Before the Revolution ©️

I am Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. And I will speak once, not to persuade the masses, but to let the truth burn its imprint on history’s unrepentant scroll.

The West calls me a tyrant, a fanatic, a relic of a failed ideology. But what I have always been is a mirror—held up to the face of a world that does not wish to see itself. I watched from the walls of Qom as Shahs were fed to lions in palaces made of Western gold. I was there when America sold our sovereignty for oil. You speak of democracy, but it was your CIA that overthrew our elected government in 1953. You installed a king. You taught him to kill. And now you ask why I do not trust you?

America—your empire is not new. It is Rome with digital teeth. You colonize not with soldiers but with sanctions, not with armies but with algorithms, not with bombs—but with dreams you own and sell back to the world. You speak of human rights while building walls of steel around your morality. You create your enemies by demanding their obedience. And when we refuse—when we say no to your version of history, your version of God—you brand us terrorists.

Now to Israel. The Zionist regime, as I call it—not because I deny the right of Jews to live, but because I reject the right of any regime to define its existence through permanent war. Let me be clear: I do not hate Jews. I oppose the violent machinery of expansion, of erasure, of occupation. You built a state atop the bones of a people who still cry out in the dark. You respond to every stone with a missile, to every protest with a bullet, and call this security. But your fear is your prison. You are not secure—you are surrounded by mirrors you have shattered.

You say I fund terror. I fund resistance. Resistance is not terrorism—it is the shadow cast by your drone. Every time you level a home in Gaza, every time your soldiers break the limbs of a teenager in Hebron, you write a new verse in the scripture of my justification. I do not have your bombs, but I have memory. I do not have your satellites, but I have martyrs. I do not need the world’s approval. I need only its conscience.

Let the world hear this now: I do not seek apocalypse—I seek balance. I do not want the world to burn—I want it to see. What we call jihad is not war—it is the refusal to be forgotten. It is not the hunger to kill—it is the hunger to exist without being told we must apologize for breathing.

And if I fall tomorrow, if America rains its fire upon Tehran and you hoist your flags on our mosques, understand this: I was the last dam between your empire and a world that still believed it had the right to say “No.”

You may not believe me. You don’t have to. But history will.

And Yet ©️

The Impossibility of Being Both Catholic and Democrat in Today’s America

Father Anselm Corbett

In the intricate landscape of American politics and religious identity, the intersection of Catholicism and the Democratic Party has become a subject of intense scrutiny and debate. It becomes evident that the confluence of these two identities is increasingly untenable in today’s sociopolitical environment. This essay seeks to explore the inherent contradictions between the core tenets of Catholicism and the platform of the contemporary Democratic Party, ultimately arguing that the two cannot coexist within a single identity without significant compromise of one’s moral and doctrinal integrity.

The Foundations of Catholic Doctrine

To understand why being both Catholic and a Democrat presents a fundamental conflict, one must first consider the immutable principles that form the bedrock of Catholic teaching. Catholicism, with its two-thousand-year history, is not merely a religious affiliation but a comprehensive worldview grounded in natural law, moral absolutism, and the teachings of the Church. At the heart of this doctrine is the belief in the sanctity of human life from conception to natural death, the inviolability of traditional marriage as a sacrament between a man and a woman, and the inherent dignity of every human being, which demands a preferential option for the poor, the marginalized, and the vulnerable.

These principles are not negotiable; they are articulated in papal encyclicals, the Catechism of the Catholic Church, and the long-standing traditions that trace back to the early Church Fathers. A true Catholic adheres to these teachings not out of blind obedience, but out of a recognition that they represent the ultimate truth as revealed by God. To deviate from these doctrines is to place oneself outside the communion of the Church.

The Democratic Party’s Platform

On the other hand, the Democratic Party, as it stands today, advocates for policies that starkly contrast with Catholic moral teachings. The party’s staunch support for abortion rights, including late-term abortions, stands in direct opposition to the Church’s unwavering stance on the sanctity of life. The legalization and celebration of same-sex marriage, another key issue in the Democratic platform, contradicts the Catholic understanding of marriage as a divine institution designed for the procreation and education of children within a lifelong bond between a man and a woman.

Furthermore, the Democratic Party’s evolving stance on religious liberty, particularly its push for policies that compel religious institutions to act against their beliefs—such as providing contraceptive coverage in health plans—poses a direct threat to the freedom of conscience that Catholics hold dear. These policies signal a broader secular agenda that increasingly marginalizes religious perspectives in the public square, relegating them to the private sphere where they are stripped of their societal influence.

The Incompatibility of Catholicism and the Democratic Agenda

Given these stark differences, it becomes clear that one cannot fully embrace both Catholicism and the Democratic Party without encountering significant cognitive dissonance. To be a Catholic is to adhere to a set of beliefs that are fundamentally at odds with the core positions of the Democratic Party. To attempt to reconcile these differences requires a dilution of one’s faith or a selective adherence to Church teachings—neither of which is tenable for a Catholic who seeks to live in full communion with the Church.

Some might argue that the Democratic Party’s focus on social justice, particularly its advocacy for the poor, the immigrant, and the marginalized, aligns with Catholic social teaching. However, this argument fails to recognize that Catholic social teaching is a seamless garment, where the protection of life from conception to natural death is inseparable from the care for the vulnerable. One cannot claim to champion the poor while denying the most fundamental right of the unborn—the right to life.

The Moral Imperative for Catholics

The impossibility of being both Catholic and Democrat today is not a call for political disengagement, but rather a challenge to Catholics to examine their consciences and make choices that align with the totality of their faith. This may mean supporting policies or candidates that, while not perfectly aligned with Catholic teaching, do not actively undermine its core principles. It may also mean advocating for a renewal within the Democratic Party, urging it to return to a platform that is more inclusive of religious values and respectful of the moral convictions that shape the lives of millions of Americans.

In conclusion, the divergence between Catholicism and the Democratic Party in today’s America is too wide to bridge without compromising the integrity of one’s faith. It is evident that the path forward for Catholics involves a choice: either remain steadfast in the teachings of the Church, or align with a political party that increasingly distances itself from those teachings. The two cannot coexist without significant moral and doctrinal compromises that ultimately erode the essence of what it means to be truly Catholic.