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The Sermon Before the Smear
Catholic Unscripted packaged this episode as a warning about podcasts, personalities, “doing your own research,” and the danger of voices that “sound Catholic” while pulling people away from the Church. The whole thing was framed as an appeal to discernment, humility, obedience, and a return to “the Church, the sacraments, and the truth handed down through the ages.”
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That sounds pious enough. It also sounds safe. That is part of the problem.
Because once the discussion gets moving, what appears is a familiar little operation. Smear the loud critics. Flatten real doctrinal contradictions into internet hysteria. Tell battered Catholics that their problem is not the men wrecking the sanctuary, flattering the world, and dissolving the Faith into humanitarianism. Their problem, apparently, is that they noticed.
That is what this genre of conservative Catholic commentary does now. It wraps a call for passivity in the language of holiness and tells the wounded man that his real sin is being too alarmed by the blood.
Humility for You, Exemption for Them
The episode begins with open mockery of Trump and MAGA. Augustine Virgil presents Trump as a grotesque quasi-sacral figure, a golden-skinned monarch performing a “king’s touch” on the diseased masses. Later, the conversation treats MAGA as one more false political paradise, spectacle, and manipulative dialectic.
Now, to be clear, Trump is not beyond criticism. He says foolish things. He posts foolish things. Catholics are not obliged to pretend otherwise. But that is not what makes this episode dishonest. What makes it dishonest is proportion.
They can find their voice when Trump posts an image or throws a punch. Suddenly the moral alarms work. Suddenly outrage is possible. Suddenly religious men and women are called to discernment.
But where is this same nerve when Leo XIV speaks with studied ambiguity, empowers bad bishops, sanctifies the postconciliar disaster with soft words, and keeps the machinery of doctrinal erosion grinding forward? Where is the same urgency when sacrilege, theological inversion, and bureaucratized apostasy come not from Mar-a-Lago, but from Rome?
That is the central absurdity. They are straining at gnats and swallowing camels






