St Francis de Sales & St Mary Magdalene

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21 Nov 21 - SCVs

Rev dear Rev: Who instructed the new pope to be so resolute when dealing with the precarious state of the Vatican finances? Is there something that he can learn from the British Church on this matter?

When I was last in Rome having lunch at one of the colleges there, I wont't say which one, I once bumped into the legend of the Vatican banking sector, Mgr Marcinkus, and I had lunch with the great survivor of the Yallop Exposees and Cornwell Flushes, who showed me his pistol gun which he stored away from public gazes in his hollowed out breviary case - he was often the bodyguard of the pope in those difficult times when right wing nutters of the old Spanish militarised system bearing INRI tattoos on their arms often tried to kill the philosopher popes of Benedict and Francesco, chiefly for being philosophers and renewing the banks around the Vatican city statelet - bearing in mind that a nice independent banking system preserves the independence of the citadel. Both those popes have tried to dumb down on Vatican finances often with some success, though Notate Bene - the George Pell story is a sobering and salutary case in point as to how reform can go badly wrong when there are serious monies involved and juries can be stacked and packed with anonymous brown envelopes and paid for accusations become standard methods for silencing reformers and renewers - but worry not Fr George has now emerged relatively unscathed though much shocked and traumatised by the accusation industry and has even produced his own Gaol Journal as a booklet through Scott and Kim's publishing houses almost like a modern day Robin Hood - brave boy, good boy. Some assumptions bear an airing on this delicate subject where misunderstandings are rife and positively endemic, common unspoken and unwritten assumptions among crazed and craze inducing "reforming" protestant bankers:

1. - The whole normative christian gospel tradition is to be rewritten by the protestant churches and charities, since Jesus in their modelling was himself anti-thetical to the possession of monies;

2. - Jesus did not have much money and did not like it in any case, despite the idea of a common purse;

3. - Paul said that the love of money was the root of all evil, hence the need to flush the system;

4. - Consequently it is simple, the Eurozone charities and churches need to be deprived of their worries by the  cash hungry speculating bankers;

5. - The churches do not really need the stuff, if they are just conducting services on a Sunday;

6. - There is no future scope for Vatican banks or Vatican SCV credit cards and the like;

7. - Vatican banks are a highly cash orientated system, so this factor makes them intrinsically unworthy, according to the cash starved protestant bankers;

8. - The IOR or the SCV bank is an old fashioned banking house which has a lot of cash going in from religious orders and colleges, so there is in the eyes of the unjust an apparent need for gradual reform away from anonymous cash, as the The Great Reset banks of old Europe move toward cashless ID strewn transactions that can be monitored easily with ID as standard, despite the now huge problem of scammings and frauds perpetrated on Eurozone cards by old Soviets and Chinese state sponsored CCP criminous gangs;

9. - Vatican finances because they feature a high proportion of cash thuswise have to be reformed, a buzz word for taken over and abolished, while Swiss and Euro-TGR bankers cash in on the cash, but underneath all of this indecent haste and rushing toward a cashless banking system is the root Swiss assumption of charities and NGOs being free of monies in the old sense - harder to control - but they care for the defenceless widow and orphan at least officially, if care is the right word, for moving in.

 10. - If there is anything to learn from the local churches abroad, a genuine desire to be imitated, it is that sometimes large sums have disappeared from the Vatican bank and have been transferred as suitcases of cash direct to London banking houses by anonymous cardinals such as Cormac and Angelo and Angelini, plus through the odd housekeeper and relative thereover of the same, to say nothing of the transfer of monies to the tune of 200m euros to buy luxury property in Kensington in recent years by monsignors at the colleges there, so maybe there is something that can be learned, chiefly about the secret transfer of monies!! In this sense, yes, maybe the SCVs can learn from the local churches and charities about how to move large wads of cash around Europe at no extra cost!! Quite amusing really, but the SCV finance gendarmerie are now on the case, the chief monsignor who was the conduit for such transactions has now gone to his eternal reward, buried in Arundel so no progress for now there. As Jesus himself says in Robyn and Adrian's favourite gospel passage - "fool this night the demand is to be made on your soul, so to whom will those monies and barns belong then?" Men - they never learn, not even from a cosmic messiah, foolish men and their foolish denizens.

Altogether, points 7 and 10 are related, since the state of Vatican finances is something worth reflecting on with the proviso that where there is great intelligence there is also great temptation for most ordinary people. A cash flow problem in the past under Marcinkus in the 1980s has now become a cash rich environing of the present day, as other banks in Europe suicidally move to other non-customer commercial systems and many outsource to China, ironically which is a cash rich environing, so there is something to marvel at in SCV finances, namely how they survive while under such huge pressure from protestant corporations and their henchmen doubling down on charities in general with carefully orchestrated headlines in Eurozone newspapers or opinion papers, much of which is very smokey fake news built on little whisps of flame. It is a marvel how small banks survive in the Eurozone especially in Germany - and David Yallop can eat his pen away trying to double down on those small banks. The Swiss bankers are also keen to pounce on such small operations in cash, so the situation is pretty sad for ordinary charities and ordinary convents and ordinary colleges that do depend on the IOR, what with the Great Reset bankers now cashing in all across Europe from the once gloriously virtuous ERM Eurozone. TGR - something to watch in the ongoing invasion of cash rich banking systems all across Denmark and Norway and Germany.

The assumption - that all transactions must leave a footprint that can be traced and that everything must feature a paper trail too. Sad day for charities and for the poor, the first victim of this new craze for transparency in Eurozone banking systems. Quantitative Easing has been a big boon for many people, but not the poor and not the start-ups it was originally destined for, so it has not worked since many of the bankers simply sit on the government bonds to the tune of 90% of them and then speculate with the hard earned cash of the poor destined for start-ups and business customers on their Chinese stock markets abroad - that is the result of the protestant banking system going hell for leather on QE. A shocking scandal in the banking system itself, but something the Russians are now aware of, and producing documentaries about for RT as of the month of November 2021. Shocking shocking scandals for which not even a private little Robin Hood industry can bring relief. And the poor young couples who wish to start their own businesses remain poor. 90% of government bonds are sat upon by fat cat oil rich bankers from the wicked older Eurozone. So there is the real scandal in Eurozone banking. Not the good old fashioned small town operation of the SCVs based and built on the little smalltown banks of the very flush German-Swiss-Cypriot systems - brava gente. At least they look after the poor in the modern world - the ordinary piecemeal customers depositing their old style cheques in local banks the old fashioned way. No transfers to switchboards in India or China there. So there we have it, our Rapporta sulla Banca.