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Condemned by Power, Absolved by God

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The Vatican Document That Changed the Templar Story   FAITH & HISTORY The Knights Templar, Joan of Arc, and the Medieval Church Under Political Siege A Historical Reflection for the Knights of Columbus Two of the most dramatic episodes in the history of the medieval Church share a disturbing common thread: canonical proceedings whose outcomes were predetermined not by the evidence of faith or the verdict of conscience, but by the demands of secular political power. The suppression of the Knights Templar in 1312 and the condemnation of Joan of Arc in 1431 stand nearly a century apart, yet they rhyme with unsettling precision. In both cases, the institutional Church — the very guardian of justice and mercy — was bent to serve the purposes of a monarch. In both cases, the truth eventually emerged. And in both cases, the delay between condemnation and vindication was measured not in years, but in centuries. For members of the Knights of Columbus, who bear in their very name a conn...

The Fortress Bank and the Great Charter

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FAITH, HISTORY & CIVIC VIRTUE How the Knights Templar, a Warrior-Diplomat, and a Stolen Sanctuary Gave Birth to the Rule of Law A Historical Reflection for the Knights of Columbus On the morning of June 15, 1215, on a meadow called Runnymede beside the Thames, a king placed his seal upon a document that would, in ways none of its authors could have foreseen, shape the constitutional foundations of every liberal democracy on earth. The Magna Carta — the Great Charter — is routinely cited as the ancestor of habeas corpus, due process of law, and the principle that no man, however powerful, stands above the law. Americans in particular encounter its legacy in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution and in the common law inheritance that shaped the entire architecture of their rights. Yet the story of how that document came to exist, how it survived its immediate repudiation, and how it eventually became law, cannot be told honestly without acknowledging two largely for...

The Long Shadow of the Temple

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FAITH, HISTORY & CIVIC VIRTUE · CAPSTONE How One Medieval Order Gave the Modern World Its Constitutional Liberties, Its Oceanic Horizons, and Its Longest Argument About the Limits of Power A Historical Reflection for the Knights of Columbus · Third in a Series In the year 1314, in Paris, a man burned at the stake in the early evening light beside the Seine. He was old — perhaps seventy — and he had been a prisoner for seven years. He had confessed under torture to crimes he had not committed, then recanted, then abjured again, and then, at the last, recanted once more as the flames were lit. His name was Jacques de Molay, and he was the last Grand Master of the Knights Templar. His order had been dissolved by papal decree two years earlier. His execution was meant to be the final punctuation in the story of the most powerful military and financial institution the medieval world had produced. It was not. The threads that the Templars had woven into the fabric of Western civiliza...

Welcome to Universe 26

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The Calhoun Effect - YouTube Society / Population / Behavioral Science Calhoun's mice didn't starve. They withdrew. So are we. By Stephen "Pseudo Publius"  |  May 2026 BLUF (Bottom Line Up Front):   John Calhoun's 1968 "Universe 25" mouse experiment was never a literal forecast of human society. Its real finding was that abundance plus a closed enclosure produces collapse through social withdrawal — not through famine. The human studies of the 1970s tested only open systems, where dispersal was easy, and dismissed Calhoun on that basis. The closed-enclosure variable was never tested in humans. Three live cases now run the comparison. California , exit open, leaks 350,000 residents a year and shows only muted Calhoun effects. Russia , having banned military-age male emigration in September 2022, is running Calhoun's social-violence check and fertility check simultaneously. Japan — closed in both directions, exit by culture and ...