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Bye bye Biondi


bonwich

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  • 7 months later...

I'm glad everyone is handling this with such grace. Maybe if Biondi got a bunch of people to sit around the clocktower, Pestello would just give him his job back.

Maybe a shirtless Biondi statue would make everyone happy.

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I am not surprised he's fighting to stay ..... the guy spent his entire adult life in St. Louis. Leaving will never be easy.

I am not surprised he wants to stay physically close ... but that will lead to sides being drawn, real or perceived.

I am not surprised there are those who want him long gone .... typical.

And I am not surprised there are those who want him staying ... again, typical.

What I do like was the professor's answers --- took the donors words and made him look like a fool without even trying.

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We must remember that we live in the "ME" generation. Everyone, including Biondi, the donors, professors, etc..., is fighting hard to get what they "deserve." "Deserve" means whatever they feel they are entitled to receive in exchange for their monetary contributions or efforts of any kind, regardless of their size or importance (otherwise they might be sad, cry or threaten to make a ruckus, which we know cannot be allowed). In reality a few hundred thousand dollars do not make much of a difference to a business the size of SLU.

I think SLU should politely (always politely) thank these donors for their past contributions and suggest that if they are so unhappy about the way Biondi is being treated by the Jesuits, maybe they should convert and become Lutherans or something else, and make their donations where their money and their sense of importance and entitlement would be better recognized and rewarded. Just saying, a few hundred thousands will not break the bank, Biondi's continued presence will be an eternal source of problems worth a lot more than whatever it is these "deserving" donors have provided.

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I would love that. It might be the ultimate backhanded compliment to anyone that I've ever seen.

Shirtless Biondi on horseback, like Putin. Brandishing the Sword of Loyola.

Also, now that Biondi is gone, Pestello should sell off all the statues to raise a little cash.

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Probably not, but it interferes with -- actually, blatantly violates -- your vow of obedience when you leak a letter from your superior to the press.

Boom.

For the record, I was never a Biondi supporter. If anyone is going to ignore or find loopholes to his vows, it's him.

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Most likely his private pool of donors had tweaked the budget by committing dollars restricted to Biondi's new roll of foreign recruitment. Think the CIA was involved? If so the story could roll on. I thank him for being the patron saint of landscapers and denigrate him for historic buildings torn down for parking lots.

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The good father has lived the life with perks of a CEO. This is being taken away from him. It won't be easy .

Have you seen the Ignatius House on the LUC campus?

I was up there for a "Come and See" Weekend with the Society a few weeks ago and it's posh, to say the least. Makes Jesuit Hall look like a Holiday Inn. 2005 SLU alum Eric Immel is in regency up there and invited me up for a retreat and was incredibly impressed with Loyola's campus. The Chicago-Detroit Province is in good hands and having Larry Legend back home will definitely be a plus.

http://valentibuilders.com/project/education/loyola-university-chicago-ignatius-house/

Also, when it comes to Fr. Biondi and his vows as a Jesuit, remember that any salary he made as president of the University would be returned to the Jesuit community at Saint Louis U. Jesuits in community are given what is necessary for them to carry out their individual missions, yes, but I honestly believe that Fr. Biondi's expenses, etc. are justifiable.

In the early history of the Society, especially as it expanded into SE Asia and Japan, most Jesuits had to live like princes rather than paupers, as they brought Ignatian spirituality to the farthest reaches of the known world.

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