"Human dignity has no passport.”
Pope Leo XIV, the first American born pope, will not celebrate July 4th in America, but will instead continue his trip to promote mass migration to Europe and will accept the Liberty Medal over Zoom from the National Constitution Center (past recipients include Hillary Clinton, Jimmy Carter and Vladimir Zelensky) while on the Muslim migrant overrun Italian island of Lampedusa.
The timing is no accident. Neither is the pope’s current trip to Spain to prop up its corrupt leftist government, much of which is facing potential prison time after a series of police raids and investigations, to protect its globalist project of opening up Spain to mass migration.
“Dear migrants, before saying anything else to you, I want to bow before your dignity,” Pope Leo told the invaders who had overrun Spain’s formerly placid Canary Islands.
“Human dignity has no passport,” he insisted, a sentiment more fit for a John Lennon song than the pontiff of a church that would not exist but for a Christendom built on nations with borders and passports. But a day earlier, the pope had also insisted that “we cannot believe in Jesus and promote war” a sentiment not only foreign to the Catholic Church for the vast majority of its history, but which would have ensured the fall of Vienna and Europe to Islamic invaders.
And Rome would then have become one with Byzantium leaving the church a tiny remnant.
But at the docks of Arguineguín, a Canary Islands port that witnessed Muslim migrant mass invasions so severe that over 1,000 invaders entered in only 3 days in 2024 and on some high points in earlier years as many as 1,000 had invaded in only a single day quickly overwhelming the resources of Gran Canaria where the economy is heavily dependent on tourism.
The inability of the poor island to adequately house the invasion attracted parasitic NGOs who blasted it as the “port of shame” and organized boat pickups of invading migrants and rallies to protest because the migrants did not have the kind of ideal accommodations they deserved.
Pope Leo echoed that message, arguing that the “drama of migration” was “an appeal to the conscience of Europe, which cannot claim to uphold human dignity” and which he contended was defined by, among other things, “legal and safe pathways” to invade Europe.
“Today, here by the sea, every individual that arrives asks us what remains of our humanity,” he castigated an island that had already suffered so much at their hands. “Sooner or later, it will be known whether we protected life or whether we yielded to indifference.”
One woman at least had taken that message, the same one put out by Pope Francis, to heart.
We don’t know her name, but we do know that the Irish woman saw four Muslim migrants camping out in a city park twenty miles from where the pope is now making his appearance. It was at the height of the mass invasion of the island and she asked if she could help them with anything.
And in response they attacked her and gang raped her.
One of the Muslim rapists had previously been arrested in the area for another sexual assault before being released. Such stories have become all too commonplace in the Canary Islands where a Danish tourist was raped by 4 Moroccan Muslims, before managing to fight off the fifth man, the media noted tha there were already 16,000 Moroccans living on the Canary islands.
But the difference is that the woman had been doing what progressive politicians and clerics had been telling her to do, to show concern and to avoid indifference at the plight of migrants.
And was gang raped by them for it in a painfully apt metaphor for what is happening in Europe.
Pope Leo had no words to spare for that woman and her “human dignity” or for any others who had suffered from the mass invasion of an island, a nation and a continent by a hostile culture and religion.
The invasion, he argued, “asks us if we have recognised Christ in those who disembark.” Or perhaps, somewhat more likely, Mohammed, who also began his invasions with rape, robbery and murder. But a better question still might be whether he sees a future for Christianity in a Europe that opens its doors and its ports to Islamic mass migration. --->READ MORE HERE
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