• Conspiracy Theories
    Mar 23 2026
    You can watch/share the video through this link: https://youtu.be/dcTODjJE0U8

    Don Bosco wrote: "All the wisdom of Solomon is of no use if you are lost.”

    Check out the YouTube channel, if you want: https://www.youtube.com/@catholicmenspodcast
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    24 mins
  • When St. Joseph Stopped a Flood
    Mar 22 2026
    Watch the video: https://youtu.be/gKkfqFQj7-Y

    "I have never known a person to have been truly devoted to St. Joseph and to have rendered him special honor without seeing him advance rapidly in virtue." - St. Teresa of Ávila

    This is an excellent article written by a good friend of mine, Mr. Joseph Ferrara: https://www.tfp.org/here-is-the-story-of-saint-josephs-miracle-at-the-santa-fe-cafe/




    Check out the YouTube channel, if you want: https://www.youtube.com/@catholicmenspodcast
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    4 mins
  • St. John Bosco’s Vision of Hell (Full Account)
    Mar 19 2026
    Full account of Don Bosco’s Dream of Hell. This vision was translated directly from the original Italian in Volume IX of "The Biographical Memoirs of Saint John Bosco."

    Watch the video: https://youtu.be/SIcd905Tlzk

    In Saint Theresa of Avila’s Poem, No Me Mueves, (I am not moved) she proclaims:
    “I am not moved, my God, to love Thee by the Heaven Thou hast promised me; nor am I moved by fear of Hell to cease for that reason to offend Thee.
    Thou art what moves me, Lord; it moves me to see Thee nailed to a cross and scorned…”

    Saint Theresa of Avila’s words were the highest expression of a disinterested love, for she loved Our Lord ardently without any motivation by personal benefit. However, until we achieve that degree of sanctity, we need to be reminded of the pains of Hell to move us along the path of holiness.

    This is why hearing about all the horrors in Saint John Bosco’s mystical dream of Hell is a gift from God that we should appreciate and take advantage of. He didn’t have to give us a glimpse of the afterlife but revealed it to Don Bosco because he loves us. Listening to this entire dream should be done calmly and with complete confidence in God, but not forgetting that God is letting you hear this story so you can repent and suffer for your sins in this life, rather than burn in the next.

    00:00 Intro
    00:05 Pt. 1 How to Escape the Snares of the Devil
    09:30 Pt. 2 The Snares of the Devil
    19:16 Pt. 3 Entering Hell
    32:18 Pt. 4 Don Bosco’s Hand is Badly Burned

    Check out the YouTube channel, if you want: https://www.youtube.com/@catholicmenspodcast
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    44 mins
  • John Ripley Sacrificed His Military Career for the Truth
    Mar 11 2026
    These are the appendices of the book, "An American Knight: The Life of Colonel John W. Ripley, USMC" by Norman J. Fulkerson.

    Here's a playlist with all the parts of the book: https://www.youtube.com/playli...

    00:00 Intro
    01:29 "Jesus, Mary, Get Me There!" by Jeremias Wells
    28:08 Col. Ripley Testimony I
    1:05:26 Col. Ripley Testimony II


    A note about pronunciation... the author of the book, Mr. Norman Fulkerson, has decided that we will pronounce the Vietnamese battlefield location names as Col. Ripley himself did, as well as the majority of Vietnam veterans. Hence the prominent "D" in Dong Ha, for example. We feel that these episodes are for an English speaking audience and we are not above how the veterans themselves pronounced these names. God bless!

    Check out the YouTube channel, if you want: https://www.youtube.com/@catholicmenspodcast
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    1 hr and 24 mins
  • The Politically Incorrect Testimonies of Col. John Ripley | Pt. 3
    Mar 5 2026
    Welcome to the Catholic Men's Podcast, helping you find good works of literature for the Catholic gentleman.

    Here's a playlist with all the parts of the book: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1a68IKIffqZ0Ad89mGt5AZQiGsuc0BbJ

    I highly recommend reading the book so that you can read the Appendices, which contain the full text of his testimonies. Just a warning, they're a little graphic, but they need to be, since he is illustrating the realities of combat: https://www.amazon.com/American-Knight-Life-Colonel-Ripley/dp/1877905410

    Soon this book will be up on Audible as well, which will include the Appendices, I just haven't narrated it quite yet. It'll be another few days, probably.

    The greatest pulpit orator of the nineteenth century, Lacordaire, once said that the vocation of a soldier is next in dignity to the priesthood, not only because it commissioned him to defend justice on the field of battle and order on the field of peace, but also because it called him to the spirit and intention of sacrifice.

