• Home
  • About Us
  • Support
  • Concerts & Events
  • Music & Media
  • Faith
  • Listen Live
  • Give Now

Catholic News 2

Washington D.C., May 18, 2016 / 05:11 pm (CNA).- While both sides say they are happy with the Supreme Court decision on the Little Sisters’ case, the long-term outcome remains to be seen, legal experts said.Dr. Marc DeGirolami of St. John’s University School of Law said that “there will very likely be another round of litigation” in Zubik v. Burwell, “unless the parties can come to an agreement.”And an agreement might not happen, Dr. Helen Alvare of George Mason University Law School said, because the government’s lawyers “were not at all cooperative” when asked to propose such a solution.On Monday, the Supreme Court sent the current HHS mandate cases of religious non-profits – bundled under the title Zubik v. Burwell – back to the lower courts where they had originated and vacated the previous circuit court rulings in those cases. The Supreme Court emphasized in its decision that it was not issuing a ruling on the me...

Washington D.C., May 18, 2016 / 05:11 pm (CNA).- While both sides say they are happy with the Supreme Court decision on the Little Sisters’ case, the long-term outcome remains to be seen, legal experts said.

Dr. Marc DeGirolami of St. John’s University School of Law said that “there will very likely be another round of litigation” in Zubik v. Burwell, “unless the parties can come to an agreement.”

And an agreement might not happen, Dr. Helen Alvare of George Mason University Law School said, because the government’s lawyers “were not at all cooperative” when asked to propose such a solution.

On Monday, the Supreme Court sent the current HHS mandate cases of religious non-profits – bundled under the title Zubik v. Burwell – back to the lower courts where they had originated and vacated the previous circuit court rulings in those cases. The Supreme Court emphasized in its decision that it was not issuing a ruling on the merits of the cases.

The lawsuits involve a government mandate requiring employers to provide cost-free coverage for contraceptives, sterilizations, and abortion-inducing drugs to employees. Religiously objecting non-profits had been offered an “accommodation” under which they could notify the government of their objection. The government would then direct their insurer or third party insurance administrator to provide the coverage.

The Little Sisters of the Poor, as well as the Archdiocese of Washington and a number of other religious non-profits, sued the government, saying this arrangement still forced them to cooperate with morally-objectionable practices because their notification would facilitate the problematic coverage.

Eventually, the cases made their way to the Supreme Court, after all of the plaintiffs had lost their cases at the federal circuit court level.

Then the Supreme Court, in a surprise move in the middle of the case, asked both the plaintiffs and the government to come up with an alternative solution to both provide cost-free contraceptive coverage and assure that the objecting non-profits are not complicit in this provision.

An acceptable alternative, the nuns and other plaintiffs proposed, would be if they set up their health plan at the beginning so as to not include the objectionable coverage; their commercial insurer would take note and notify the government of their religious objection. Coverage would be provided apart from the health plan and at a separate cost.  

The Supreme Court treated these proposals as a new development in the case and remanded it back to the federal courts, voiding all the prior circuit court decisions. The parties now need time to craft a solution to please both sides, the court said.

Meanwhile, the court said “nothing” was to stop women from getting their contraceptive coverage as required by law, but added that “the Government may not impose taxes or penalties on petitioners for failure to provide the relevant notice.”

This means that the Supreme Court “thought more likely than not, the government was going to be able eventually to carry the day,” Dr. Helen Alvare told CNA. Thus, she said, the Court established that “the goal is to get the contraception there to these employees and their daughters, but to do it by means less restrictive of religious freedom.”

Lawyers for the Little Sisters said this was a victory for them, while the White House said it was very pleased with the decision.

But ultimately, it still uncertain what will happen with the Little Sisters’ health plans, said DeGirolami, because the sisters are self-insured. Self-insured plans are not covered in the court’s opinion, he said, “so it’s extremely unclear what will happen to them.”

However, the court did suggest something significant in the nuns’ favor – that their free exercise of religion may have been substantially burdened, Alvare said.

Under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, the 1993 federal law at the heart of the case, “Government shall not substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion” unless the government proves both that it has a “compelling interest” for acting and that it is using the “least restricting means” of furthering that interest.   

