I did not criticize the administration. My comments were pastoral, not political. I simply asked that detained Catholics have access to the sacraments—a request met with openness from federal officials.
New from me: Two bishops with ties to Trump’s Religious Liberty Commission, including Bishop Robert Barron, criticized the administration’s treatment of Catholics detained by immigration officials this week. nytimes.com/2025/11/06/us/tr…
I frankly believe it would be more pastoral for you to address the illegal community about the Commandments they’ve violated by being here illegally: stealing and coveting come to mind. Also, their dishonesty in sneaking into our country and helping themselves to our services which taxpayers fund. Not to mention the criminal behavior that follows them everywhere they settle.
Also, I’ve never heard a priest or bishop ever comment on the obligation these so-called Catholic illegals have to bring children into the world they can afford, and not use procreation as a paycheck via anchor babies. I’ve never heard a priest or a bishop talk to them about chastity and self control as regards this matter, those being Catholic positions.
What about humility? They’ve behaved like entitled brats—which is what they are. Where’s the call to gratitude for our nation’s empathy all these years they’ve been flooding our country with third world people and attitudes, and carving their destructive paths?
How about the immorality of assuming you can occupy a country as a non-citizen indefinitely and the hostile push back when that same country decides to enforce its laws? Lying about the intentions of said country (Nazis, racist, etc) and the officials who enforce the laws is slander and bearing false witness. And you say nothing about that.
Then there’s the violence perpetrated upon officials by the illegal community and their supporters. I haven’t heard any bishop or priest call for that to subside.
Illegals’ sins and immoral behavior are numerous, well-known and on full display. They ruin parishes and act like animals—I’ve witnessed this myself at multiple parishes across the country. And yet always the red carpet treatment while real Catholics who are citizens are marginalized.
And you say nothing about these things.
“He who has eyes to see, let him see, and he who has ears to hear, let him hear.”
None of you can hide anymore. We see and we hear. And we know the agenda you serve. And we will fight it.
So, with all due respect, this is not actually pastoral on your part and is most certainly a political stunt. You’re using the Eucharist to posture, just like everyone else is in this drama.
Nov 7, 2025 · 2:57 PM UTC


