Monthly Archives: February 2022

Pro-abortion justice retires

Oswald Clark: In January, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, 84, announced that he would retire following the current session that is expected to end in June; the Court will be giving its decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, a challenge to the state of Mississippi’s ban on abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy. The retirement will therefore not affect [...]

2022-02-28T10:12:00-05:00February 28, 2022|Politics|

Prayer crusade to end COVID restrictions

Interim Staff: Catholic Canadians have joined a global movement of praying the rosary in public to ask Mother Mary to intercede to end COVID restrictions such lockdowns, forced masking, and coercive vaccine mandates. Canada Prays is a weekly recitation of the Rosary in a public place in 50 communities across the country. The first one took place on Jan. 26 at 6 [...]

2022-02-28T09:48:48-05:00February 28, 2022|Abortion|

The joy of Lenten Cooking

Emma Castellino Review: The Lenten Cookbook by David Geisser with essays by Scott Hahn (Sophia Institute Press, $29.95, 224 pages) In the Kristin Lavransdatter trilogy, set in medieval Norway, we are told about one nursing mother who was exempted from her Lenten obligations. She took her accommodations just as seriously as she had previously observed the fast, and thrived. I was struck [...]

2022-03-02T16:41:52-05:00February 25, 2022|Reviews, Society & Culture|

Conservative MPs dump O’Toole triggering leadership race

Paul Tuns Analysis: Following the September 2021 federal election in which the Conservatives lost two seats and nearly a half million votes compared to their 2019 showing under Andrew Scheer, there were calls for Erin O’Toole to resign as leader of the party. Campaign Life Coalition called for O’Toole to resign immediately and, failing that, for the caucus to vote him out [...]

2022-02-25T12:46:18-05:00February 25, 2022|Politics|

ATTWT February 2022

Abortion leading global cause of death WASHINGTON -- Worldometer is a database that keeps track of statistics on health, the global population, and other metrics in real time based on data obtained from the World Health Organization. It has released its 2021 causes of death for a number of health categories globally. If you watch the news, you would be forgiven for [...]

2022-02-14T11:16:04-05:00February 14, 2022|Abortion, Society & Culture|

Guatemala pro-life declaration

Interim Staff: Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei said that on March 9 his country will declare itself the pro-life capital of Latin America with a solemn act pronouncement.  Giamattei has already instituted pro-life laws including the Public Policy for the Protection of Life and the Institutionalization of the Family for 2021-2032, which guarantees the right to life. Guatemala also bans any organization “that [...]

2022-02-14T11:11:53-05:00February 14, 2022|Abortion|

Trans v. women

Paul Tuns, From the editor's desk: Christine Rosen, senior writer for Commentary, wrote the magazine’s January cover story, “The New Misogyny,” on how women are denigrated by the transgender ideology. Under the guise of a “liberationist philosophy,” she writes, this “progressive” spirit is actually “an audacious form of woman-hatred” that “comes in the guise of opening up womanhood.” This new misogyny “insists [...]

2022-02-11T14:34:01-05:00February 11, 2022|Paul Tuns|

Domestic tranquility

Commentary By Donald DeMarco: An important factor that has been ignored in the ongoing discussion concerning the constitutionality of abortion is the U.S. Constitution’s Preamble. While this important statement is part of the Constitution, it does not specify on how the government should operate, but it does allude to its goals thereby providing a context for what the Founding Fathers were aiming [...]

2022-02-10T09:39:23-05:00February 10, 2022|Abortion, Marriage and Family|

‘No place like home:’ Sci-fi gets scared

Rick McGinnis: Interim writer, Rick McGinnis, Amusements If you want to feel bad about the future, the best place to start is modern science fiction. This probably isn’t where it was supposed to be going, but it’s where we are now, based on the most popular and acclaimed sci fi literature being published. A previous column discussed recent sci fi [...]

2022-02-10T09:49:31-05:00February 10, 2022|Reviews, Rick McGinnis|

Lockdowns, vaccine passports and the Catholic Catechism

John Carpay: Have Canada’s Catholic bishops seriously evaluated lockdowns and vaccine passports through the lens of the Catechism of the Catholic Church? The Catechism teaches that a law is just only to the extent that it accords with right reason, and otherwise it “has not so much the nature of law as of a kind of violence” (1902). Are lockdowns and vaccine [...]

2022-02-09T10:16:47-05:00February 9, 2022|Society & Culture|

Covid and compassion

Andrew Lawton: Two years into the Covid era it may seem fruitless to call for nuance, let alone compassion. I hope you’ll permit me the opportunity to nevertheless try. In law, there’s a nifty tactic known as arguing in the alternative, in which counsel can advance one (or several) backup arguments with which a judge might agree, on the off chance his [...]

2022-02-09T10:09:25-05:00February 9, 2022|Society & Culture|

Freedom of religion

Rory Leishman: Jesus admonished: “Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s.” What, though, should a faithful Christian do if Caesar decrees a law that conflicts with the natural and divine law of God? Sir William Blackstone addressed this issue in his magisterial Commentaries on the Laws of England. The natural and divine law, [...]

2022-02-08T11:51:44-05:00February 8, 2022|Politics, Society & Culture|

Dr Ehrlich should stop worrying about the population bomb and love humanity

Special to The Interim: By Pierre Desrochers and Joanna Szurmak: In a short piece published recently in Nature, Stanford University professor emeritus and “Population Bomber” extraordinaire Paul R. Ehrlich worries that overpopulation, “one of the most important factors in the hunger nexus,” is not discussed by the Scientific Group for the UN Food Systems Summit 2021. This is a mistake, he writes, [...]

2022-02-08T11:50:52-05:00February 8, 2022|Population|

Pride in prudishness

Josie Luetke: Interim writer, Josie Luetke, Talk Turkey One of my many pet peeves is critics showing what they’re lambasting others for showing. (Don’t show it!) The CitizenGO petition to “STOP the blasphemous film Benedetta” very helpfully displays the offending lesbian kiss that petition signers apparently don’t want viewers to see. I can’t tell you how many screengrabs I saw [...]

2022-02-07T11:47:02-05:00February 7, 2022|Society & Culture|

Ted Byfield, Canada’s Bill Buckley, RIP

Paul Tuns: I began my review of Ted Byfield’s 1999 collection of columns, The Book of Ted: Epistles from an Unrepentant Redneck: “The American columnist George Will once said that before there was Ronald Reagan there was Barry Goldwater, before there was Goldwater there was National Review, and before there was National Review there was William F. Buckley … The Canadian equivalent [...]

2022-02-07T15:16:04-05:00February 7, 2022|Marriage and Family, Society & Culture|
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