The court’s decision may have confirmed the first part of the law, that the mandate is a “substantial burden,” Alvare said. “I’m hard-pressed to think that they [the court] would have allowed this case to go back, unless there were at least strong disagreement there between the justices, or even maybe a majority in favor of the idea that the Little Sisters get to decide if they’re burdened,” she added.

However, a key concern in the court’s decision was that it gave the government a “pass” in having to prove its contraception mandate was in the “compelling government interest,” part of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, she said.

By pushing for a solution where women employees were still guaranteed their contraception coverage, it seems the court “swallowed the [government’s] argument that contraception is preventive health care,” she explained.  

This would be bad reasoning because cost-free contraception for everyone is not a public health necessity, she argued, in part because unintended pregnancy rates have risen despite the government claiming that contraception will solve that problem.

“The very groups that the government has targeted for free or low-cost contraception since the ‘70s, their rates of abortion and unintended pregnancy have soared,” she noted. “People do more risky behavior when they think it’s insured against.”

Also, in its arguments the government “didn’t ever even mention the annual billions of dollars of settlements from contraceptive manufacturers to women who have been injured or have died,” she said, a huge liability to their defense of birth control as public health.

For instance, by July of 2013, Bayer Pharmaceuticals had settled claims related to its birth control drugs from over 6,700 plaintiffs totaling $1.4 billion, according to the Chicago Tribune.

“And the idea that this could be a compelling health interest alongside these billion dollar settlements is ridiculous,” Alvare said.

The vast majority – “89 percent of sexually-active women” – are “using contraception” already, she argued, and the other women not using it have good reasons which do not involve cost.

“You can make it free, you can hand it out on the street corners. You’re probably not going to get more women using it than use it now.”

Photo credit: www.shutterstock.com.

Full Article

IMAGE: CNS/Paul HaringBy Cindy WoodenVATICAN CITY (CNS) -- In recognizing civil unions ofheterosexual and homosexual couples, the Italian government has equated thoseunions to marriage, said the head of the Italian bishops' conference.While some supporters of the new law, which passed thelegislature May 11, insisted the law did not recognize gay marriage, CardinalAngelo Bagnasco of Genoa, president of the bishops' conference, said thedifferences are only in the vocabulary used and in "easily circumventedlegal devices."The bill passed after its sponsors removed languageexplicitly allowing one partner in a gay union to adopt the biological child ofthe other partner. Supporters of the bill said it now would be up to individualjudges in adoption cases to decide."The final blow -- which is already being spoken ofpublicly" -- Cardinal Bagnasco said, would be the legalization ofsurrogate motherhood. Surrogacy, he said, "exploits the female body"and profits from the poverty of women willin...

IMAGE: CNS/Paul Haring

By Cindy Wooden

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- In recognizing civil unions of heterosexual and homosexual couples, the Italian government has equated those unions to marriage, said the head of the Italian bishops' conference.

While some supporters of the new law, which passed the legislature May 11, insisted the law did not recognize gay marriage, Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco of Genoa, president of the bishops' conference, said the differences are only in the vocabulary used and in "easily circumvented legal devices."

The bill passed after its sponsors removed language explicitly allowing one partner in a gay union to adopt the biological child of the other partner. Supporters of the bill said it now would be up to individual judges in adoption cases to decide.

"The final blow -- which is already being spoken of publicly" -- Cardinal Bagnasco said, would be the legalization of surrogate motherhood. Surrogacy, he said, "exploits the female body" and profits from the poverty of women willing to carry a child for others.

Cardinal Bagnasco made his remarks May 17 to members of the bishops' conference. Pope Francis had opened the bishops' general meeting the evening before with a speech about the lives and witness of priests, which is a topic on the bishops' agenda.

Unlike the pope, the cardinal spoke about a wide range of social and political issues facing Italy and the rest of Europe. In addition to the civil-unions law, the cardinal decried the apparent inability of Europe's governments to find a fair and coordinated response to the refugee crisis.

