The Minions of ‘Despicable Me’ Could Teach Kathleen Kennedy Townsend a Lesson
When Kennedy Townsend goes on a tear about someone she disfavors, the result is frustrating because she rarely sticks to facts.
When Kennedy Townsend goes on a tear about someone she disfavors, the result is frustrating because she rarely sticks to facts.
The facts about stem cell research are not complicated. For example, we know that a stem cell taken from someone’s bone marrow or from the cord blood stored after a baby is born is a stem cell without ethical problems.
Virginia attorney general Kenneth Cuccinelli’s anti-Obamacare lawsuit has resulted in a small but mighty first step in undoing the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. U.S
“It is to be hoped that Costa Rica does not violate the rights of the unborn with laws that legitimise in vitro fertilisation or abortion,” said Pope Benedict XVI [on 3 December] in remarks to the new Costa Rican ambassador to the Vatican.
One of the most remarkable public relations features of the culture of death is the innovative manner in which they attempt to sell the public on their “compassion.”
We’ve been paying close attention to the reports of Pope Benedict’s comments regarding the use of condoms in certain special circumstances (see “What the Pope really said about condom use”).
In the National Catholic Register, writer Pat Archbold opines, “Rutgers University Professor Helen Fisher, of the Center for Human Evolution Studies, has written for Oprah Magazine and [on November 17] was on the Joy Behar Show talking about women making the choice to be childless.
One of the most remarkable aspects of the digital information age is the ongoing use of polls—designed, I suppose, to make people feel like their opinion really matters.
Abortionist Martin Haskell, developer of the intact dilation and extraction method of killing (a type of partial birth abortion), recently moved his abortion facility from Cincinnati, Ohio to Sharonville, Ohio.
Early [October] President Barack Obama signed a law decreeing that federal statutes must no longer use the term “mental retardation.”
One of my Catholic media heroes, Phil Lawler, always writes with a certainty that forces one to think beyond what is claimed or what is reported elsewhere.
There was a time when it would never have occurred to simple folk that murder would become a recommended solution to budgetary woes—both at a national and a state level. In fact, years ago, the very idea would have sent shivers down the spines of most people.