Holy See Welcomes Back Porn Convict Capella
In a stunning and deeply troubling development, the Vatican has quietly reinstated convicted child pornographer Fr. Carlo Alberto Capella to its diplomatic corps, according to confirmation this week from The Pillar. Capella, who in 2018 was convicted of possessing and distributing dozens of explicit images of minors aged 14 to 17, served his sentence within Vatican walls and has now resurfaced not only as a resident but as a salaried official in the Roman Curia’s Pontifical Yearbook 2025. Once stripped of his clerical honors but never laicized, Capella now operates under Archbishop Paul Gallagher in the Secretariat’s Second Section, a mid-to-senior rank post unthinkably restored under the justification of “mercy.” His quiet reappointment — reportedly after years of visitations and "preparation" — has shocked some within the Vatican, raising urgent spiritual and moral concerns about the state of justice and transparency in Rome. Catholics around the world are left reeling, asking what damning secrets Capella might hold to warrant such shocking leniency, and what message this sends to the faithful about accountability and the protection of innocents in the Church.
The US Civil War-era submarine Hunley required an eight-man crew—seven to power the propeller with a hand-crank and one to steer. Within months of its launch, the Confederate sub had sunk and been salvaged twice, taking the lives of five crewmen the first time and the entire crew the second. Manned with a new crew, Hunley became the first submarine to sink a ship in battle, yet the achievement was marred when the sub itself sank, killing all aboard yet again. When was it recovered?
As a Swiss explorer traveling in North Africa, Eberhardt often dressed as a man to move more freely through Arab society. Intensely independent, she took the side of Algerians fighting against colonial French rule. She converted to Islam, was initiated into a Sufi brotherhood, and married an Algerian soldier. She wrote about her travels in books and newspapers. She survived a murder attempt—in which her arm was badly injured by a saber—only to die at the age of 27 in what unlikely fashion?
People can and do die of laughter. The 3rd century BCE philosopher Chrysippus, for example, is said to have laughed himself to death while watching the antics of a drunken donkey. In 1410, Martin I of Aragon succumbed to a combination of indigestion and uncontrollable laughter. More recently, a UK man died of heart failure after laughing for 25 minutes at a TV show featuring a Scotsman in a kilt battling a vicious black pudding. What other historical figures have died from laughter?
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