One phenomenon you can always count on is normal people rushing out to buy weapons anytime the Death Cult tries to ban them.
Turns out that doesn’t just go for physical weapons, but spiritual ones, too.
Online shops that sell rosaries have reported a boost in sales following a controversial article published Sunday in The Atlantic magazine that attempted to link the Rosary to right-wing extremism in the United States.
In the article, Daniel Panneton claimed, “The rosary has acquired a militaristic meaning for radical-traditional (or ‘rad-trad’) Catholics.”
“Militia culture, a fetishism of Western civilization, and masculinist anxieties have become mainstays of the far right in the U.S. — and rad-trad Catholics have now taken up residence in this company,” he continued.
The article sparked a frenzy of comments on social media, as Catholics shared photos of their rosaries. Some observed that the article’s thesis had an anti-Catholic bias.
Shannon Doty, CEO of Rugged Rosaries, told CNA on Monday that she saw “a pretty good boost in sales” on both of her websites, RuggedRosaries.com and MonkRosaries.com amid the reaction to the article.
It’s good that ordinary Catholics have started coming around to the ruling class’ animus against them.
What too many have yet to learn is that this isn’t a simple matter of media bias. It’s a heretical Death Cult putting its intrinsic anti-Christian ethos into practice.
Get to know your enemy, and learn how to wage spiritual warfare against them, here: