The abortion issue we're ignoring
Abortion on demand: empowerment -- or bamboozlement -- of women?
Abortion on demand: empowerment -- or bamboozlement -- of women?
One does not treat an interlocutor with respect if one refuses to speak plainly. Candor, far from being the enemy of civility, is one of its preconditions.
As a Catholic Christian and pastor of the Archdiocese of Vancouver, I believe the pro-life movement can be increasingly effective in the years to come; here are a few reflections on how.
Whenever longstanding laws are reversed, and practices come to be sanctioned that were formerly forbidden, it behooves us to examine whether such momentous legal shifts are morally coherent or not.
At the start of the homily, I asked for a volunteer from among the youngest, smallest members of the congregation.
Why, even though abortion has been virtually unrestricted for years, do so few women who have undergone abortion ever talk about it?
Fifteen years ago, philosopher James Q. Wilson proposed a provocative new take on abortion.
The Spanish daily La Razon has published an article on the pro-life conversion of a former "champion of abortion."
This could be a free speech story, or a pro-life story, or just a story about plain old perseverance. You decide.