President Trump's recent Truth Social attacks on Pope Leo XIV—labeling the first American pontiff "weak on crime" and "terrible on foreign policy" over his calls for de-escalation in the Iran war—sparked backlash from US Catholic bishops, Knights of Columbus, and global leaders like Italy's Meloni, who deemed the rhetoric unacceptable. Yet, with no new personal insults, mocks, or attacks since the market opened April 13, traders imply just a 26% chance of further disparagement by April 30, reflecting de-escalation amid Catholic dismay and Trump's shift to other priorities like economic issues. Pope Leo's defiant vow to speak out on peace persists, but lacks immediate catalysts for renewed White House-Vatican feud.
Polymarket डेटा का संदर्भ देने वाला प्रयोगात्मक AI-जनरेटेड सारांश। यह ट्रेडिंग सलाह नहीं है और इस बाज़ार के समाधान में कोई भूमिका नहीं निभाता। · अपडेट किया गयाThis includes calling the Pope weak, stupid, disloyal, a failure, using an insulting nickname, using other derogatory language, or using the negative form of a positive trait in a derogatory personal way (e.g., “He/She isn’t smart”). Negative forms used in reference to the Pope's professional actions, policies, or decisions (e.g., “He/She isn’t being smart about this policy”) will not count. Policy disagreements stated without disparaging language will not count.
A direct reference will qualify even if the individual is not named, so long as it is reasonably clear from context that they are the subject.
Any written, verbal, or recorded public statement by Trump qualifies.
The resolution source will be a consensus of credible reporting.
बाज़ार खुला: Apr 13, 2026, 6:35 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...This includes calling the Pope weak, stupid, disloyal, a failure, using an insulting nickname, using other derogatory language, or using the negative form of a positive trait in a derogatory personal way (e.g., “He/She isn’t smart”). Negative forms used in reference to the Pope's professional actions, policies, or decisions (e.g., “He/She isn’t being smart about this policy”) will not count. Policy disagreements stated without disparaging language will not count.
A direct reference will qualify even if the individual is not named, so long as it is reasonably clear from context that they are the subject.
Any written, verbal, or recorded public statement by Trump qualifies.
The resolution source will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...President Trump's recent Truth Social attacks on Pope Leo XIV—labeling the first American pontiff "weak on crime" and "terrible on foreign policy" over his calls for de-escalation in the Iran war—sparked backlash from US Catholic bishops, Knights of Columbus, and global leaders like Italy's Meloni, who deemed the rhetoric unacceptable. Yet, with no new personal insults, mocks, or attacks since the market opened April 13, traders imply just a 26% chance of further disparagement by April 30, reflecting de-escalation amid Catholic dismay and Trump's shift to other priorities like economic issues. Pope Leo's defiant vow to speak out on peace persists, but lacks immediate catalysts for renewed White House-Vatican feud.
Polymarket डेटा का संदर्भ देने वाला प्रयोगात्मक AI-जनरेटेड सारांश। यह ट्रेडिंग सलाह नहीं है और इस बाज़ार के समाधान में कोई भूमिका नहीं निभाता। · अपडेट किया गया
बाहरी लिंक से सावधान रहें।
बाहरी लिंक से सावधान रहें।
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