Friday, April 17, 2026

A Just War?

Whenever POTUS predicts the downfall of the United States, he is referring to the Radical Left.

Well, on the other hand, he can rely on and is supported by the Extreme Right, which comes to his defense even when he posts awkward photos portraying him as the savior.

On this, Vice President J. D. Vance, the man to iron out the blunders of his boss, said about Trump's Jesus meme:

People are too stupid to understand the president.
Later, during a Podium discussion, J. D. warned the pope he should be careful when talking about religion.

In a step further, the Speaker of the House, Michel Johnson, taught the Augustinian pope, Augustine's theology:



So, while on his Apostolic journey to Cameroon, the pope retorted:


POTUS hastened to point out:


But Leo XIV doubled down:


A reporter asked, "What do you say, Mr. President? The Catholic bishops put out a statement saying the pope isn't merely exercising his opinion; he's preaching the gospel."

©NDR
Trump answered, "Well, I want him to preach the gospel. I'm all about the gospel, but I have the right to disagree with the pope."
 

Trump didn't learn, but "tripled" down on sharing an "Irish for Trump" post:


Already, Einstein "knew" that God doesn't throw dice; does He play cards now?

War Minister Pete Hegseth "tripled" down, too. During his latest prayer service at the Pentagon, he referred to the combat search-and-rescue mission "Sandy One" in which a downed U.S. fighter pilot was evacuated from Iran. 

Hegseth explained that the prayer he will cite refers to Ezekiel 25:17: "And I will execute great vengeance upon them with furious rebukes; and they shall know that I am the Lord, when I shall lay my vengeance upon them." and has been used during the mission. He asked the audience to pray with him:

The video is only semi-automatic. You possibly have to play with the controls.
Well, what he quoted is actually a passage from Quentin Tarantino's film "Pulp Fiction."

Her last word was bleeped.
The religious feud is a goldmine for the media, but what Americans are more interested in - because it affects their cost of living - is the inflation triggered by the war in Iran. When asked about it, California Congresswoman Sydney Kamlager-Dove said, "I mean, you name it, the prices have gone up. And this Jude, Dr. Jesus, next is wanting to spend $2 billion of your money every single day rather than help you get health care. His ass."

A final quote from the Washington Post, "Trump's unfavorability ratings are stratospheric across the continent as of March surveys by YouGov: 78 percent unfavorable in France, 86 percent in Germany, 80 percent in Italy. Across the continent, 73 percent of Europeans viewed Trump as a threat to peace and security in Europe, according to YouGov polling last summer, just nine percentage points behind Russian President Vladimir Putin's 82 percent."
**

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

WEAK on Crime

The feud between the Trump Administration and the Pope entered a new phase last Sunday.

Click to enlarge
A reporter asked Trump:


The answer, "Uh, I don't think he's doing a very good job. He likes crime, I guess."


Actually, Trump's criticism of Leo on Truth Social reads more like a rearguard action when Elise Ann Allen, author of "Pope Leo XIV, The Biography," said:
 
"Donald Trump is clearly feeling the heat from Leo's recent public condemnations of the Iran war and the need to promote peace over conflict. He is realizing that Leo is emerging as a stronger global figure, and he's trying to remind moderate Catholics why they voted for him. But outbursts like this could backfire as they could further alienate the moderate Catholics on the fence about him. If he's trying to win back Catholic voters, this will only help Leo's cause, not his."

Indeed, Trump slammed the door with his Truth Social broadside on Sunday: "I don't want a Pope who criticizes the President of the United States because I'm doing exactly what I was elected, IN A LANDSLIDE, to do."


On his flight to Algeria, Leo made his standpoint clear, "I don't think that the message of the gospel is meant to be abused in the way that some people are doing it. And I will continue to speak out loud against war, looking to promote peace, promoting dialogue and multilateral relationships among the states to look for just solutions to problems. Too many people are suffering in the world today. Too many innocent people are killed. And I think someone has to stand up and say there's a better way."

