Stephan: Roman clergy sex abuse has passed from the media's center stage, but that does not mean it is resolved, or has stopped. This is the other dynamic that will be involved in the confrontation of the bishops and the Bidens.
After reports of children being sexually harassed in Catholic institutions, senior UN rights experts have urged the Vatican to end child sex abuse in these institutes and punish the victims.
Four special rapporteurs have revealed that they had written to the Vatican in April, voicing their “utmost concern about the numerous allegations around the world of sexual abuse and violence committed by members of the Catholic Church against children”.
These rapporteurs do not represent the United Nations (UN) but submit their findings to the UN, and have now released their letters that they sent to the UN.
The experts called for “all necessary measures” to stop any kind of future sexual abuse to children and accused that the Catholic institutes “protect alleged abusers, cover up crimes, obstruct accountability of alleged abusers, and evade reparations due to victims”.
In addition to this, the experts have also urged authorities to punish those who are behind these crimes and added that it should be made sure that “reparations are paid […]
Lt. Colonel William Astore, USA (Ret.), - Common Dreams
Stephan: We have spent hundreds of billions of dollars of your money and mine fighting wars, that have cost tens of thousands of lives, and untold misery and social violence. For what? This article raises some of what I think are the relevant questions and suggests some answers. I will suggest one more answer that is not mentioned. When we made the military an all-volunteer institution, I can tell you from personal experience, we never for a moment considered that the military would go from an experience most American families would have one way or another, into something that only involves about 1% of Americans, even as it has become unspeakably profitable for the military-industrial complex about which Dwight Eisenhower warned us. So few Americans are involved with the military today that these failed wars are hardly a factor in anyone's lives. That is how politicians are able to get away with them.
Americans may already be lying themselves out of what little remains of their democracy.
The big lie uniting and motivating today’s Republicans is, of course, that Donald Trump, not Joe Biden, won the 2020 presidential election. Other big lies in our recent past include the notion that climate change is nothing but a Chinese hoax, that Russia was responsible for Hillary Clinton’s electoral defeat in 2016, and that the invasion of Iraq in 2003 was necessary because that country’s leader, Saddam Hussein, had something to do with the 9/11 attacks (he didn’t!) and possessed weapons of mass destruction that could be used against the United States, a “slam dunk” truth, according to then-CIA Director George Tenet (it wasn’t!).
Americans have become remarkably tolerant of comfortable lies, generally preferring them to uncomfortable truths.
Those and other lies, large and small, along with systemic corruption in Washington are precisely why so many Americans have been driven to despair. Small […]
Stephan: Unnoticed by many, perhaps most Americans, a woman's right to control her own body once again hangs by a thread. Republican-controlled state legislators are doing everything in their power to overturn Roe v Wade or pinch off access to the functional point of stopping it. So I wondered where do Americans stand on this issue, as objectively verified by research, not politics. Here is the latest and best poll I could locate.
And please be clear about one thing. The abortion argument is not about "killing babies". If that were true then the same people who are anti-choice should be leaders in maternal care, pre-delivery social services, and post-delivery childcare. But, of course, they are not. The abortion argument is about whether a woman or the state controls her body and the maintenance of the subordinate status of females.
In turns out the majority of Americans oppose overturning Roe v. Wade. Here is Gallup's sophisticated assessment.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Nearly six in 10 Americans do not want Roe v. Wade overturned
Republicans are closely split on reversing the landmark decision
Bans on early-term abortions fall short of U.S. public support
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Gallup’s latest update on U.S. abortion attitudes finds 58% of Americans opposed to overturning the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, while 32% are in favor. Since 1989, between 52% and 66% of U.S. adults have wanted to maintain the landmark abortion decision. Today’s support roughly matches the average over that three-decade period.
Line graph. Trend from 1989 to 2021 in the percentage of Americans who would like to see the U.S. Supreme Court overturn its Roe v. Wade abortion decision and the percentage who would oppose such an action. Opposition to overturning the decision has ranged from a low of 52% (in 2008) to a high of 66% (in 2006). It has been at or near 60% since 2018, including 58% in the latest reading.
The high court recently announced it will take up a Mississippi law prohibiting abortion after 15 weeks […]
Stephan: The other end of the abortion argument is the legitimacy of the death penalty for murder. How Americans think about this may surprise you. Here is some solid data.
A majority of adults in the United States favor the death penalty for people convicted of murder, according to a recent Pew Research Center survey. However, views about the death penalty vary by religion – with atheists and agnostics opposing this form of punishment at about the same rate as Americans overall support it.
Roughly two-thirds of atheists (65%) and six-in-ten agnostics (57%) either “strongly” or “somewhat” oppose the death penalty for people convicted of murder. Atheists and agnostics are small religious groups, representing less than 10% of the adult population, but their share has grown in recent years.
Meanwhile, 60% of U.S. adults overall favor the death penalty, including 75% of White evangelical Protestants and 73% of White non-evangelical Protestants, according to the survey, which was conducted in early April. White Protestants account for […]
Thom Hartmann, Talk Show Host & Author - Salon/Indendent Media Institute
Stephan: Thom Hartmann, in my opinion, is correct in what he says. Democracy is not possible in a two-party system when one party, on the basis of objectively verifiable data, not partisanship, has become an anti-democratic criminal syndicate. The United States is in a cold civil war, one that is not yet fully recognized.
Texas is showing us all how the corruption that has overwhelmed the GOP has reached a crisis point, and it’s killing people.
President Dwight Eisenhower said, “If a political party does not have its foundation in the determination to advance a cause that is right and that is moral, then it is not a political party; it is merely a conspiracy to seize power.”
Sadly, Eisenhower’s Republican Party is now there: they haven’t governed to protect or help the people at the federal or state level since the Reagan Revolution. Today, instead, they simply engage in a corrupt form of political performance art while stuffing their pockets with corporate money.
Today’s example: Greg Abbott.
Corrupt Texas Governor Greg Abbott is the poster child for corrupt Republicans’ sellout to the fossil fuel industry. And the consequence of that will almost certainly kill hundreds of Texans this summer. But Abbott really, really doesn’t want you to be thinking about that.
His latest scam to divert Texans’ attention away from this malfeasance is to proudly declare that Read the Full Article