The Catholic Church has consistently taught that each human life, from the moment of conception until natural death, is sacred and deserves to be protected. Indeed, the right to life is the very foundation of every other human right. For this reason, only when a society safeguards the sanctity of human life will it flourish and prosper.
If legislators always vote with the President, we have a king.
If legislators always vote with the prevailing wind, we have mob rule.
If legislators always vote with the Constitution, we have a Republic.
As we wrestle in my home state of Minnesota with the fact of deep corruption in the political and economic orders, I want to draw attention to the “social justice” dimension of this problem. Catholic social teaching has a good deal to say about official corruption, insisting that it undermines confidence in our leaders, compromises the integrity of the institutions of government, and subverts the rule of law. But even more importantly, it deeply harms the poor, stealing resources from them, increasing inequality, and blocking essential services such as health and education. And if the widespread fraud in Minnesota is also present in a number of other states, we are dealing with a massive violation of human rights and a heinous attack upon the poor and needy. This should not be a matter of partisan politics. Rather, wherever this corruption exists, it should be fought and those responsible for it brought to justice.
There was a line from Zohran Mamdani’s inaugural address yesterday that took my breath away. He said he intended to replace “the frigidity of rugged individualism with the warmth of collectivism.” Collectivism in its various forms is responsible for the deaths of at least one hundred million people in the last century. Socialist and Communist forms of government around the world today—Venezuela, Cuba, North Korea, etc.—are disastrous. Catholic social teaching has consistently condemned socialism and has embraced the market economy, which people like Mayor Mamdani caricature as “rugged individualism.” In fact, it is the economic system that is based upon the rights, freedom, and dignity of the human person. For God’s sake, spare me the “warmth of collectivism.”
Proven conspiracy theories:
-MKUltra
-Tuskegee Syphilis Study
-Operation Northwoods
-Gulf of Tonkin Incident
-NSA Mass Surveillance
-COINTELPRO
-Project Sunshine
-Government Poisoning of Alcohol -During Prohibition
-The Business Plot
-CIA Support for Tibetan Resistance and Dalai Lama
-Tobacco Industry Conspiracy
-Operation Mockingbird
-Iran-Contra Affair
-Nayirah Testimony
This is what the morans [sic] are typing furiously about acetaminophen right now.
But this is a truly ignorant statement. The proper one is:
Correlation is not *always* causation.
Because quite often correlation is your first signal that causation lies beneath.
It is absolutely bonkers to think this is blaming mothers. There are multiple studies pointing to possible risk. That potential risk should be disclosed. This article reeks of reporters defending thalidomide. I know of many adults that pop Tylenol at the slightest hint of pain, thinking there is zero risk or harm in doing so. If they knew of potential side effects, they would be much more judicious in use, and limit potential side effects. They stated it is a potential link, and that causes of autism are multifactorial and they will be looking at all potential causes (did you miss that part??). This isn't a scapegoat as you implied in your article. Really disappointed in this reporting... More studies covered here: https://t.co/o4LuzxEsfK
Chris Cuomo gets crushed by the facts on air after claiming the Harvard Tylenol study came to a “split decision” on whether there’s a link to autism.
@MartyMakary wasn’t about to let that claim slide.
CUOMO: “So Harvard does a review of previous studies... and they came up with what I would term as a split decision in favor of studies that found that Tylenol may have an association with negative effects, including potential forms of autism.”
MAKARY: “This research is NOT a split decision as you described. TWENTY-SEVEN studies found an association between prenatal use of acetaminophen and autism. There were thirteen studies that went the other way, but the authors concluded that higher quality studies FAVORED an association.
“And if I can just quote the dean of the Harvard School of Public Health, my former institution: ‘There is a CAUSAL relationship between prenatal acetaminophen and the neurodegenerative disorders of ADHD and autism spectrum disorder.’”
In no context ever is 27 studies vs. 13 a “split decision.” If this were a boxing match, it would be a unanimous decision in favor of the autism link. Makary wasted no time correcting Cuomo and made him eat those words on air.
It's been 5 years and the world is still divided by those that believe cloth masks were effective against a virus and those of us that realized most people were dumber than we ever imagined.
Florida Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo exposes the CDC:
A cult-like obsession with vaccines has replaced science.
If data doesn’t fit the narrative, they bend the “science” to match.
The leader of the CDC who is being held up as the face of science:
✅Covered up and falsified data on myocarditis risk.
✅Encourages to this day COVID shots for every 6 month old.
✅Encouraged orgies as a normal “Friday night” activity.
✅Openly encourages bondage and devil worship.
✅Implied it’s bigoted to use the word “mother” instead of “birthing person.”
This man is the leader of the “experts” we are told to trust.
Americans have a very clear choice:
More of the status quo, or reform.
There have been 25 Secretaries of HHS. Of these, three have been physicians. 12%. Those complaining that RFKjr is not medically trained are just trying to score political points with an irrelevant argument.