    Today I'm narrating, “An American Knight: The Life of Colonel John W. Ripley, USMC,” by Norman J. Fulkerson. There's something about a Catholic soldier that really captivates my imagination. Saints like George, Martin of Tours, Sebastian and the Martyrs of the Theban Legion have fascinated young Catholic men for centuries. When I heard that my friend, Mr. Norman Fulkerson, wrote a book about a United States Marine whose fervent faith and Catholic upbringing aided him in saving an untold number of lives in the Vietnam War - I had to read that book. I was in Australia at the time promoting the message of Our Lady of Fatima and I'll never forget reading this gem of a book in the outback.
    Since then he's had trouble in getting the book narrated and I promised him that over the course of lent, I would narrate the book on my channel. It'll be in 3 parts, launched over the course of a few weeks this lent, which I think is appropriate timing because Col. John Ripley was forced to stop the brutal advance of the North Vietnamese communist army by blowing up the Dong Ha Bridge on Easter Sunday, April 2, 1972.

    Not only is this book anti-communist, but it's distinctly Catholic and gives many principles on how a man should act when faced with adversity. You can listen to this to fall asleep if you want, as part of our Catholic Insomniac series, but it's a very rousing and exciting story.

    00:00 Intro
    00:27 Ch. 18 “A Holy Crusade”
    08:55 Ch. 19 In Defense of Womanhood and Femininity
    21:21 Ch. 20 Experiments in a Petri Dish
    30:00 Ch. 21 Traditional American Elite
    36:18 Ch. 22 The Most Dramatic Liver Transplant in History
    47:29 Ch. 23 Final Notes in Life’s “Symphony”
    56:40 Ch. 24 The Burial of a Legend
    01:05:06 Ch. 25 He Honored Us All
    01:16:00 Acknowledgements

    Check out the YouTube channel, if you want: https://www.youtube.com/@catholicmenspodcast
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    1 hr and 23 mins
  • God + 1 Marine Defeat 30,000 Communists | Pt. 2
    Feb 27 2026
    Welcome to the Catholic Men's Podcast, helping you find good works of literature for the Catholic gentleman.

    Here's a playlist with all the parts of the book: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1a68IKIffqZ0Ad89mGt5AZQiGsuc0BbJ

    The greatest pulpit orator of the nineteenth century, Lacordaire, once said that the vocation of a soldier is next in dignity to the priesthood, not only because it commissioned him to defend justice on the field of battle and order on the field of peace, but also because it called him to the spirit and intention of sacrifice.

    Today I'm narrating, “An American Knight: The Life of Colonel John W. Ripley, USMC,” by Norman J. Fulkerson. There's something about a Catholic soldier that really captivates my imagination. Saints like George, Martin of Tours, Sebastian and the Martyrs of the Theban Legion have fascinated young Catholic men for centuries. When I heard that my friend, Mr. Norman Fulkerson, wrote a book about a United States Marine whose fervent faith and Catholic upbringing aided him in saving an untold number of lives in the Vietnam War - I had to read that book. I was in Australia at the time promoting the message of Our Lady of Fatima and I'll never forget reading this gem of a book in the outback.
    Since then he's had trouble in getting the book narrated and I promised him that over the course of lent, I would narrate the book on my channel. It'll be in 3 parts, launched over the course of a few weeks this lent, which I think is appropriate timing because Col. John Ripley was forced to stop the brutal advance of the North Vietnamese communist army by blowing up the Dong Ha Bridge on Easter Sunday, April 2, 1972.

    Not only is this book anti-communist, but it's distinctly Catholic and gives many principles on how a man should act when faced with adversity. You can listen to this to fall asleep if you want, as part of our Catholic Insomniac series, but it's a very rousing and exciting story.

    00:00 Intro
    0:24 Ch.9 A Catholic Marine
    07:20 Ch.10 A Wise and Fearless Warrior
    14:20 Ch.11 A Legend is Born
    21:53 Ch.12 Unique Side of a Warrior
    34:28 Ch.13 The Last Advisors Chapter
    38:26 Ch.14 The Ring of Steel
    46:16 Ch.15 The Dong Ha Bridge
    53:45 Ch.16 “Jesus, Mary, Get Me There”
    01:03:57 Ch.17 Giap’s Frustrating End to a Bloody Stalemate

    Check out the YouTube channel, if you want: https://www.youtube.com/@catholicmenspodcast
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    1 hr and 16 mins
  • John Ripley: The Catholic Marine Who Stopped an Army | Pt. 1
    Feb 21 2026
    Welcome to the Catholic Men's Podcast, helping you find good works of literature for the Catholic gentleman.

    Here's a playlist with all the parts of the book: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL1a68IKIffqZ0Ad89mGt5AZQiGsuc0BbJ

    The greatest pulpit orator of the nineteenth century, Lacordaire, once said that the vocation of a soldier is next in dignity to the priesthood, not only because it commissioned him to defend justice on the field of battle and order on the field of peace, but also because it called him to the spirit and intention of sacrifice.