But if his “WEAK on crime” wasn't enough, POTUS went one better a few hours later with the following meme.


The image fits Trump's well-established style, being dense with the basic icons of American patriotism and militarism, foregrounding the flag and the bald eagle, with the Statue of Liberty and the Lincoln Memorial in the background.

There are jet planes and bombs bursting in the air and soldiers marching magically, or celestially, through the firmament.


The answer, "I did post it, and I thought that it was me as a doctor.

Late Night host Stephen Colbert doubled,

... and my favorite TV show, Dr. Jesus Medicine Christ.
Regarding the man at Trump's feet, comedian Jimmy Kimmel had an assumption about a similarity ...


... while comedian Jon Stewart flipped out ...


... followed by a strong personal reaction.

Could it be me?
Trump's staunch followers still stick by their president, contradicting him about the meme's origin.

Must be AI or someone.
POTUS had crossed a red line. The image evoking Jesus offended not only Catholics, but it drew harsh criticism from ultra-evangelical Christians, too, who have otherwise expressed near constant support for Trump's decisions.

Following the backlash, no wonder there was TACO*. After 12 hours, the meme was deleted on Truth Social.
*Trump always chickens out

The Washington Post questioned, "Trump and his allies regularly invoke Christianity in their work and campaign messaging. Did Trump blow it all up?"
**

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Mitläufer

... are people who, during the Third Reich, were merely ordinary Parteigenossen (PG) of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party (NSDAP) and thus were not involved in the crimes of the Nazi regime.

Law on Liberation from National Socialism and Militarism of March 5, 1946,
commonly known as the Liberation Act (©Alexander Buschorn/Wikipedia)
After Nazi Germany’s defeat, the victorious Allied powers wanted to denazify the about 8.5 million members of the NSDAP. They established so-called Spruchkammern (denazification tribunals). These ad hoc courts classified all Germans into five categories based on their involvement in Nazi crimes. Here is what Wikipedia knows:

V. Persons Exonerated (German: Entlastete). No sanctions.

IV. Followers (German: Mitläufer). Possible restrictions on travel, employment, and political rights, plus fines.

III. Lesser Offenders (German: Minderbelastete). Placed on probation for two to three years with a list of restrictions. No internment.

II. Offenders: Activists, Militants, and Profiteers, or Incriminated Persons (German: Belastete). Subject to immediate arrest and imprisonment up to ten years, performing reparation or reconstruction work, plus a list of other restrictions.

I. Major Offenders (German: Hauptschuldige). Subject to immediate arrest, death, imprisonment with or without hard labor, plus a list of lesser sanctions.


To reduce the workload of the Spruchkammern, the Allied Control Council decided that members of the NSDAP born after 1919 were exempted because they had been brainwashed. Disabled veterans were also exempted.

Within Category I were the war criminals, whose leaders were convicted during the Nuremberg Trials and executed by hanging.



My loyal readers know that I was born in Essen and spent my early school years in the city on the Ruhr River. At the time, my parents and I lived in the Recklinghausen district, at Goldammerweg 4. There I had a friend named Ursula.

At Goldammerweg 6 lived a family with a son, Wolfgang, who was two years younger than me. My parents were such good friends with neighbors Eugen and Friedel B. that in the summer of 1940, we spent a vacation together at Kühlungsborn on the Baltic Sea.

From the right: Eugen, Friedel, Wolfgang, my mother, and father, Manfred.
Eugen was an architect, athletic, and a member of a fencing club. Friedel, also athletic, was the Westphalian breaststroke champion at the time.

From left to right: Manfred, Wolfgang, and Eugen on a walk on the Kühlungsborn promenade
I often saw my father, an engineer, sitting with Eugen in our living room. As far as I could understand as a five-year-old, they talked a lot about technology, especially cars. I also picked up on the fact that Eugen was a staunch Nazi.
 
He must have convinced my father to join the NSDAP during our Baltic Sea vacation.

Recently, the National Archives partially opened its Collection of Foreign Records Seized, 1675–1958, and so I was able to make a copy of my father‘s approved membership application.

