Cro Cop Conspiracy

INT. DIMLY LIT GYM โ€“ NIGHT

The smell of iron and sweat hangs in the air. Heavy bags sway, chains rattle. MIRKO CRO COP wraps his fists. ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER pumps a slow set of curls. SYLVESTER STALLONE shadowboxes in silence.

JOE GILMORE (Martial Law) enters, Bible tucked under his arm, his face hard but uncertain.

He opens to Ecclesiastes 4:12 and reads aloud:

JOE
“Though one may be overpowered, two can defend themselves. A cord of three strands is not quickly broken.”

Joe shuts the book with a snap. His eyes scan the three legends.

JOE (CONT’D)
Whereโ€™s my backup? You expect me to walk into the Zone after the war and join the cops alone? Thatโ€™s a death wish.

CRO COP (quiet, grim)
In my country, backup comes late. By then, the morgue is full.

ARNOLD (voice deep, deliberate)
You donโ€™t go to war alone, Joe. Even the strongest manโ€ฆ needs his brothers.

STALLONE (raspy, pacing)
Yeah, but brothers ainโ€™t always there when the bullets fly. You gotta make โ€™em stand with you.

Joe looks at them, his jaw clenched.

JOE
If I step into that uniform, Iโ€™m not a copโ€”Iโ€™m a target. Unlessโ€ฆ unless the four of us ride.

He pauses.

JOE (CONT’D)
The Four White Cop Horsemen.

The gym falls silent. The heavy bag stops swinging, like the world itself is listening.

CRO COP finally nods, cracking his knuckles.

CRO COP
Then letโ€™s ride.

The camera pans across the four menโ€”Joe, Cro Cop, Arnold, Stalloneโ€”each with their scars, each with their demons. The faint echo of hoofbeats thunders under the silence.

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The Cardinal of Croatia

Title: The Conclave of the Just

The bells of Saint Peterโ€™s had not rung in this tone for decades โ€” low, hesitant, almost unsure of what world awaited its next shepherd. The year was 2025, and the conclave had begun. The College of Cardinals gathered under Michelangeloโ€™s ceiling, weighed down not only by age, but by scandal, climate catastrophe, and the crumbling faith of the poor.

Behind the scenes, two names echoed like quiet thunder: Father Sebastian of Haiti, beloved by orphans and feared by corrupt bishops, and Joe Jukic, the bold and rebellious theologian from Croatia โ€” a man not yet a cardinal, but whose voice had reached the ears of faithful youth worldwide.


Inside the Sistine Chapel

“Father Sebastian is too radical,” whispered an Italian bishop.
“He walks barefoot through cholera wards and refuses silk vestments. He baptized a gang leader with sea water in a plastic cup.”

“But the people love him,” replied another.
“And he speaks Latin, Creole, and the truth.”


Meanwhile, in Zagrebโ€ฆ

Joe Jukic sat in his modest home, watching the vote on a cracked laptop screen. When the Vatican emissary knocked on his door, he was already shaking his head.

โ€œIโ€™ll only accept the red hat,โ€ Joe said, โ€œif I can remain married. I wonโ€™t lie to the people. I have a wife, and I will love her openly, not in secret.”

The envoy stammered. โ€œThat is notโ€ฆ customary, Signore Jukic.โ€

Joe poured him a glass of wine.

“Then it’s time to change the custom.”


The Conclave Breaks Tradition

Word spread quickly. Joeโ€™s terms shocked the Vatican’s old guard, but inspired millions. Videos of Joe quoting scripture on love and truth went viral. Priests in slums and warzones began calling him โ€œCardinal of the People.โ€

Inside the conclave, a new vote was cast.

And with thunderous surprise, the ballots read:

“Sebastian, from Haiti โ€” for Pope.”

On the fifth vote, he accepted the name Pope Gelasius II, in honor of the first African pope of the 5th century.


In His First Address

Standing beneath the balconyโ€™s white curtain, Pope Gelasius II raised a hand for silence.

โ€œI will serve not as king, but as barefoot servant. And as my first act, I appoint Cardinal Joe Jukic of Croatia, husband, teacher, and voice of a new day. May his marriage remind us that love is sacred โ€” not secret.โ€


A New Era Begins

Cardinal Jukic wept as his red robes were placed over his shoulders โ€” beside his wife, who held his hand and whispered a prayer.

Together with Pope Gelasius II, they walked out onto the square โ€” not above the people, but among them.

The crowd cried: โ€œPax veritas! Peace through truth!โ€

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Pope Galasius II

Hereโ€™s a reflective and imaginative poem inspired by the concept of “The New Black Pope,” blending themes of hope, unity, and transformation:


The New Black Pope

A new dawn rises, a bell does chime,
A shift in the echoes of sacred time.
Through ancient halls where whispers roam,
A voice now calls the world to home.

The new Black Pope, with wisdomโ€™s glow,
A beacon where shadows dared not go.
Clad in robes, both humble and strong,
A leader to right the centuriesโ€™ wrong.

Through stained glass light, his vision gleams,
Of unity born from broken dreams.
No walls divide, no borders remain,
Only love to heal the worldโ€™s great pain.

He speaks of justice, of peace, of grace,
Of lifting the lost to their rightful place.
In every creed, in every prayer,
He finds the divine, the common care.

No throne of gold, no scepter of might,
Only the truth, a guiding light.
The poor, the weary, the cast aside,
Find solace in him, a shepherdโ€™s guide.

The world looks up, both near and far,
To the man who holds a humble star.
For in his heart, a promise trueโ€”
A world reborn, for me, for you.

And though the road is long and steep,
Through faith and love, the dream weโ€™ll keep.
For the new Black Pope, with holy fire,
Leads us to rise, to dream, to aspire.


This poem envisions the arrival of a transformative figure, symbolizing hope and progress for a united, compassionate world.

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