Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Brother Isaac and Nephew Ernest Visited Mama B In the Village

 



Mass Reading and Reflection for Tuesday May 5th 2026


First Reading: (
Acts 14:19–28)

Psalm: (Psalm 145)

Response: Your friends make known, O Lord, the glory of your reign.

Alleluia: Alleluia, alleluia.

Christ has risen and shines upon us, whom he has redeemed by his Blood.
Alleluia.

Gospel: (John 14:27–31)

Reflection

From the Gospel, Jesus gives a peace that is not like the peace of the world.

The world offers external peace, agreements, handshakes, treaties, and appearances. Yet beneath these, there can still be anger, division, and the desire for revenge. This kind of peace is often temporary and superficial.

The peace of Christ is different. It is an inner peace, a peace of the heart and mind. It frees us from fear, anxiety, and hostility. It comes from surrendering completely to God and trusting that He is in control.

True peace cannot exist without justice. Where there is truth, acknowledgment of wrong, and a willingness to reconcile, peace begins. Without justice, there can be no lasting peace.

This peace also requires forgiveness. A heart filled with anger, hatred, or guilt cannot experience peace. Only when we let go, seek forgiveness, and forgive others can we begin to live in the peace Christ offers.

Peace is not just something we talk about, it is something we must live:

  • In how we speak

  • In what we say

  • In how we treat others

Words can build peace or destroy it. Before conflicts arise, harmful words are often spoken. To live in peace, we must learn to speak words that heal, unite, and reconcile.

We are called to be instruments of peace:

  • Where there is hatred, sow love

  • Where there is division, bring unity

  • Where there is conflict, promote reconciliation

True peace begins with Christ. Without Him, any attempt at peace rests on a fragile foundation.

Let us, therefore, welcome His peace, live it, and share it with others.

Lord, may we know your peace.

Amen!

Have a great day.

Monday, May 4, 2026

The Trouble with The Daily Wire Media Group


It’s been all over the web and social media over the past week: reports of mass layoffs at The Daily Wire. A company once seen as a rising force in alternative conservative media now finds itself under scrutiny, and not just from critics, but from its own audience. Most of them now walking way. 

The outlet is synonymous with Ben Shapiro as its founding member. He’s widely regarded as a brilliant, Harvard-trained lawyer and a sharp debater. But let’s be honest, his delivery isn’t for everyone. I have never watch any show of his in full because there is something about his voice. Irritable?.... perhaps. And it doesn't help that he speaks at lightning speed, and for many listeners, the appeal isn’t immediately clear. Still, what can’t be denied is that Ben has built powerful networks and amassed significant wealth, turning his platform into a formidable media empire. A propaganda outlet maybe, just like most media companies out there. 

But something shifted after the October 7th attacks in Israel over 3 years ago. Since then, the cracks have become more visible.

One major turning point was the departure of Candace Owens, one of the platform’s biggest stars. She was terminated after being outspoken in her criticism of Israel’s actions following October 7th. And contrary to what some may have expected, she didn’t fade, she in fact exploded in popularity.

She had around 1.5 million subscribers at the time of her exit on her personal YouTube channel. After going independent, that number has since surged past 5.5 million today in under two years. That kind of growth sends a message: personalities can outgrow platforms.

Since then, The Daily Wire appears to be struggling, losing subscribers and navigating internal and external tensions. Ben himself has engaged in public clashes with prominent right-wing voices like Tucker Carlson and Megyn Kelly. Watching these fractures play out in real time has been… interesting, to say the least.

Here’s the core problem: if your brand is built primarily on personalities, instability is inevitable. People evolve, disagree, leave, or pivot. And when they do, the structure shakes.

But if the system is strong, independent of any one figure, it can survive those shifts.

Right now, investors and observers seem uneasy about The Daily Wire, largely because of how closely it’s tied to Ben himself and his ongoing public disputes. The same concern shows up elsewhere. Take Elon Musk and Tesla, for example. Many believe Tesla’s fate is deeply intertwined with Musk’s personality. The question becomes: is the company sustainable without him, or is it driven by the whims of one individual?

That’s the underlying tension, and it’s what makes this moment so compelling.

This isn’t just about one media company. It’s a case study in modern influence: personality-driven platforms versus system-driven institutions. One is explosive and powerful, but fragile. The other is slower to build, but far more resilient.

What we’re seeing now might just be the natural consequence of choosing the former.

And honestly? It’s fascinating to watch for there are lessons to be learned here.

What Do We Know About Hantavirus?


So recently, news has reported a suspected hantavirus outbreak linked to a cruise ship in the Atlantic Ocean, with multiple illnesses and reportedly 3 deaths under investigation. While the situation is being monitored closely, it’s important to understand what hantavirus actually is and how it spreads.