Application for admission: October 22, 1940; admitted on January 1, 1941
Since I know that our Papi was a thoroughly apolitical person, PG number 8302911 was a Mitläufer.
**

Friday, April 3, 2026

Deus Vult?

Since May 2025, War Secretary Pete Hegseth has hosted unprecedented monthly evangelical worship services at the Pentagon. The war minister’s understanding of Christianity is one that would dominate American life and cast those who disagree with him as God’s enemies.

The worship services have included Doug Wilson, the founder of the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches, of which Pete is a member. Wilson has stated that homosexuality should be a crime and that women shouldn't have the right to vote.

Following complaints, the Military Religious Freedom Foundation has stated that the services show that Christian personnel are favored over their Jewish, Muslim, or other non-Christian peers in the Department of Defense. These favors would only be given if non-Christians attended the services, which is discriminatory.

Soon after the start of the U.S. war against Iran, there were reports that military leaders told their service members that the war was "part of God's divine plan" and that President Donald Trump was anointed by Jesus. One commander ought to have quoted the Book of Revelation, saying that the war will bring the second coming of Jesus Christ.

A new crusade against Islam that Deus vult?

Multiple members of Congress sent a letter to the military Inspector General stated, “If accurate, these outrageous statements—justifying a war based on interpretations of biblical prophecies, and informing troops that they are risking their lives to advance a specific religious vision—raises not only glaring Constitutional concerns, but potential violations of Department of Defense regulations regarding religious neutrality and breaches of professional obligations and standards expected of military leadership.”

Leading the Operation Epic Fury against Muslim-majority Iran, Pete is in his element as a crusader. So on the Wednesday preceding Palm Sunday, Hegseth prayed for U.S. troops to inflict “overwhelming violence of action against those who deserve no mercy … We ask these things with bold confidence in the mighty and powerful name of Jesus Christ.”

The War Secretary has repeatedly praised the Crusades and supports the idea of “his” war being a holy war. People who enjoy the "benefits" of Western culture should "thank the crusaders.”

Two of Hegseth's tattoos reference the Crusades
©Gage Skidmore/Wikipedia
Multiple former high-ranking military officials, heads of the chaplain corps, some veterans' groups, current Pentagon staff, and current officers criticize the Pentagon’s shift from historical norms as dangerous. Some of these critics made their statements anonymously, fearing retribution from the Trump administration.

However, retired Army Col. Larry Wilkerson spoke out, “The American military has had a remarkable ride of equanimity and fairness and justice and all manner of good adjectives with regard to religion. It’s done this in a way that’s really remarkable — until now. Hegseth’s actions are totally violative of everything that transpired before it.”

And an anonymous (sic!) said, “If troops are trained to believe that ‘God is on our side,’ what precludes us from doing anything we want to win?


This reminds Red Baron painfully of the buckle the soldiers of the Nazi-Wehrmacht wore, “God is with us”, committing war crimes.

"Gott mit uns" (Nobiscum deus) is a quote from Matthew 1:23 and has served as the motto of King William I of Prussia from 1861 onward. It adorned the buckles of German soldiers until 1945.

However, all concerns about religious freedom and about the separation of church and state in the U.S. Constitution pale in comparison to Pope Leo XIII’s reply.

Steven Colbert presented the clip on Monday this week.
According to the prophecy of Zechariah (Zech 9:9): “Your king comes to you … humble and riding on a donkey.” By not entering Jerusalem on a horse, Jesus makes it clear that he is not the expected warlike Messiah to liberate the Jewish people from Roman occupation. He is the king of peace.

Still, many in the crowd hoped for a Davidic king who would overthrow Rome, and cried, “Blessed be the kingdom of our father David, that cometh in the name of the Lord: Hosanna*!”
*Meaning Save us!

Instead, we read further (Zech 9:10), “And I will cut off the [war] chariot from Ephraim, and the horse (sic!) from Jerusalem, and the battle bow shall be cut off: and he shall speak peace unto the heathen: and his dominion shall be from sea even to sea, and from the river even to the ends of the earth.”

