Mrs. Don-o, psy ops (that is, manipulation of the public) are getting more advanced all the time. They really go back all the way in human history, but modern science and ruthlessness have made them a discipline. Government, politics and business are advancing their methods all the time. The Vatican too demonstrates an advanced ability in this as well.
So given the actual outcome of the “Kim Davis affair,” it’s hard to conclude that it was as it might seem at face value. It could have been as orchestrated as bringing the little illegal immigrant girl to meet the Pope.
Given all this pope has done, it was a curious thing to begin with that he would go so far as to meet with Davis, even considering the possibility that his underlings set the meeting up. Giving his penchant for talking out of both sides of his mouth so people of different beliefs can latch onto what they want to hear, it wouldn’t have been surprising for him to issue some vague ambiguous statement offering some support to Davis. But to go out of his way to initiate a meeting with her, or even for his underlings to do so? That was uncharacteristic right there.
What it really seemed like, initially, was that Kim Davis was being used and manipulated for some reason, but it wasn’t quite clear how.
As the situation turned out, it seemed like a way for the Vatican to publicly repudiate Kim Davis without seeming to go on the offensive to do so. The Vatican, after all, really couldn’t release a statement attacking her. That would be too unambiguous. But by initiating a meeting with her, but then saying that didn’t mean it was an endorsement of her actions (untrue right there since that is logically how it should be taken), and overall allowing her to be accused of lying about the circumstances of their meeting by the left, just served the purposes of “gay marriage” advocates. The Vatican could seem to need to “correct the record” on not supporting Davis, rather than having to come out and, unbidden, make a statement against her that would make the Pope’s position all-too-clear. This way they maintained their cover of ambiguity.
Your analysis appears to be spot on. Mo Rocca was spotlighted while Kim Davis was thrown under the bus.