Thursday, April 16, 2026
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The Truth About The Pope’s Attacks On Trump



I am a man of Christian faith, influenced by a Jesuit education.

Xavier University is my home.

I played football there, earned two degrees there, and spent years as an administrator and member of the faculty.

The Jesuits teachings on reasoning influenced how I argue, think, and hold the powerful accountable.

They taught me that faith without discernment is not faith. Itโ€™s naivety.

So when I look at what has happened in Rome over the past two weeks, I am not confused.

I am clear-eyed.

And what I see is a political operation.

I watched David Axelrod use Black America as a prop for two presidential campaigns.

I watched him up close.

His entire career was built on one calculation: make Black candidates, Barack Obama above all, palatable to white moderate voters.

He did not see communities.

He saw instruments.

He did not see people of faith.

He saw leverage.

He turned the most loyal voting bloc in American history into a backdrop for someone elseโ€™s ambitions.

And now he is running the exact same play.

Different face.

Different institution.

Same weasel.

On April 9, Pope Leo XIV, the first American pope in history, sat down privately with David Axelrod.

Think about what that means.

The chief architect of Barack Obamaโ€™s presidential campaigns flew to Rome and got a private audience with the new pope.

The very next day, Pope Leo XIV issued a public statement aimed squarely at the Trump administration.

Axelrod looked at this pope, a man of historic significance, and saw what he always sees.

A tool to move white voters.

Now let me walk you through the rest of the operation, because the pieces fit together too neatly to be coincidence.

On April 6, a story ran claiming the Pentagon threatened the Vatican by invoking the Avignon Papacy.

It was false.

The Department of Defense said so.

Ambassador Brian Burch said so.

The Vatican said so.

The story died in the fact-check.

But DNC operative Christopher Hale kept amplifying it anyway.

That tells you everything.

Then on April 12, CBS aired a โ€œ60 Minutesโ€ segment featuring three of the most politically liberal cardinals in the American Catholic Church.

They spoke against the Iran conflict.

They spoke against immigration enforcement.

The timing was not an accident.

This is a coordinated operation designed to do one specific thing: drive a wedge between conservative Catholics and Evangelical Protestants.

It is a tactic as old as American politics.

Now I want to ask a question that no one in the mainstream press seems willing to ask.

Pope Leo XIV condemned President Trump.

He spoke out against American policy in sharp, public terms.

But the IRGC massacred 45,000 Iranians.

Where is the statement?

We are supposed to believe that an American presidentโ€™s policies are a moral crisis demanding papal intervention.

And a theocratic regime murdering tens of thousands of its own citizens does not rise to that same level.

The Jesuits teach that intellectual honesty requires consistency.

You cannot apply moral standards selectively and then claim the moral high ground.

Either human dignity matters everywhere or the argument is political, not spiritual.

I know which one I believe it is.

Here is what the progressives inside and outside the Church do not want you to understand.

The strength of American Catholicism is not a product of Rome.

It is a product of America.

The freedoms that allow Catholics in this country to worship, to build schools, to form communities, to engage in public life without government persecution โ€” those freedoms were built by Protestant Christians.

By Evangelicals.

By men and women who wrote a Constitution that protects the free exercise of religion for everyone.

Pope John Paul II understood this.

Pope Benedict XVI said it plainly.

American religious liberty is a gift, and conservative Catholics and Evangelicals have been its joint stewards for generations.

That partnership is exactly what Axelrod wants to destroy.

Because if he can get Catholics and Protestants fighting over papal politics and mean tweets, he can distract both groups from what is actually happening.

While we argue on social media about who is to blame for Americaโ€™s moral collapse, the people engineering that collapse are working without interruption.

The Jesuits also taught me to name things correctly.

A lie is a lie.

A manipulation is a manipulation.

A political operation disguised as moral leadership is an offense against both politics and faith.

What we are watching is not a Vatican-Washington crisis.

It is a 2026 voter operation aimed at the conservative Christian coalition that has been the backbone of every major electoral realignment in the last forty years.

The playbook is simple.

Elevate liberal voices inside the Church.

Manufacture a confrontation with the administration.

Flood social media with provocations designed to make Catholics and Evangelicals blame each other instead of the people pulling the strings.

Then watch the coalition fracture.

I have spent my life in public service and in the Church.

I know what a well-funded political operation looks like.

I know what David Axelrod looks like when heโ€™s working.

And I know what my Jesuit professors would say right now.

Hold the line.

Do not let them divide what God has joined together in common cause.

Conservative Christians of every tradition have built something rare in this world: a coalition of faith that can actually move a nation toward justice and freedom.

The people running this operation are not afraid of the pope.

They are afraid of you.

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