The video below shows the political corruption in California, which is a failed state because of the Democrat Party. It has the highest income taxes, the most illegal aliens, and the largest homeless population in the nation. Voter fraud keeps the leftist Democrat Party in power and will continue to do so in perpetuity.
California is a lost cause, and Illinois and New York are not far behind following in its footsteps. Soon Florida and Texas will join them, and when they do, the Democrat Party will control the Electoral College, i.e. the presidency will go to the Democrat in perpetuity, which means the party will control the appointments for who sits on the Supreme Court and who interprets the Constitution.
California is microcosm of what the United States will become once the Democrat Party gains control of the three branches of government again.
So when you vote in 2020, use this rule of thumb: the worst Republican is better than the best Democrat.
The Reverend Patrick J. Conroy, 60th Chaplain of the House of Representatives, is the second Catholic priest and the first Jesuit priest to hold that position.
So far this session, Conroy has given 44 prayers in the House, and has not mentioned the name of Jesus in those prayers, and what’s more, he says he won’t mention the name.
“I understand my responsibility is to offer prayers that all the members of the House can say ‘Amen’ to, which is the difference in my mind between a chaplain and a pastor. A pastor is responsible for his or her denomination and nurturing their shared faith. So if that’s Christian, you do pray in the name of Jesus. But if your congregation, so to speak, is inter-religious, I try to word it in such a way that everybody present can say, ‘Amen,’” Conroy said.
Conroy, who’s been serving as House chaplain since 2011, begins his prayers with either “eternal God” or “gracious God” and usually ends them with, “May all that is done this day be for your greater honor and glory.”
No surprises here. After all, the Catholic priest hails from the Oregon Province of the Society of Jesus, an order which paid out the largest sex-abuse settlement of any order in the Roman State-Church, $166 million settlement to more than 400 claims of child sex abuse.
In 1986 before the molestation allegations became public, Conroy penned a letter to then-Seattle Archbishop Raymond Hunthausen stating a boy told him that he had been abused by a priest when he was 12 or 13 at a parish in Snohomish, Washington. When Hunthausen didn’t reply to his letter, Conroy sat on his hands and didn’t follow up on the abuse accusation.
Now that I think about it, a Jesuit prayer addressed to a generic god is actually more appropriate than one addressed to the God of the Bible and has a better chance in hell of being answered.