You keep asserting without evidence, and when people call you on it you move the goal posts from “it was never taught” to “it was never publicly taught by a Pope”.
Saying “everyone knows” is an extremely weak argument. Clearly people on this thread don’t all know that your assertions are true. I certainly don’t. What I do know is that the CDF was ruling in favor of Communion for some people in irregular marriages prior to the Pontificate of John Paul II, and that in all of the arguments that I’ve read by radical traditionalists and sedevacantists against the “innovations” of John Paul II this particular issue has never appeared. They call his praying with Jews and Protestants an example of heresy, but not his extending Coommunion to the divorced and remarried.
This is an important matter because you seem to be claiming that innovations on the part of Pope Francis are equal to, or justified by, innovations by John Paul II. If you can’t demonstrate that John Paul II was innovating, or that the CDF was innovating for that matter, then this argument is baseless.
This is of course secondary to the question of whether or not Pope Francis is innovating at all, which isn’t settled because the text of AL is ambiguous and given to contradictory interpretations (as evidenced by the vastly different guidelines that have emerged since its publication), and Pope Francis refuses to actually engage the Bishops, priests, and the laity in a clear and direct way. This may be an argument over nothing, but we won’t know until the Pope actually addresses the controversy he has created.
In my view this controversy, and the refusal to engage it, is the real problem. I’m much less concerned about the possibility of heresy on the part of the Pope, and I still have Faith in the infallibility of the Church. I have less and less confidence in the notion that we have an effective Pope, but the Pope is the Pope, and I’m loyal to the See of Peter.
Peace and God bless!