Editor:
Jerry Novotny OMI
Updated Daily:
January 7, 2009

Breaking News

Youth In Nigeria At Increased Risk Of HIV Because Of Inadequate Information, Counseling
Sodeinde said HIV is increasing among young people because they have not received education on how to prevent transmission of the virus. Youth are hindered further because they often are not considered in decisions regarding HIV programs, she said, adding that they should be involved in policymaking to successfully curb the spread of the virus.

Debate Over Mandatory HIV Testing Increases In Malaysia, New Cases Up Among Married Women
A limited mandatory testing policy recently was extended by Muslim clerics to cover all Muslim couples seeking to get married, based on an argument made by non-Muslim organizations, individuals and religious groups that HIV transmission can be curbed only through mandatory testing of all couples.

Survey: Majority Favors Abortion Limits
The online poll of 2,341 adults, commissioned by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) and conducted Dec. 10-12 by Harris Interactive, also found strong majorities favor specific laws limiting abortion. The data was weighted to be representative of the U.S. population. Among the findings:

Strike At Gaza School 'kills 30'
At least 30 people were killed and 55 injured when Israeli artillery shells landed outside a United Nations-run school in Gaza, UN officials have said.

What Price Life?
Bruce Hardy probably doesn’t have long to live. But he could live longer, if it weren’t for the attitude and policies of the British government. As recounted in a New York Times article, Mr. Hardy has kidney cancer that has spread to his lung. His doctor wanted him to take an expensive but effective new drug that has been shown to delay cancer progression for six months.

Baby Girl Given Only 10 Percent Chance Of Survival Goes Home For First Time
A baby girl given a 10 percent chance of survival after she and her twin were born at just 23 weeks has gone home for the first time. Steven and Michelle Wilson were told to expect to lose both their girls after the death of Ellie at 30 days. But Chloe has defied the odds and has gone from strength to strength in hospital. Mr Wilson, 24, of South Hetton, County Durham, said: "We have waited 16 weeks for this and it feels fantastic. "It feels just right having her here in her home rather than hospital. I think we must be the only parents who are looking forward to being woken in the night."

'Never Again' - Combatting A Culture Of Death
The Second International Symposium on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide will be held in May in Landsdowne, Virginia. In the aftermath of the passage of an assisted suicide constitutional amendment in Washington State, Alex Schadenberg, executive director of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, says the meeting and discussion are especially important "to build a culture that rejects 'mercy killing.'"

Merck Stops Producing Vaccines Without Cells From Babies Killed In Abortions
A leading pro-life group that educates about the vaccines that are based on the cells from babies killed in abortions is worried about a new decision from the pharmaceutical giant Merck. The company has decided to stop producing some vaccines that are not made based on fetal cells from abortions.

More Headlines…

Recent Articles By:

Ethical Perspectives

New! 'Embryos On Ice' And Other Absurdities

Judie Brown
Of all the now familiar terms we have seen and heard applied to preborn children, perhaps the most heartless is "Embryos on ice." While the term was coined by a Raleigh, North Carolina News & Observer reporter covering fertility clinics, the idea reappeared just a few days ago in a New York Times article entitled "Parents Torn Over Fate of Frozen Embryos." The underlying idea in both articles is that parents are faced with a dilemma involving "extra" embryos that were not needed for the in vitro fertilization procedure they underwent in order to have a child. These parents - loving and well meaning, I am sure - have unwittingly contributed to the ongoing growth of the culture of death by agreeing with the hypothesis that there are embryonic children who are somehow less human than those who were implanted in their mom and brought to term. It is as if there are some embryonic children who are really children and others who are not.

New! Children: the Supreme Gift of Marriage

Janet E. Smith
What I wish to explore here is how the modern age has a philosophical and theological dysfunctionality in respect to its understanding of children and their intrinsic importance, and of the importance of children to their parents and society. At the risk of sounding unduly alarmist, I must observe that our society has nearly reached a state of philosophical insanity in respect to the value of human life, the value of babies and the meaning of sexuality. A state of philosophical insanity means that we are fundamentally and basically denying the reality of fundamental and basic truths to the point that our behavior is dangerously self-destructive.

New! Harvesting Embryonic Stem Cells from Deceased Human Embryos

Maureen L. Condic
The retrieval of cells from deceased human embryos would enable scientists to obtain genuine embryonic stem cells for use in their efforts to cure various diseases that they believe could be alleviated if wider access to these cells were made available. Most importantly, harvesting cells from deceased human embryos overcomes the central moral objection to this line of research, namely, that it requires the destruction of living human embryos.

Death in Paradise

Anthony Zimmerman
Political realities had blocked efforts for several decades to assemble a general council of the Church for the purpose of responding to questions generated by the Protestant Reformation. Finally in November 1544 Pope Paul III (1534-1549) called the Fathers to Trent for the 19th General Council of the Church.

The Final Corruption of Human Embryology
(Article Revised March 3, 2006)

C. Ward Kischer
The history of science records certain events which have seriously impeded the search for truth. That is what science is: the search for truth. Sometimes the truth is obscured due to lack of information, or the means by which to measure; but, at other times, due to deliberate falsehoods. Alexander Kohn said it precisely: "The whole edifice of science is built upon honesty".

Hopeful in Trouble
5th Sunday of Easter (C)

Antonio P. Pueyo
Building bridges over troubled waters is not a solitary task. It is the task of united communities.

"Heritage Foundation 'Science': 'Pregnancy' Begins at 8-days??"

Dianne N. Irving
Much as we all wish it weren't so, people just can't have it both ways -- they can't use the accurate science sometimes (when it is convenient), and then use false science at other times (when the accurate facts are not convenient). Sooner or later it catches up with them. Nowhere is this truer than in the current debates surrounding human cloning and human embryonic stem cell research (HESCR). If prolife and all those who hold for the inherent equality of all human beings don't start getting on the same scientific page on a host of issues, they will continue to shoot themselves (and each other) in the foot, loose their debates - not to mention their credibility - and be known and remembered later only for the massive confusion they have caused even for their own followers and the corrupt bills they have helped to pass.

Cleansing the Temple
3rd Sunday of Lent (B)

Antonio P. Pueyo
What makes us lose our cool? We may fly off the handle when we are personally hurt, when somebody we love is being hurt, or something we care deeply about is not respected.