Of Fraud & Foreclosures
Economists and others have consistently been warning that the housing crisis (and cascading effects on the rest of the “economic recovery”) is far from over. In particular, L. Randall Wray at Huffington Post has...
Read MorePosted by Meghan Clark | Apr 4, 2011 | Current Events |
Economists and others have consistently been warning that the housing crisis (and cascading effects on the rest of the “economic recovery”) is far from over. In particular, L. Randall Wray at Huffington Post has...
Read MorePosted by Meghan Clark | Apr 4, 2011 | From the Field |
The goal of Catholic social teaching on the economy is to provide us with a set of principles, a set of tools that each individual and family can use to make concrete, practical decisions. How do we live as fully human persons,...
Read MorePosted by Thomas Bushlack | Apr 4, 2011 | Classic Posts, Current Events, Ecclesial Politics, From the Field |
Strictly speaking, the U.S. Catholic Bishops’ Committee on Doctrine statement critiquing professor Elizabeth Johnson, CSJ’s, 2007 book, Quest for the Living God, has nothing to do with moral theology. The seven main...
Read MorePosted by Beth Haile | Apr 3, 2011 | Current Events |
Unless you are one of the nation’s 400,000 dialysis patients, you may not know that a law passed by Congress 39 years ago provides almost entirely free dialysis to patients whose kidneys have failed, regardless of age or...
Read MorePosted by Charles Camosy | Apr 3, 2011 | From the Field |
Over at the Public Discourse, the very good Loyola Marymount philosopher Chris Kaczor has responded to a review of his recent book on abortion by another well-known philosopher, Don Marquis. While calling it “the...
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