Tue, 6 November 2007 "Whether or not they are fully informed about its intricacies, almost everyone in the United States seems to have an opinion about stem-cell research...Opponents claim that to destroy an embryo, even for a good purpose such as curing Alzheimer's disease, is as wrong as killing an adult so that his or her organs can be distributed to six or seven other adults who might otherwise die. But is the wrong done in each of these cases really of the same magnitude?"Dr. Rosemarie Tong, a distinguished professor of health care ethics and director of the Center for Professional and Applied Ethics in the Department of Philosophy at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, tackles the moral questions surrounding stem cell research and puts forth an approach that asserts the positive potential--and moral correctness--of such research. For more information, or to read Dr. Tong's original article, please visit www.CatholicsforChoice.org/Conscience. |
Wed, 15 August 2007 ![]() The National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy estimates that 51 percent of Latina teens get pregnant at least once before age 20—nearly twice the national average. Moreover, the Listen as Bill Albert, the deputy director of the National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy and the author of “51%: Latinas and Teen Pregnancy� in the latest issue of Conscience, describes recent trends in the
Direct download: Bill_Albert__Teen_Pregnancy_and_Latinas.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 4:30 PM |
Tue, 29 May 2007 ![]() "As the World Congress of Families packs up its tents and leaves its fantasy world in Warsaw, participants will now have to face the harsh reality of the real world in which we all live. There will be far fewer subservient women, there will be gays living on the same block, and there will be people having premarital sex and using contraception to boot..." Listen as Catholics for a Free Choice analyzes the World Congress of Families (May 11-13, 2007), an international gathering of extreme--and extremely out-of-touch--anti-choice groups in Warsaw, Poland. A Catholics for a Free Choice associate attended the conference and provided first hand reports and analysis of what turned out to be an underwhelming event. For full coverage of the event and to read daily reports, visit Catholics for a Free Choice Opposition Watch: World Congress on Families. |
Tue, 22 May 2007 ![]() Abortion has been at the eye of a terrible storm in recent years. Clinic bombings, Supreme Court decisions, shootings, violent protests and venomous rhetoric have not brought the country any closer to a resolution. Both sides in the debate have generated more heat than light... Listen as Jon O'Brien, President of Catholics for a Free Choice, discusses the importance of preventing unwanted pregnancies as the best means of reducing the need for abortion--something that the majority of Americans and American Catholics, regardless of where they identify themselves on the issue of abortion, support. His remarks are from an OpEd published in the May 4, 2007 issue of the National Catholic Reporter. |
Thu, 30 November 2006 In the next hour, 468 men, women and children will be infected with HIV. In the same timeframe, 320 will die from AIDS-related causes, the majority of these in the world's poorest countries. While everybody agrees that we should do something to stop this pandemic, there are substantial disagreements about what that should be. Listen to Jon O'Brien, executive vice president of Catholics for a Free Choice, discuss rumors of possible changes to the Vatican's policy on condoms and call for Catholics to hope, pray and, most importantly, speak out against the Vatican's arcane and callous policy against condoms. |
"Whether or not they are fully informed about its intricacies, almost everyone in the United States seems to have an opinion about stem-cell research...Opponents claim that to destroy an embryo, even for a good purpose such as curing Alzheimer's disease, is as wrong as killing an adult so that his or her organs can be distributed to six or seven other adults who might otherwise die. But is the wrong done in each of these cases really of the same magnitude?"

