Human Rights or Human Wrongs?
This past year has witnessed an escalation in the redefining of human rights.
This past year has witnessed an escalation in the redefining of human rights.
As a new year approaches, we naturally reflect on the one past. While it’s easy to get caught up in the negatives of the past year, we must identify and focus on the positive things that have happened as well.
By Louie Verrecchio
In the days following [November’s] U.S. presidential election, a staggering amount of analysis has been focused on Republican messaging, demographics, and core constituencies, but it misses the most fundamental point entirely.
It is reported that Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal is a Catholic. Further, it has been said that he is a conservative Republican.
A running controversy centers on the question of whether or not it is a good idea to provide pre-prescriptions of morning after pills to young people who have not yet reached the age of 17.
Contraception has ensnared women in more ways than one.
Recent events have caused us to wonder whether or not our fellow citizens are capable of critical thinking at this juncture in America’s slow slide toward moral wreckage.
By Dr. Patrick Lee
In the last decade or so there has been a shift in the kind of argument usually advanced by abortion advocates.
A “Catholic” billionaire says she is doing what the nuns at Ursuline Academy taught her by questioning whether contraception is a sin.
‘Tis the season to be cunning, evasive, and ignorant. It’s election time, 2012.
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.
While it is certainly right to lament the fact the Obama administration is attempting to force Catholic institutions, through the Health and Human Services mandate, to provide insurance coverage for contraceptives, abortifacients, and sterilization, there is a bright side to all this.