"May Europe find its soul again and, therefore, its love for peoples and nations," the cardinal said. He echoed Pope Francis' words to European leaders earlier in May, "I dream of a Europe that cares for children, that offers fraternal help to the poor and those newcomers seeking acceptance because they have lost everything and need shelter. ... I dream of a Europe where being a migrant is not a crime but a summons to greater commitment on behalf of the dignity of every human being."

Currently, the cardinal said, Italian parishes, religious communities and other church institutions are providing a home and assistance to about 23,000 migrants and refugees; the number, he said, has increased by 4,500 since the beginning of the year.

Anti-Christian violence is another serious problem, which Cardinal Bagnasco said the international community is not doing enough to resolve. "In the world there seems to be a growing indifference to such violence as if the real problem was something other than the right to profess one's faith without undergoing persecution and death."

And, he said, while the Italian government and politicians spent months working on and debating the law on civil unions -- an issue he said impacts only a tiny percentage of the population -- unemployment is growing and so is poverty.

The percentage of Italians working has fallen 4.8 percent, he said. "And current data tells us that close to 40 percent of people between 15 and 24 are looking for work, compared to the European average of 22 percent" youth unemployment.

The country's continually falling birthrate is another indication of how bad things are, he said. "The data of 2015 are the worst since the unity of Italy" in 1871.

"Last year, against 653,000 deaths, there were 488,000 births while 100,000 Italians left the country. Demographics are a crucial indicator of a country's state of health," he said. Falling birthrates show a lack of "hope in tomorrow and courage in generating new life."

- - -

Copyright © 2016 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. www.catholicnews.com. All rights reserved. Republishing or redistributing of CNS content, including by framing or similar means without prior permission, is prohibited. You may link to stories on our public site. This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To request permission for republishing or redistributing of CNS content, please contact permissions at cns@catholicnews.com.

Full Article

GENEVA (AP) -- The "Oppenheimer Blue" diamond sold Wednesday for more than 56.8 million Swiss francs ($57.6 million) including fees, crushing the previous record for the most expensive diamond ever sold at auction....

GENEVA (AP) -- The "Oppenheimer Blue" diamond sold Wednesday for more than 56.8 million Swiss francs ($57.6 million) including fees, crushing the previous record for the most expensive diamond ever sold at auction....

Full Article

MIAMI (AP) -- George Zimmerman says he's vetting bids after closing an auction for the pistol he used to kill unarmed black teenager Trayvon Martin during an altercation....

MIAMI (AP) -- George Zimmerman says he's vetting bids after closing an auction for the pistol he used to kill unarmed black teenager Trayvon Martin during an altercation....

Full Article

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- A nonprofit organization headed by a Lebanese citizen held prisoner in Iran received grants totaling $730,000 from the U.S. government for projects in the Middle East, The Associated Press has learned....

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- A nonprofit organization headed by a Lebanese citizen held prisoner in Iran received grants totaling $730,000 from the U.S. government for projects in the Middle East, The Associated Press has learned....

Full Article

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump on Wednesday released a list of 11 potential picks to replace Antonin Scalia on the U.S. Supreme Court, a mix of federal and state judges that appeared tailored to win over conservatives still skeptical of his candidacy....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump on Wednesday released a list of 11 potential picks to replace Antonin Scalia on the U.S. Supreme Court, a mix of federal and state judges that appeared tailored to win over conservatives still skeptical of his candidacy....

Full Article

Vatican City, May 18, 2016 / 12:16 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- While Pope Francis might have chastised animal-lovers who treat their pets better than people in last week’s general audience, that didn’t stop him from giving a good pat on the head to Magnum – the Saint Bernard with VIP access to today’s audience.Magnum is quite literally a “Great Saint Bernard.” Bred by an order of priests known as Augustinian Canons, he was born on the Great Saint Bernard Pass, one of the highest passes in the Alps connecting Switzerland and Italy.  He is also a descendant of Barry, one of the most famous St. Bernard rescue dogs known to history.Long before Beethoven drooled his way onto the big screen, Saint Bernard dogs had been made famous by the Augustinians for a more noble cause: saving lives.Since the early 18th century, the Augustinian monks who lived in the treacherous Great Saint Bernard Pass kept the dogs in order to help them on their rescue missions to s...

