Thursday, September 02, 2021

Catholic School Remains Under Attack in Madison

After securing a Supreme Court victory over Dane County commissars, St Ambrose Academy continued to operate in normal fashion.  We had mentioned the case here.

That was last year.

A Madistan reporter did the bidding of the Madistan Politburo, gained un-authorized entry to the school, and wrote a Scary Story.

With the delta variant causing a surge in COVID-19 cases and children under the age of 12 still not eligible for vaccination, leaders of one of Madison’s Catholic schools are refusing to say whether the school will follow the local mask mandate, and the Diocese of Madison is saying it can’t force the school to abide by the order....

...No one a State Journal reporter initially observed inside the school Tuesday afternoon, including two children, were wearing masks....

The school should have had armed guards at its door.

The report claims that there were 'two complaints' about the mask matter, which is most likely a flat-out lie.  The reality is that Dane County authorities are making a revenge-move here.

It is important to understand Madison in order to understand this "story."  As we wrote a while back:

It has been known for at least 60 years that Madison is a decidedly anti-Catholic town, largely due to the overwhelming influence of the University of Wisconsin's flagship atheist/Leftist campus.* ...

That anti-Catholicism extends to Dane County, a fiefdom of far-left Democrats, atheists, Marxists, collectivists, and other detritus.  It's San Francisco County less the glitzy wealth and pooped-sidewalk decor....

We were NOT exaggerating.  The asterisk brings you to this posting which includes the following, from this (now-miraculously-deleted essay at the Wisconsin Historical Society):

It opens by discussing the eugenics movement in general before describing its growth in Wisconsin during the 1890s. At the height of the Progressive Era, it was backed by a coalition of clergy, doctors, legislators, and Univ. of Wisconsin faculty that included Progressive policy maker Edward A. Ross (1866-1951) and UW President Charles Van Hise (1857-1918). Alfred W. Wilmarth (1855?- ?), director of the state Home for the Feeble-Minded in Chippewa Falls, Chippewa County, and Dr. Frank I. Drake (1864-1930), of the Wisconsin Hospital for the Insane, are discussed at length. (13 pages)

 The UW still houses one of the country's finest  Communist Party USA programs disguised as "progressive".  (Note the D.E.I. language on the home page.  Surprised?)

Summary:  it is not a co-incidence that this story was pursued and published.  Prayer will be needed.

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