Thursday, December 4, 2025

Le Bal des Débutantes 2025

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In which the daughters of celebrities mix with aristocrats and princesses at a traditional event. From Vogue:

Read more HERE and HERE.

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Surrounded

 From Tierney's Real News:

I hear from so-called “conservatives” every day who call themselves “Libertarians” and they want me to hate Trump and hate Israel. Their latest narrative is to tell me how stupid it is that Trump is focusing on Venezuela. They say he’s clueless and needs to put America First.

Let me tell you why focusing on Venezuela right now IS putting America First.

Where do conservative voters get these constant Never Trump narratives from? Primarily from Koch Libertarian RINO “influencers” who have large followings on X.

Many Soros-Koch Libertarian RINO influencers, like Jesse Kelly, MTG, Tucker, Emerald Robinson, Rand Paul, Thomas Massie, Michael Tracy, Candace Owens, etc., keep telling their followers on a daily basis that President Trump is letting America down.

They say he must focus on America First because Venezuela isn’t an important issue and voters don’t care. WRONG. Smart and informed voters DO care.

Here’s just a few examples of the garbage that Koch Libertarians spew on a daily basis - I could give you lots more but you can research their feeds yourself. Their constant Trump hate is documented if you just look. (Read more.)

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Be Very Careful About Letting AI Take the Place of Humans in Your Life

 From John Hawkins at Culturcidal:

However, you feel about this, from “Oooh, creepy,” to “Wow, I can’t wait,” I would tell you that AI is truly amazing, but you do not want to get emotionally entangled with it in any way, shape, or form.

As a starting point, it’s not human, and therefore, it can’t scratch that itch we all have for companionship like another person. Worse yet, even if you assume that it generally has good “motives” (and we really can’t do that), we’re talking about products here. You know how you sell products and keep your customers coming back for more? You please the consumer by telling them what they want to hear.

AI grandma may tell you that it’s fine that you’re losing your teeth because you’re using meth, but real grandma is probably going to cry and beg you not to do that to yourself. Your AI girlfriend is going to cater to you and what you want all the time, while your real girlfriend is going to be in a bad mood sometimes, wants to go to a restaurant you don’t like, and complains because you have week-old dishes in the sink. AI Jake Paul will probably… well, they both may give terrible advice to their great grandkids, so that may be more of a wash.

Still, the point is that it’s not healthy to be catered to, told what you want to hear, and to live life on easy street ALL THE TIME. So many of the most worthwhile things in life, like relationships, kids, learning, and skill building, require a lot of discomfort, pain, and boredom. The more you lean on AI EMOTIONALLY, the more it’s going to limit your ability to connect with other people and your life. In the short term, it may seem fun, but long term, it will cripple you emotionally. (Read more.)

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Wednesday, December 3, 2025

The Tree of Jesse in Sacred Art


 From The Liturgical Arts Journal:

The season of Advent is synonymous with many things; Advent wreaths, Advent hymns and so on, but another symbol that is strongly associated with this liturgical season is that of the Tree of Jesse. This is manifest in the scriptural readings associated to this period of liturgical time, and it is also manifest in the O antiphon, O Radix Jesse. To understand what "Tree of Jesse" intends to refer to, we need to back up and consider the following passages from sacred scripture:

"There shall be a root of Jesse; and He that shall rise up to rule the Gentiles, in Him the Gentiles shall hope." (Romans 15: 11-13)

"On that day, a shoot shall sprout from the stump of Jesse, and from his roots a bud shall blossom. The spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him; a spirit of wisdom and of understanding, a spirit of counsel and of strength; a spirit of knowledge and of fear of the Lord, and his delight shall be in the fear of the Lord. Not by appearance shall he judge, nor by hearsay shall he decide, but he shall judge the poor with justice, and decide aright for the land's afflicted. He shall strike the ruthless with the rod of his mouth, and with the breath of his lips he shall slay the wicked. Justice shall be the band around his waist, and faithfulness the belt upon his hips. Then the wolf shall best a guest of the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid; the calf the young shall browse together, with a little child to guide them. The cow and the bear shall be neighbours, together their young shall rest... There shall be no harm or ruin on all my holy mountain; for the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the Lord, as water covers the sea. On that day, the root of Jesse, set up as a signal for the nations, the Gentiles shall seek out, for his dwelling shall be glorious." (Isaiah 11: 1-10)

In essence then, the image of the tree relates to a family tree; that is to say, the genealogy of Christ coming from the line of David and born in Bethlehem. It is within this context that we can understand why there is an association between the "Tree of Jesse" and the season of Advent which leads us up to the birth of Christ.