Vatican City, May 18, 2016 / 12:16 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- While Pope Francis might have chastised animal-lovers who treat their pets better than people in last week’s general audience, that didn’t stop him from giving a good pat on the head to Magnum – the Saint Bernard with VIP access to today’s audience.

Magnum is quite literally a “Great Saint Bernard.” Bred by an order of priests known as Augustinian Canons, he was born on the Great Saint Bernard Pass, one of the highest passes in the Alps connecting Switzerland and Italy.  

He is also a descendant of Barry, one of the most famous St. Bernard rescue dogs known to history.

Long before Beethoven drooled his way onto the big screen, Saint Bernard dogs had been made famous by the Augustinians for a more noble cause: saving lives.

Since the early 18th century, the Augustinian monks who lived in the treacherous Great Saint Bernard Pass kept the dogs in order to help them on their rescue missions to save stranded travelers after bad snowstorms.

Sitting just over 8,000 feet above sea level, the pass stretches 49 miles and in previous centuries was an extremely dangerous route to take. So in order to help travelers who met trouble along the way, Augustine monk St. Bernard de Menthon founded a refuge and monastery around the year 1050.

It wasn’t until sometime between the years 1660-1670 that the monks at what become known as the “Great St. Bernard Hospice” acquired their first dogs, who for the next 150 years served as both companions, scouts and rescuers for travelers in trouble.

A “hospice” at that time was a lodging for travelers. If the dogs found an injured traveler stuck in the snow, one would typically lay on top of the person to keep them warm, while another would return to the hospice to alert the monks that someone was stranded.

Perhaps the most famous of the St. Bernard rescue dogs was Barry, who lived in the monastery from around 1800-1812, and saved the lives of more than 40 people. In total, the St. Bernard rescue dogs are credited with saving roughly 2,000 lives.

Magnum was present at the Pope’s general audience through the help of UNESCO, who not only wanted to honor the memory of his the dog’s famous ancestor, but also garner support for their effort to declare the Great Saint Bernard Pass a World Heritage Site.

Pioneering the effort is the “Barry Foundation,” which was established in 2005 to take over the breeding of the dogs and to ensure they have some social occupation.

With the support of Pierre-Yves Fux, Switzerland’s Ambassador to the Holy See, the foundation was able to organize the visit to Rome.

In addition to Magnum, others accompanying him to meet the Pope included a Swiss-Italian delegation composed of politicians and representatives of various organizations linked to the dogs and the Saint Bernard Pass.
 

Pope Francis met this St. Bernard today at the general audience. Read the story at CNA: https://t.co/nbMfHb2mDh pic.twitter.com/gxs7AsXRSp

— Catholic News Agency (@cnalive) May 18, 2016


 

 

Full Article

JERUSALEM (AP) -- A 19-year-old Israeli woman has spent more than three months in military prison in what supporters say is the longest sentence ever handed down to a female conscientious objector....

JERUSALEM (AP) -- A 19-year-old Israeli woman has spent more than three months in military prison in what supporters say is the longest sentence ever handed down to a female conscientious objector....

Full Article

BAGHDAD (AP) -- Among the dozens killed when a truck bomb struck a crowded market last week in Baghdad's Sadr City were two brothers, the only sons of Talib Jassum Issa, who got the news in a phone call just minutes after the attack....

BAGHDAD (AP) -- Among the dozens killed when a truck bomb struck a crowded market last week in Baghdad's Sadr City were two brothers, the only sons of Talib Jassum Issa, who got the news in a phone call just minutes after the attack....

Full Article

BOSTON (AP) -- The recipient of the first U.S. penis transplant says he is looking forward to walking out of the hospital a "complete" man....

BOSTON (AP) -- The recipient of the first U.S. penis transplant says he is looking forward to walking out of the hospital a "complete" man....

Full Article

Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube Soundcloud

Public Inspection File | EEO

© 2015 - 2021 Spirit FM 90.5 - All Rights Reserved.