Anti-democracy anti-estrangement trans Facebook post leo brothers drawing censorship | Pope Leo 14

The big brother of newly elected Pope Leo Fourteen predicts that the Roman Catholic Church’s first ever American-born leader will strive to be a non-political role in his role—if that happens, it will contrast with the strong support of the pope’s fellow popes for far-right American politics.

Facebook post, in the name of Louis Martin "Lou" Prevost, whose young brother Robert Prevost was recently elected as the late Pope Francis to replace the late Pope Francis, has been scrutinized by journalists and social media users as the world seeks about what kind of relationships Leo may promote with Donald Trump.

A post by Lou - a resident of Port Charlotte, Florida, loops in most Republican counties, loops a videotape involving former U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and former U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for "drunk (c-word)."

Another accused Barack Obama and the Democratic Party who served as president from 2009 to 2017, "had a desire for a total destruction of our way of life and to turn this country into a dictatorship and become a racist, and this kind of racist is in it."

Another post called for a meeting with Volodymyr Zelenskyy, a Democrat who met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy after he and Trump argued in the Oval Office that he defended the war with Russia and Russia. A separate post shared an anti-LGBTQ+ meme with text: "Your kid is not trans - you are just a mean parent."

In an interview awarded to him after Leo's election, Lu said that he and his brother (widely considered rational, both differ.

Lou told The New York Times that he was conservative, and he and Leo – as the exit said – “disagree on some things.” And, more easily described how he took root in his hometown of Chicago Cubs baseball team, while Leo rivals competed with the White Sox when they grew up with their parents and middle brother John.

Still, the efforts Lou made to portray himself and Leo as his men did not quell the polarized reaction from his brother’s Facebook post since the painting notification.

As of Monday, there is an article in the new comment visible on Lou's account: "Your brother must be embarrassed." Another more polite person read: "Your comments and language are not satisfied with anyone. Shame on you. Besides being annoying, it is also a factual incorrect. I hope this is not a reflection of the Roman Catholic Church."

However, Lou has defenders in his corner. A Facebook user on the Lou page wrote “What exactly is the problem with the person who got there” and they went there to complain about their beliefs. Conservative political website Gateway Pundit promoted him to "a red-blooded American patriot, tell it is."

As far as Leo is concerned, his early signs are that he appears willing to pass his two presidency terms, beginning in 2017 and January.

Social media campaigns linked to Leo, 69, reportedly showed that he had previously raised a 2018 statement from a church leader that criticized the Trump administration's policy of allowing immigration authorities to separate families at the U.S.-Mexico border at the time. He apparently shared an article asking “Your conscience is not disturbed”, referring to Kilmarábrego García, a man who was wrongly deported to prison in El Salvador for the second time.

Meanwhile, in some of his earliest remarks as the Catholic Pope, Leo mentioned Francis' previous call to the church as the "building bridges." This image during the Pope Francis was seen as a condemnation of the slogan of “building a wall”, which Trump often used in administration efforts to restrict immigration from Mexico’s border with the United States.

Trump's record congratulations to Leo on congratulations to the outcome of the pope election and said he was looking forward to meeting him.

"I don't think there will be a lot of politics involved," said Lou Prevost, a Southwestern Florida Gulf Coast News, who believes his brother's Pope compared to Francis's Pope.

Lou, 73, added that his younger brother introduced him to Francis at one point, and that was “more…this is the rules already made – let’s follow them.”

He mentioned Francis’ efforts to widely publicize the church (not acknowledging homosexual unions) more enthusiastically welcomed the LGBTQ+ people to “be more freer to people like transsexuals and homosexuals.”

Lou Prevost did not respond to news from The Guardian, who sought comments. He told Gulf Coast News that he had not spoken to Leo after the pope's election, thinking his brother must have been busy at the time.

It is reported that the Prevost brothers all attended Catholic school. John, 71, became the principal of the Catholic school in their hometown. Louis said Robert was in the U.S. Navy when he was appointed as a pastor in 1982.

Before becoming the Pope, Leo served as the global leader of the Catholic religious order and was known as the Augustine. Lead the Peru diocese; in September 2023 Bishop Francis; and leads the Vatican entity, responsible for selecting new bishops from all over the world.