Hantavirus is a group of viruses carried primarily by rodents such as mice and rats. Humans become infected mainly by inhaling air contaminated with particles from rodent urine, droppings, or saliva. It can also spread through direct contact with contaminated surfaces or, less commonly, rodent bites. In most cases, it does not spread from person to person.

In humans, hantavirus can cause two serious illnesses. The first is Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome, which often begins with flu-like symptoms such as fever, fatigue, and muscle aches. It can rapidly progress to severe respiratory failure and has a high mortality rate. The second is Hemorrhagic Fever with Renal Syndrome, which affects the kidneys and blood vessels and is more common in parts of Europe and Asia.

The current concern on the cruise ship appears to involve suspected environmental exposure, most likely related to rodent contamination in a confined space. Investigations are ongoing to determine how the exposure occurred and whether additional cases are present.

Despite the alarming headlines, hantavirus is not easily spread between people, and outbreaks are rare and typically contained. Public health officials continue to emphasize that the overall risk to the general public remains low.

In short, hantavirus is a serious but uncommon rodent-borne virus that occasionally appears in isolated outbreaks, especially where human exposure to infected rodent environments occurs.

 The market reacted and the cruise ships stocks did bad today. Look at the Norwegian Cruise Line Holding, it went down over 8%. Outbreaks are profitable for greedy people and don't expect this to be quiet. 


The Ugly Synthetic Desire: $43,000 Earned on Fake Woman and the Illusion of Intimacy


An AI Virtual Girlfriend Earns $43,000 in a Month and could rake in half a million in a year. 

I came across this story today, and it stopped me in my tracks.

A 21-year-old college student in Austin created an OnlyFans account called Maya-and in just one month, it generated $43,000.

Here’s the part that should make you pause:

Maya does not exist.

She is entirely artificial.

A 22-year-old psychology dropout from UCF, with over 1,200 paying subscribers. One of them spent nearly $2,000 in a single month. Yet there is no real person behind the photos, no human typing messages, no lived experience-just code.

Every message is generated by AI.
Every image is synthesized.
Every voice is artificial.

Maya is nothing more than four files sitting on a laptop:

  • persona.md -her identity, background, personality

  • voice.md -how she speaks

  • flux.md -how she looks

  • brain.md-memory of interactions with subscribers

Before every reply, the system reads all four files, ensuring consistency. No slips. No breaks in character. No forgetting.

It’s seamless.

And that’s the unsettling part.

Not long ago, building something like this would take over a year. Now it takes four weeks. Soon, it may take a weekend.

This is no longer experimental technology. It’s a repeatable system-a plug-and-play model that can be deployed across platforms: OnlyFans, Instagram, TikTok, Twitch.

The barrier to entry has collapsed.

What remains is not technical skill, but taste-the ability to design a persona that people will emotionally invest in.

-And that raises a harder question.

What does it say about a society where a non-existent person can generate real emotional attachment-and real income-at this scale?

Where illusion outperforms reality?

Where connection is simulated, yet monetized as if it were real?

This isn’t just about technology.

It’s about demand.

Because Maya exists for one reason:
people are willing to pay for the illusion.

Call it innovation. Call it opportunity.

Or call it what it may actually be:

A reflection of a culture increasingly comfortable replacing reality with simulation-so long as it feels good. That is a crisis of civilization, my friends. 

Short-Term Pain, Long-Term Lies: The Trouble with Mainstream Media Lies


One of the things I enjoy doing on my days off is to go for long drives. While out there today, I noticed my road master needed a bathe. I pulled into the Fanwood Car Wash on my way back home to give her the treat she deserved.

The guy at the counter gave me their usual pitch: “Oh, sign up for monthly and you can wash all you want.”

I told him I was just visiting the area and would soon be gone. Then he glanced at my license plate-"New York"-and asked whether that was where I was coming from. I said yes and he exclaimed, “Hey, New York is expensive.”

I laughed. “New Jersey, too.”

And I meant it. I used to drive up to Mahwah, New Jersey, back in the day just to buy gas. When I was in college, it was always cheaper there-always as Mahwah was closer to me.

Today?

I have been driving around, and everywhere I looked, gas price is at $4.45 a gallon almost everywhere. All the stations from Plain Field, Fanwood, Scotch Field and up to West Fields, all expensive.

He nodded. “It’s true. Everything is expensive.”

I told him I like to use gas as the baseline for everything being expensive-because it’s the base commodity. The one that touches everything else: heat for homes, food, transportation, even rent-you name it.

When gas moves, the whole world moves with it.

We’re in May, and prices are still sky high.

And that got me thinking about all those talking heads on TV.

A while back, right after the U.S.–Israel coalition started bombing Iran, they all parroted the same programmed line to the masses:

“Short-term pain for long-term gain.”

Sounds stupid, doesn’t it?

In fact, it is stupid, because everyone could tell they were highly dishonest as they are trained to be. No wonder they are all failing, thanks in part to independent media i.e. podcasts. 