The Tree of Jesse is something we have frequently seen depicted within sacred art. It shows Christ and the Virgin at the top of this tree (or in some instances, the Virgin holding the Christ-child) with Jesse reclining at the bottom and trunk proceeding forth from his side; proceeding upward to Christ are various Old Testament figures, including King David and often King Solomon. This imagery has appeared in various forms through the course of two millennia, from stained glass to manuscripts, icons, murals, sculptured carvings and more. (Read more.)
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America’s Child Crisis

 From Splice Today:

The child problem is simple. Fewer people are having children because the conditions required to raise them have collapsed. The supports that made family life possible for previous generations no longer exist. Stability, affordability, healthcare, childcare, time, and margin have eroded to the point that adding a child feels like stepping off a cliff. This is a system failure, not a spiritual one.

From a family’s perspective, none of this is abstract. You feel the pressure in grocery bills, rent, medical premiums, childcare costs, and the constant guesswork of whether one sick day or one broken car will throw everything off. The margins are thin. Friends delay having kids because they can barely afford themselves. Couples who want children fight over numbers, not values. This isn’t about faith. This is about a country that stopped making space for families to survive.

Men are told to provide, be steady, be responsible, and lead their households. At the same time wages have flattened, job stability has evaporated, housing has priced out entire generations, healthcare bills can wipe out a savings account in one night, and childcare costs more than rent. Men get blamed for not stepping up while the tools they need to do that have been stripped away piece by piece. It’s not a moral failure. It’s economic sabotage dressed up as personal weakness. (Read more.)


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Remembering Jean Raspail

 From Chronicles:

Like many writers and artists, Jean Raspail eludes easy typecasting. He’s most famous for The Camp of the Saints, a novel that careless readers interpret as a xenophobic screed. Yet he made his reputation as a writer of travel stories, recounting the plights of vanishing aboriginal peoples around the world, in a tenor akin to other postcolonial writers. He was certainly a Catholic traditionalist, but he drew insights from other religions. Because he was never involved in politics and his books aren’t really about politics, it’s hard to classify him as a man of the political right. “I’m a novelist,” he wrote in an earlier preface for The Camp of the Saints. “I don’t have a theory and I don’t have a system or ideology to offer or to defend.” 

Nevertheless, Raspail’s works do evince “metapolitics,” what Joseph de Maistre called the “metaphysics of politics.” They show the intuitions and insights required to grasp deeper realities, or at the very least, identify the ones that are missing from the present. For the first time in a generation, English speakers can discover Raspail’s metapolitics for themselves. His most famous novel, The Camp of the Saints, is now back in print, with a fresh new English translation by Ethan Rundell published by Vauban Books. Read alongside Raspail’s other works, it captures his determination to preserve and pass on the best of Western civilization, especially during moments of catastrophe.

Jean Raspail was born in 1925 in Chemillé-sur-Dême, a town in the Loire Valley. The youngest of four children, he was a solitary child: by the time he was eight, his siblings had married and left the house. His family, bourgeois and Catholic, was well-connected to Parisian commercial and civic life, and so he grew up in the city’s affluent 16th arrondissement, attending the best Catholic schools. 

Raspail, however, never felt at home in this milieu. A restless student, he found his summer vacations spent outside the city far more formative. They nourished his provincial roots and his imaginative connections to the distant past. Legend had it that the family was descended from Visigoths vanquished by the Frankish armies of Clovis in 507. Tall, blue-eyed, and fair-haired, Raspail seemed to embody that ancient heritage that endured long after defeat.

