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MercurysBall2 ago

No, I have not seen that. Thank you for the link. It has led to some interesting places.

"The co-founder of Wayfair Steve Conine attended the Delbarton School in NJ, which had a major sexual abuse scandal"

https://twitter.com/UncleBabyBernie/status/1282037692587315205

Steve Conine (co-chair of Wayfair) is a Cornell grad attended the Delbarton College Preparatory School (class of '91). Delbarton is a prestigious Catholic school and home to a spree of sexual abuse allegation from the 70s/80s.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delbarton_School

Delbarton School is a private all-male Roman Catholic college-preparatory school in Morristown, in Morris County, New Jersey, United States, educating young men in seventh through twelfth grades. Delbarton is a Catholic independent school directed by the Benedictine monks of St. Mary's Abbey. The school is located within the Roman Catholic Diocese of Paterson, operating on an independent basis.

Conine was class of 1991. Headmasters at the time: Rev. Bruno A. Ugliano, O.S.B. (1985–1990); Rev. Beatus T. Lucey, O.S.B. (1990–1995)

2002 article: 2 former priests from Delbarton in sex charges

MORRIS TWP - Two former Delbarton priests were caught up last week in the child sex abuse scandal rocking the Catholic Church nationwide.

A former headmaster of the school, the Rev. Bruno Ugliano, who now works a chaplain at Rider University in Lawrenceville, has been accused by a woman that he sexually molested her while she was a teenager in Union County two decades ago before he joined Delbarton.

In a separate incident, former Delbarton teacher, the Rev. Timothy Brennan, who in 1987 pleaded guilty to abusing a 15-year-old boy, was removed from his priestly duties by his supervisors at St. Mary's Abbey in March, just as the sex abuse scandal started gaining nation-wide attention. However, Brennan, who hasn't officially lived in the area for three years, said mass for the diocese in Rochester, N.Y., up until a few weeks ago without the diocese being aware of his conviction.

Under the Green Wave - Misconduct at Delbarton School and St. Mary's Abbey

Newark Abbey https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newark_Abbey

Newark Abbey, also known as "The Benedictine Abbey of Newark," is a Benedictine monastery located in Newark, New Jersey. It is one of only several urban Catholic monasteries in the country. The monks serve the community through Saint Benedict's Preparatory School and St. Mary's Abbey Church, which are situated on the Abbey grounds...The monastery has its roots in a St. Mary's Church, a parish founded in 1842 to serve the immigrant German Catholics.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marylou_and_Jerome_Bongiorno

Marylou Tibaldo-Bongiorno and Jerome Bongiorno are husband-and-wife filmmakers based in Newark, New Jersey, USA.... Their award winning films include the 3Rs trilogy of documentaries on urban America:[3] Revolution '67[4] on the 1967 Newark riots/rebellion; The Rule,[5] on the highly successful urban school model of Newark Abbey and Saint Benedict's Preparatory School (screened by the White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for African Americans at the U.S. Department of Education[6]), both broadcast nationally on PBS,[7] and Rust,[8] on solutions to inner city poverty. Their Emmy-nominated documentary Mother-Tongue: Italian American Sons & Mothers featured Martin Scorsese, John Turturro, Rudy Giuliani and Pat DiNizio.[9] ..They created and hosted the Watermark (fiction film) Conference at Wingspread[14] and the Newark Poverty Reduction Conference at Rutgers University[15] and presented solutions to poverty at TEDxNJIT.

The Black Monk (film): a Chekhov inspired feature, is being used to teach psychosis in medical schools... Trailer for the film here: http://www.bongiornoproductions.com/THE_BLACK_MONK/Trailer.html

In it the monk mentions the Omega Point... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omega_Point

The Omega Point is the subject of a belief that everything in the universe is fated to spiral towards a final point of unification.[1] The term was coined by the French Jesuit Catholic priest Pierre Teilhard de Chardin (1881–1955).[2] Teilhard argued that the Omega Point resembles the Christian Logos, namely Christ, who draws all things into himself, who in the words of the Nicene Creed, is "God from God", "Light from Light", "True God from true God", and "through him all things were made".

Teilhard de Chardin was a paleontologist and Roman Catholic priest in the Jesuit order. In France in the 1920s, he began incorporating his theories of the universe into lectures that placed Catholicism and evolution in the same conversation. Because of these lectures, he was suspected by the Holy Office of denying the doctrine of original sin. This caused Teilhard to be exiled to China and banned from publication by Church authorities.[7] It was not until one year after his death, in 1955, that his writings were published for the world to read. His works were also supported by the writings of a group of Catholic thinkers, which includes Pope Benedict XVI.[7] His book, The Phenomenon of Man, has been dissected by astrophysicists and cosmologists to be a theological or philosophical theory that cannot be scientifically proven...

Teilhard's theory was a personal attempt in creating a new Christianity in which science and theology coexist..

Related concepts

The technological singularity is the hypothetical advent of artificial general intelligence theoretically capable of recursive self-improvement, resulting in a runaway effect to an intelligence explosion.[27] Eric Steinhart, a proponent of "Christian transhumanism", argues there is significant overlap of ideas between the secular singularity and Teilhard's religious Omega Point

You can read all about sex abuse scandals at the Newark diocese here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_Catholic_Archdiocese_of_Newark

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benedictines

The Benedictines, officially the Order of Saint Benedict (Latin: Ordo Sancti Benedicti, abbreviated as OSB), are a monastic religious order of the Catholic Church following the Rule of Saint Benedict. They are also sometimes called the Black Monks, in reference to the colour of their religious habits.

From the book Nazis in Newark

and googling for Nazis and the Black Monks, the book A New Order of the Ages has some pretty crazy stuff https://imgur.com/a/p9pJBO0 .. I don't have any more time to look into this but tag words from that selection are:

Thule Society, Dr. John van Nueumann, Montauk Projects, CIA, NSA, Black Monks, Nazis, Philadelphia/Rainbow projects, US Navy Intelligence..

The German catholics thing really resonates because I cane across that when looking into the Rudin and Seymour families.. will have to go back through my notes when time permits..