    Today I'm narrating, “An American Knight: The Life of Colonel John W. Ripley, USMC,” by Norman J. Fulkerson.

    There's something about a Catholic soldier that really captivates my imagination. Saints like George, Martin of Tours, Sebastian and the Martyrs of the Theban Legion have fascinated young Catholic men for centuries. When I heard that my friend, Mr. Norman Fulkerson, wrote a book about a United States Marine whose fervent faith and Catholic upbringing aided him in saving an untold number of lives in the Vietnam War - I had to read that book. I was in Australia at the time promoting the message of Our Lady of Fatima and I'll never forget reading this gem of a book in the outback.

    Since then he's had trouble in getting the book narrated and I promised him that over the course of lent, I would narrate the book on my channel. It'll be in 3 parts, launched over the course of a few weeks this lent, which I think is appropriate timing because Col. John Ripley was forced to stop the brutal advance of the North Vietnamese communist army by blowing up the Dong Ha Bridge on Easter Sunday, April 2, 1972. Not only is this book anti-communist, but it's distinctly Catholic and gives many principles on how a man should act when faced with adversity. You can listen to this to fall asleep if you want, as part of our Catholic Insomniac series, but it's a very rousing and exciting story.
    So let's begin…

    00:00 Intro
    02:16 Forward
    09:18 Preface
    14:13 Introduction
    20:07 Ch. 1. Birth and Childhood
    29:42 Ch. 2. “Culture and Refinement Personified”
    40:47 Ch. 3. Huckleberry Finn
    51:45 Ch. 4 .City of Radford
    58:55 Ch. 5. Hearing the Battle Cry
    1:10:00 Ch. 6. Naval Academy
    1:19:56 Ch. 7. Moline Blaylock
    1:26:54 Ch. 8. The Challenges of Fatherhood

    Check out the YouTube channel, if you want: https://www.youtube.com/@catholicmenspodcast
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    1 hr and 39 mins
  • I Reveal the Full Story: Don Bosco’s Warning (SPOILERS)
    Feb 14 2026
    Advisory! This live stream podcast contains spoilers. I will reveal every path of "Don Bosco's Warning," an interactive story. If you would like to try this choose your own adventure game for yourself before you listen to this, please click here: https://youtu.be/Dfw5F5PJyM0

    If you would like to watch the live stream to see the stunning visuals for the stories created by a good friend of mine, please click here: https://youtube.com/live/cWG0G...

    Maybe come back if you can't find all of the story paths like South America or Grigio, the angel dog.

    The visions and direct quotes you may hear in this adventure are true. They really did occur in the life of a Catholic saint and all these accounts were diligently recorded by his contemporaries. The only thing that has been changed is the sequence of these mystical visions and historical events. You can decide that sequence for yourself. Be careful though, as the wrong decision may end in an untimely death, which of course never really happened to the saint, who died of natural causes, but these untimely ends had to be invented for the purposes of the game which is the only element of fiction in all these adventures. The rest is all true. The citation for the visions and incidents recounted are in the description below each video.

    The year is 1868. You are an Italian priest who has started an Oratory school for boys in Turin, but the many stresses of the year, far too many to recount here, have taken their toll on you. You decide to go to Lanzo for a short retreat and some rest. On your last night there, you have an incredibly vivid dream that shakes you to the very core of your soul.

    Later, you would tell your Oratory boys:
    “I saw in my bedroom a most loathsome toad, as big as an ox, that squatted at the foot of my bed. I stared breathlessly. It was green and its legs, body, and head swelled and grew more and more repugnant. His fiery eyes, red-lined mouth and throat presented a terrifying sight. His bones were made of fire and his bony ears were very small. I kept staring and muttering: ‘But a toad has no ears!’ I also noticed two horns jutting from its snout and two greenish wings sprouting from its sides. Its legs looked like those of a lion, and its long tail ended in a forked tip.”
    “Initially, I did not feel afraid, but became terrified when the monster began edging closer to me. He opened its enormous, tooth-studded jaws, and looked like a demon from hell. I crossed myself but nothing happened; rang the bell, but no one responded; shouted, but in vain. As the monster would not retreat, I asked: ‘What do you want of me, you ugly devil?’ It crept forward, as if answering, and stretched its ears which pointed upward. It then paused momentarily, resting its front paws on the top of the headboard and raising itself on its hind legs. It looked at me and crawled forward until its snout was close to my face.”

    “I felt such horror that I tried to jump out of bed, but the monster opened its jaws wide.”

    This incident is recounted in “The Biographical Memoirs of Saint John Bosco” by Rev. Giovanni Battista Lemoyne, S.D.B., Vol. 9, Ch. 75.

    Check out the YouTube channel, if you want: https://www.youtube.com/@catholicmenspodcast
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    51 mins