Scoutisme, the French Scouting movement, played a particularly important role in forming his character. Now best known for teaching leadership and appreciation for the outdoors, Robert Baden-Powell’s scouting movement was, in fact, founded upon Christian virtues and practice. Unlike many other scouting movements, French scouting embraced Baden-Powell’s explicitly spiritual outlook. The Scouts de France was founded in 1920 by the Jesuit priest Fr. Jacques Sevin, who was later beatified. It blended the precepts of scouting, Catholicism, and the nation’s oldest chivalric customs. Properly done, scoutisme was meant to turn fidgety boys into self-disciplined men, whose love of adventure and pursuit of the noble are coupled with a mission to help others discover their roots and origins. Whereas French schooling failed to shape Raspail, scoutisme did. (Read more.)

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Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Melusine

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From Justine Brown at The Writing Desk:

Her story was written down by the French poet Jean d’Arras in the 14th century. It goes something like this: over the English Channel and faraway, in a deep well at the edge of the town of Lusignan, near Poitiers, there swims a beautiful two-tailed water sprite named Melusine. 

The daughter of the fairy Pressine and the King of Albany—Scotland-- Melusine is born in human form and grows into a graceful maiden. One day, however, she mistreats her royal father; as punishment, her enchantress mother condemns Melusine to metamorphose into a freshwater mermaid each Saturday. 

One day, riding in the forest, Melusine stops to water her horse at a cool fountain. There she encounters the noble Raymondin; they instantly fall in love.  He asks for her hand, and she agrees to marry him—on a single condition. One day out of seven, each Saturday, he may not see her at all. 

If he so much as glimpses her, he will lose her forever. Raymondin asks no questions, but hastens to accept. Now Melusine makes him blissfully contented. Not only does she adore him, she pulls riches out of thin air for him. She magicks him up a church, where they marry; and a castle, where they live happily together. Day after day, month after month, everything is perfect. She gives him many sons. Together the couple found the noble House of Lusignan. 

But the idyll is disrupted when an ill-wisher convinces Raymondin to spy on his wife, claiming that Melusine is entertaining a lover on Saturdays. Peering through the keyhole, Raymondin sees her in her bath, her great green tail flopping out. 

He emits a gasp. Melusine, realising what has happened, rebukes him. Transforming into a dragon, she wheels three times around the chateau, crying aloud, and flies away. Melusine has abandoned the castle, cathedral and village to her people, but she herself vanishes from sight. Returning to mermaid form, Melusine returns to her watery home. She can sometimes be heard keening to announce the death of a family member. But that is all. (Read more.)

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Murder & Mayhem in Minnesota

 From Tierney's Real News:

Almost 500 employees of the Minnesota Department of Human Services (DHS) publicly accused Democrat Governor Tim Walz on X of being responsible for facilitating and covering up the massive fraud in Minnesota committed by Somalis. I was one of the first to report on this fraud long ago!

Tim Walz (referred to by MAGA as Tampon Tim) is a proud member of TEAM ILHAN in Minnesota - along with AG Keith Ellison, Senator Amy Klobuchar and Senator Tina Smith - and a card-carrying Communist aligned with the CCP.

Trust me, it’s not just Walz - it’s ALL of Team Ilhan and their co-conspirators in the Koch Libertarian party in Minnesota!  

A statement was posted from an account called “Minnesota Department of Human Service Employees” on X, which claimed to represent more than 480 current DHS staff members.

The post claimed that Governor Tim Walz was “100% responsible for massive fraud in Minnesota,” asserting that employees repeatedly raised concerns about fraudulent activity within DHS programs but were met with “monitoring, threats, repression,” and efforts to discredit internal reports.

That account was created in 2023 and had nearly 17,000 followers. (Read more.)

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The High Cost of Being Experienced

 From Of Home and Womanhood:

Sex was once regarded as something that could bind two souls with a permanence stronger than any contract written on paper. Because that is what sexual intimacy really is. Our ancestors were mocked for treating sex with reverence. “How prudish,” we said, “that they believed the body had anything to do with the soul.” And with arrogant pride, we declared ourselves free. Free from shame, free from limits, free from the old insistent truth that deep pleasures require deep commitments.

We are modern men, and women, after all. We don’t need the old fashioned ways of our grandparents. We know better. We are better. Much of modern day suffering, I believe, is really due to our rejection of what was just common sense for most of human history. Children need their parents. Marriage is more than just romance. Discipline builds character. (Read more.)


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