Relay for Abortion? What the American Cancer Society Can Learn from the Komen Crisis
Charity walks and runs are big business. Who doesn’t love a fun event, even if we’re out of shape? Walking or running for a good cause makes us feel good.
Charity walks and runs are big business. Who doesn’t love a fun event, even if we’re out of shape? Walking or running for a good cause makes us feel good.
Nearly 40 years ago, in the chill of winter, the United States Supreme Court decided that abortion was legal in America for any reason at any point in pregnancy because women, in consultation with their doctors, should have the right to abort their own children.
We are now 30 days away from the October 18 Al Smith Dinner. The opportunity for Cardinal Dolan to disinvite president Obama is fading quickly, and many are left wondering why it has not come to pass that the invitation has been withdrawn.
We live in a time of great confusion, and the only remedies for such a calamitous condition are great clarity, great courage, and great faith.
A recent National Review report quoted Cardinal Timothy Dolan, in which he made a statement regarding vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan and U.S. vice president Joe Biden.
Something rather odd is playing out on the political stage, and recent events lead me to believe that the nation is in colossal trouble.
In an August 20 press release entitled “Inviting Scandal to Dinner,” American Life League pointed out that the Catechism of the Catholic Church defines scandal as “an attitude or behavior which leads another to do evil.
The confluence of events surrounding the Obama administration’s arrogant political use of Catholics is dreadful! The most recent announcement from the Obama campaign about a new 2012 division—known oxymoronically as Catholics for Obama—is one example of what I mean.
Shortly after American Life League’s “Open Letter to Cardinal Dolan” began reaching grassroots Americans.
The Al Smith Dinner invitee, President Barack Obama, continues to spit in the face of the Church. Yet his invitation stands.
Dan Cathy, CEO of Chick-fil-A, made a simple statement that wound up creating an uproar among those who detest people of faith.
As hard as it is to believe, the Catholic Church willingly funded at least some of Barack Obama’s community organizing training in his early days.