Since that war started, energy markets have never been the same since-and we’re still feeling the pain. Not just at the pump. The spillover effects are everywhere now: grocery bills, utilities, rent, everything.

Here’s the thing:

Those politicians and their 1% puppet masters don’t go food shopping. They don’t pump their own gas. They will never feel the impact-not really. Only Everyday people do.

And that’s why it’s so counterintuitive to me when I see ordinary people fighting one another over small things.

We have been set against each other while the real architects of this mess sit comfortably far away from any checkout line or gas station.

But maybe-just maybe-thanks to them, we’re all finally putting our faculties to work.

Seeing clearly.

Connecting the dots.

The conversation at the Fanwood Car Wash was small: between two strangers, a few minutes, a shared frustration over the price of everything. But it reminded me of something big: The ones who caused the pain aren’t feeling it.

And the ones who are feeling it need to stop fighting each other long enough to notice.

That has always been one of the tools in their tools box. 

God bless,

Pal Ronnie

The Antichrists Is Not a Person; It's a System and We Are Already Wrestling In It

A friend asked me not too long ago in our conversation about my favorite part of the Catholic Mass-not the music, not the community it provides, but the moment during the celebration by the priest.

Without hesitation, I answered: the Consecration-and, of course, I added, a good homily.

Yesterday, I was given the latter.

The homily was good-truly good an highly pragmatic. Not because it was comforting or polished, but because it was challenging. It left me with so much to ponder that I carried it with me all day, and I am still in fact, turning it over in my mind today.

That, to me, is the mark of a great homily: when it convicts and doesn’t let you go.

As I was reflecting today, a startling thought came to me:

What if the very system that so many of us feel trapped in-exhausted by, bound by it-is actually the antichrist spoken of in the Book of Revelation? 

Think about it.

Here we are, we live inside this system. We breathe its air, play by its rules, check all its boxes. And yet, at the very same time, we want to live according to the Word of God. Can you feel that tension?

But here’s the tension just in case: Nearly everything the Word teaches is opposed by this system.

Yesterday, Jesus said:“Believe in me.”

Such a simple command....but oh, how hard it is to obey when our jobs demand every ounce of our energies; when our monthly expenses often outrun the income; when everything you love and hold dear begins to fall apart. And more importantly, the flesh total opposed everything because we are humans and we see and feel everything.

All of these forces-the grind, the pressure, the loss-are not neutral.

They simply oppose and that my friends, is the anti-Christ.

They demand more from us than our time or our focus. They demand what belongs to God alone: our ultimate attention, our trust, our worship, our believes.

In essence, everything around us is antithetical to the Gospel.

And yet, here we are-called to wrestle with that reality every single day. Called to remain faithful to Jesus, not in spite of the system, but from within it.

That wrestling-that daily, costly, often lonely fight to believe-might just be the greatest challenge we will ever face as believers in Christ.

Not to escape the world-but to love Jesus more than we love surviving in it.

What do you think? leave me a comment. 

Pal Ronnie

Mass Readings and Reflection for Monday May 4th, 2026


First Reading:
(Acts 14:5–18)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 115)

Response: Not to us, O Lord, but to your name give the glory.

Alleluia:

Alleluia, alleluia.
The Holy Spirit will teach you everything and remind you of all I have said to you.
Alleluia.

Gospel: (John 14:21–26)

Reflection:

Today’s readings confront one of the most subtle dangers in life: pride in our own gifts.

Paul heals a crippled man, an undeniable miracle. Yet when the crowd tries to worship him, he refuses immediately. He does not entertain the praise, does not redirect it halfway, he completely rejects it.

He understands something essential:

What God does through you must never be mistaken as coming from you.

This is where many fall.
We are gifted, intellect, skill, talent, influence. These are real. But the danger is not in having gifts; it is in claiming ownership of what was only entrusted to us.

Pride often disguises itself subtly:

  • “I worked hard for this.”

  • “I earned this recognition.”

  • “I’m just better at this than others.”

But the truth remains:
Without God, the gift has no life.

The apostles show the correct posture:

  • They redirect attention immediately

  • They refuse false elevation

  • They point everything back to God

This is the meaning of the Psalm:

Not to us, O Lord, not to us, but to your name give the glory.

“Thank God.”

Because the moment we take the glory, we open the door to the very fall we don’t see coming.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

You Will Own Nothing And Be Happy


They told us at their WEF: “You will own nothing and you will be happy.”

No house - just rent.
No car-just lease.
No stability-just subscriptions.
No permanence-just access.

Now even relationships feel temporary… replaceable… transactional. Hard luck for all single folks out there. That is the dystopian life they planned for us.

So now, everything can be rented.
Nothing is truly ours.

Is this convenience… or control? You decide 🤔 


St. Bartholomew Church, Scotch Plains