“Wealth doesn’t just beget more wealth – it begets more power.” Robert Reich, former Secretary of Labor and Professor.
When Pope John Paul II died on April 2, 2005, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger appeared to be his most likely successor according to reports at the time. Karol Wojtyla had reigned for 27 years. He had appointed Ratzinger prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith – the most powerful Vatican position at the time – on November 25, 1981. For 24 years, Ratzinger was one of the pope’s closest advisers, supporting Wojtyla’s ecclesial and political ideologies.
“In the Vatican, the Opus Dei cardinal most active in view of the conclave is Julian Herranz … Ratzinger’s leap to the top of the list of candidates for the papacy is due to him; it took shape at the suppers for cardinals that Herranz organized at Opus Dei’s heavily guarded villa in the…
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