Montana lawmakers consider abortion, death penalty, assisted suicide bills
The Montana Senate gave initial approval Feb. 25 to four bills restricting access to abortions in the state.
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Posted by bcadmin | Mar 2, 2021 | Montana, Montana Senate, News, pro-life, Restricting access to abortion, U.S. & World News |
The Montana Senate gave initial approval Feb. 25 to four bills restricting access to abortions in the state.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Mar 2, 2021 | Fast from gossip, From the Pope, Lenten journey, News, Spreading hearsay |
People should fast from gossiping and spreading hearsay as part of their Lenten journey, Pope Francis said.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Mar 2, 2021 | Cat and mouse, Featured, Hanna-Barbera, Movie Reviews, News, Tom & Jerry |
Cat and mouse remain natural-born enemies in “Tom & Jerry” (Warner Bros), starring the eponymous animated characters created by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Mar 2, 2021 | Bishop Oscar Cantú, Diocese of San Jose, News, Santa Clara county, Supreme Court, U.S. & World News |
A Supreme Court decision allowing indoor worship services in Santa Clara county, California, was praised by Bishop Oscar Cantú of the Diocese of San Jose, located in the county where the ban had been in effect.
Read MoreKarlo Broussard shares the bible blueprint for the Catholic Church.
Questions Covered:
14:16 – I am an Anglican. What is the Catholic perspective on the Anglican claim to apostolic succession?
21:19 – What part of the old covenant is brou…
Washington D.C., Mar 1, 2021 / 05:00 pm (CNA).- The Archdiocese of New Orleans says that the recently-approved Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine is “morally compromised,” and advises Catholics to use ethical alternatives if available.
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Washington D.C., Mar 1, 2021 / 04:20 pm (CNA).- The Senate on Monday voted to confirm President Biden’s nominee for education secretary, who had supported males identifying as transgender females to participate in girls’ athletics.
Miguel Cardona, Connecticut’s education commissioner, was confirmed on Monday by a vote of 64 to 33. At his Feb. 4 confirmation hearing, he said that male athletes identifying as transgender females should be allowed to play girls’ sports.
Questioned by Sen. Rand Paul (R-Kent.) about the matter at his confirmation hearing, Cardona repeatedly stated that it “is the legal responsibility of schools to provide opportunities for students to participate in activities, and this includes students who are transgender.”
Several female athletes had sued the state of Connecticut in 2019, over the state’s policy of allowing student-athletes to compete in sports based on their “preferred gender identity” and not their biological sex. The girls alleged that they were discriminated against by having to compete against biological males.
The Trump-era Education Department issued a letter in 2019 stating that “boys can’t compete with girls in sports.” The agency also sided with the girls in the Connecticut transgender athletics case, saying that the state had violated Title IX through its policy.
However, last week the agency reversed course and withdrew its findings in the case. President Biden has already issued an executive order on “Preventing and Combating Discrimination on the Basis of Gender Identity or Sexual Orientation.” The order stated that part of the policy of his administration would be to allow students to play sports based on their gender identity.
When asked about the Education Department’s 2019 letter, Cardona would not say if he would continue to enforce the policy. He answered that he would uphold “the civil rights of all students, and that includes activities they may engage in, in high school or in athletics.”
He later told Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisc.) that it was “non-negotiable to make sure that our learning environments are places that are free of discrimination and harassment for all learners, including our LGBTQ students.”
The White House has made a number of other appointments to the Education Department including Suzanne Goldberg, a former attorney with the pro-LGBT group Lambda Legal.
Goldberg, appointed to serve as assistant secretary in the Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights, was the founding director of the Columbia Law School’s Sexuality & Gender Law Clinic, and co-director of the Center for Gender & Sexuality Law. Her university bio lists her as “a leading advocate and attorney for the LGBTQ+ community.”
At Columbia, Goldberg “reaffirmed” policies for students identifying as transgender in 2018, clarifying that students could access bathrooms based on their gender identity and students
She told the New York Times in 2020 that the Supreme Court’s Bostock ruling—which extended employment discrimination protections to include discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity—was “a simple and profound victory for L.G.B.T. civil rights.”
Transgenderism is a growing concern for the Church as more and more parents and kids are convinced to take part in gender treatments from a young age. Mary Rice Hasson talks about the danger of accepting gender dysphoria as healthy and provides practic…
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Mar 1, 2021 | News, The Dispatch |
For a society aptly described by Pope St. John Paul II as the “Culture of Death”, most of us are not very comfortable facing mortality. However, as the old saying goes, death is one of […]
Read MoreCatholic Archbishop Paulos Faraj Rahho of Mosul was involved in many organizations of peace and dialogue between denominations and religions
Read MoreChetumal, Mexico, Mar 1, 2021 / 03:08 pm (CNA).- A pro-life leader in Mexico has called the occupation of the legislature in Quintana Roo state by pro-abortion feminists “green terrorism”, after the color adopted by pro-abortion activists i…
Read MoreCNA Staff, Mar 1, 2021 / 02:48 pm (CNA).- The Hasbro toy company is now marketing a gender-neutral Potato Head family set showing same-sex couples and a baby, alongside a traditional family portrayal.
While the company has rejected reports that …
Posted by bcadmin | Mar 1, 2021 | ABC-X, Great Depression, Lent, Living history, Making history, News, Rueben Hill, Simple Holiness, World War II |
It seems truly incredible that we are living history at this very moment. In fact, most people are not aware when they are making history, but there is no mistaking this reality for those of us living through this uncertain time.
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Mar 1, 2021 | News, The Dispatch |
The OSV Institute for Catholic Innovation is accepting application submissions for the 2021 OSV Challenge, an entrepreneurial competition designed to “incubate unique project ideas in any stage from Catholics whose faith has motivated them to […]
Read MoreCatholic and other civic groups join Sunday protests, insisting that Haiti’s outgoing president stop clinging to power
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Mar 1, 2021 | Abortion, Catholic Church, Catholic News Service, Church in the US, Congressman Chris Smith, Coronavirus, COVID-19, COVID-19 pandemic, News, US House of Representatives |
Over a dozen nonprofit organizations, including Catholic Charities USA, praised the American Rescue Plan passed by the U.S. House early Feb. 27 for including “several provisions of importance to the charitable nonprofit sector.”
Read MoreThe late Polish pope had hoped to walk “in the footsteps of Abraham” on the eve of the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000, but he never made it…
Read MorePosted by bcadmin | Mar 1, 2021 | Catholic Church, Catholic News Service, Church in the US, Deacons, Diocese of San Diego, News |
Deacon Albert Graff, who turned 102 Jan. 23, explains the secret to his longevity in two words: “Never retire.”
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