it at all, in fact, when
>> everybody was accepted in Communist Youth (I believe it is by the age of
>> 12 or 13), I was contemplating not to do it. At the last moment I
>> decided to do it, otherwise I would be the only pupil in the whole
>> school not to do it (maybe even in the whole town, :) ), and this would
>> affect my life very badly, so I decided to do it.
>
> I suspect that was the main reason the vast majority joined.
>
> My wife's father left Hungary in 1956, with six (!) children, of whom
> my wife was the youngest, because he had been repeatedly
> asked to join the Communist party and felt that he could no
> longer hold out without suffering severe repercussions.
Yes, your view is the logical one, and this is how things should be.
But, things weren't like that, actually there were a lot of people who
wanted to join communists. In Croatia, which had 4,500,000 people
(including children), you had 400,000 members of the Party. Being a
member of the Party opens possibilities for you. When system changed
those same communists started acting like they are Democratic
Christians, Catholic Church organized fast courses for them, to become
Catholics overnight, evening schools, and today the prominent
ex-communists are sitting on the first benches in church, and priests
give them their blessing. Today, if you want opportunities to open for
you, you have to do this. So, the same people were eager to became
members of the Party, later were eager to become members of the church,
and tomorrow will be eager to become members of whatever opens you the
opportunities. Complete immorality. And Church gives its blessing to it.
In China you have 90 million members of the Party. China has 1,410
million people (including a lot of children). And this Party drives
tanks over Chinese people, yet a lot of Chinese people want to become
members of that Party.
>> When I started to hate Catholicism? My country went through some
>> transitions, the moral standards of Croats were extremely low, and I
>> realized that Catholic church is the main responsible for it.
>
> The communism-suppressed Catholic Church. Where could you
> have been taught the 10 commandments in a more mature form
> than what you had in your little catechism?
Things became worse when Catholic church wasn't suppressed anymore,
more immoral, just like in every country where Catholic church is
strong. In every such country you have mafia connected to Catholic
church, and dictators connected to Catholic church, Catholic church help
them to steal money from sheep, and then shares that stolen money with
those thieves. This is how things are going where Catholic church has
its way. She brainwashes people and gets rewards from thieves which she
installed on power. And if you take a closer look, very often in such
countries in power are people who actually aren't the same nationality
as the majority, actually it is nationality that is in conflict with the
majority. Because that guy does very bad things to the majority. If they
can find one such guy, they will install him on power rather than the
guy which is the same nationality as majority.
>> I followed
>> politics, and what's going on around me, saw what is happening, and
>> realized that Catholic church is extremely bad institution. Didn't you
>> notice that Pope condemns the West for Ukrainian war, and justifies
>> Putin?
>
> I never noticed any such thing. It is the Russian Orthodox Patriarch
> who does what you describe. He is of all the Orthodox by far the
> most subservient to the civil authorities, and the most at odds with the Pope.
Oh yes, he doesn't like Pope, but Pope likes him. Just watch.
>> Vatican hates UK and USA for the reason that those two countries
>> are the sources of democracy, Vatican thinks that people should be
>> Vatican's sheep.
>
> This has been largely obsolete since the Vatican II general council.
> Now it is the traditional Catholics who like the pre-Vatican II Church
> who are the target of the Vatican. They were recently commanded
> to refrain from performing the old Latin Mass except under the most
> severe restrictions. The pre-1989 Communist countries could hardly
> have been more draconian about that.
I don't understand the whole section. In Croatia we had Mass in
Croatian language for thousand years.
> What animosity the Vatican has against the US and UK is
> that these are the most influential sources of secularization.
> Now they have the financial pressure on third world countries to promote
> abortion under the Biden and Obama administrations to add to that.
> Also the promotion of LGBTQ+ to add to that.
"Financial pressures"? The West is abandoning third world countries.
Countries who dislike West often make big fuss about Pride (LGBT)
events. They organize Pride events, and then they say that West forced
them to do this. They put a lot of LGBT people on front pages
everywhere. This is a psychical trick.
First, LGBT is the last thing West wants to impose. The West wants to
impose freedom of press, free market, democracy, get rid of corruption,
and things like that. This is what West wants to impose, but those
countries don't do any of that, they just do Pride events, and nothing
else. And now you have a situation when there is just the same number of
LGBT people like before, but you get the impression that there are twice
as many of them, because they are on all front pages. Usually you see
only few people on those pages (always the same few people), but nobody
sees it like that, everybody sees like now our society has twice as many
LGBT as before. And LGBT is a handicap. Now, you know that there are
some number of handicapped people, for example, some number of blind
people, and you can tolerate this. But imagine, suddenly you get twice
as many blind people as before. Well, you notice that things are
deteriorating, and becoming worse, where this will lead us, is the world
falling down? So, people suddenly go to find safety in God, they prey to
God to save them. So, when Pride events start, usually you have enormous
raise of believers who are looking to find sanctuary in church. And in
church they preach against the West, like, this evil comes from the
West. So, this is why countries who dislike West don't introduce free
press, free market, free justice, but they are very eager to organize
Pride events. And guess who's idea this is, who has nothing else to do
but to construct psychological tricks to sell to people?
> This may partly account for whatever lack of condemnation of Putin
> by the Pope there may be. But even Viktor Orban, Hungarian prime minister, condemned the
> February 24 "military action" and stood for the freedom and independence of Ukraine.
> Do you really think the Pope feels any different?
>
>
>> People take this lightly, but what really is going on
>> is that Vatican sees it in the most ugly way, they really do think, and
>> behave towards humans, like humans are their stupid sheep.
>> I even went to Catholic kindergarten, and as a really small kid I
>> noticed how soulless those nuns are. They were behaving towards children
>> as they are things, like they are not something worthy.
>
> That was before the end of the Vatican II council, and I too had
> that influence back then. We didn't even know what the word
> "atheist" meant until secondary school! The word was never spoken or written.
>
> However , the religious Sisters who taught us were a very mixed bunch.
> Two of them treated us as good individuals. Two others were tyrants and sadists,
> and they were our first and second grade teachers! The second grade
> teacher was not as bad as the first in that respect, but she taught
> us insane stories about children (totally unlike us) who were "saintly."
We had one nice old nun, she was really nice, and her duty was to
watch on us. But the rest were just robots doing their robotic, soulless
things, like they are on a different level, separated from humans.
>> Anyway, I didn't learn anything in Sunday School, I didn't like that I
>> had to use my free Sundays for it (at that time normal school was from
>> Monday to Saturday), so as soon as I got first Communion I stopped to go
>> there (my sisters continued with it).
>
> I'm curious to know how you got influenced the way I suspected.
> Was it the daily media?
Oh, I wrote this in some other post, you may find it. If you don't
find it, I'll repeat.