If I plant two different varieties of squash (both Cucurbita Maxima, for example) and they cross-pollinate, and I then plant the seeds of the resulting squash the next year, I’ll get something different from either of the parent plants.
But, if I considered both parent plant varieties to be “good”, shouldn’t I expect the resultant offspring to be generally “good” also, even if not identical to either parent?
This Bergoglio guy acts a lot more like the Chaplain of the World Economic Forum than the Vicar of Rome (though I seem to recall he has formally renounced the latter title).
He’s more concerned with saving the planet than with saving souls.
They had 365 days to choose from; they chose Lenin’s birthday.
And I would bet more than one beer that Soviet TV portrayed the festivities as “Children of the American running dog lackeys celebrating the birth of Comrade Lenin”.
Here it’ll jump 30-40 cents at every station in four counties within a couple of hours, then gradually drift back down over the next couple of weeks, then repeat.
A side note about the crack from the junkman about “you guys up there in the air, while I was stuck down in the muck in a tank” ... it was safer to be a marine on Iwo Jima than it was to be a B-17 crewman.