Later, at his arrest, Jesus tells his disciples, “All who take the sword will perish by the sword” (Matt 26:52)
**

Thursday, April 2, 2026

The Langemarck Myth

Starting in 1946, Red Baron attended a high school in Hamburg that had been founded in 1944 as the Langemarck School.


That is why I was particularly interested in a traveling exhibition of a joint remembrance-and-peace project by the Belgian municipality of Langemark, the In Flanders Fields Museum in Ypres, and the University of Kent. The exhibition has been and will be shown in cities with streets named Langemarck.

Veterans wrote about their romanticized memories.
Early in the First World War, on November 10, 1914, German troops attacked the Allied front near Langemark* in Belgium. More than 2,000 young, inexperienced recruits lost their lives. From this military defeat emerged the "Langemarck Myth" as a symbol of the supposed willingness of German youth to make sacrifices.
*In German, an ungrammatical "c" was added to the original name

Commemorative ceremonies, publications, monuments, and street names emerged in the postwar period.

Following the French Campaign, the Daily Order for Langemarck Day 1940, signed
by the Commander-in-Chief of the German Army (OKH), Walther von Brauchitsch.
Young men willing to sacrifice themselves for their country were exactly what the Nazis needed for their Wehrmacht.

Der Führer visiting the Langemarck site in 1940
The regime permanently anchored the "Langemarck Myth" in the public sphere. 

Macabre: During World War II, young Flemish men were invited
to enlist in the Langemarck Assault Brigade of the Waffen-SS.


Across Germany, more than 30 streets are named after the small Belgian village of Langemarck.


An exhibition at the Freiburg city archives took the material from the traveling exhibition and expanded it to include information about the unique situation in Freiburg.

Admiral-Spee-Straße and Langemarckstraße in Freiburg's Heldenviertel

Initially, the Höllentalbahn, climbing the heights of the Black Forest, ran through the heart of the Wiehre district* at street level. As traffic increased, the required railroad crossings became increasingly problematic.
*Red Baron lives here

On the right, the four-lane Baslerstraße passes under the north-south
Rhine Valley Railway and, further up, the newly built Höllental line.
Note the undeveloped area between Basler Straße, the railroad bypass,
and Merzhauser Straße running through the photo diagonally.
Consequently, the Reichsbahn decided to reroute the Höllental line, featuring cuttings and bridges along the edge of the Wiehre district. Construction started in 1930, and trains began operating in 1934.


The zoning plan for the area west of Merzhauser Straße includes streets named after "heroes" and battle sites from World War I. Consequently, the Freiburges called this part of town Heldenviertel. 

 In 1996, a citizens' group drew attention to this fact.
      

In 1934, the streets in this neighborhood were named after battles, places, and soldiers from World War I. The names of the fallen, who were exploited for the ideological purposes of the Nazi regime, serve as a reminder of the importance of peace and international understanding.

Meet the heroes
Calls to rename the streets grew louder, but this is a double-edged sword. On the one hand, the name is erased; on the other, residents are forced to change their addresses, which involves effort and expenses.

One additional argument for retaining the "warlike" street names in the Heldenviertel is that people and places are part of our (inglorious) German history that must not be forgotten.

In 2012, Freiburg's city council engaged a commission of experts to assess the names of Freiburg's streets in terms of persecution of minorities, dictatorship, antisemitism, militarism, nationalism, chauvinism, and colonialism. They cautiously proposed to rename a dozen streets. Among those was the Gallwitzstraße in the Heldenviertel.

Max von Gallwitz (1852–1937) was a general in the First World War. He strongly supported the Dolchstoßlegende (stab-in-the-back myth) and was a revisionist of the Treaty of Versailles, viewing it as a Schanddiktat (dictate of shame).

Did they overdo it? Who will read those two loaded explanatory signs?
After World War II, contested street signs were often supplemented with explanatory notes, as was the case in Bad Wildungen.
**