Distinction Matter - Subscribed Feeds

  1. Site: LifeNews
    2 days 18 hours ago
    Author: Steven Ertelt

    Senator Josh Hawley is urging the Trump administration to reverse Biden-era policies on dangerous chemical abortion drugs, arguing that states like Missouri should be empowered to impose safety restrictions on mifepristone to protect women and unborn children.

    In a letter dated May 7 to Attorney General Pam Bondi, Hawley called for the Justice Department to reconsider its defense of Biden’s mail-order abortion policy, which he says has led to severe health risks for women.

    The letter highlights a recent study showing that 1 in 10 women who use mifepristone experience serious complications, such as infection or hemorrhaging, often requiring emergency medical care within 45 days.

    HELP LIFENEWS SAVE BABIES FROM ABORTION! Please help LifeNews.com with a donation!

    “The Biden administration’s mail-order abortion policy poses a grave threat to the health and safety of American women,” Hawley, a Missouri Republican, wrote. “I strongly urge you to reconsider the Justice Department’s defense of this policy in court.”

    Hawley’s push aligns with his broader efforts to reinstate safety regulations on mifepristone, a drug used in medication abortions.

    On April 28, he introduced legislation aimed at restoring safeguards that were stripped away under Democratic administrations, including in-person doctor visits and mandatory follow-up care. The senator cited a study by the Ethics and Public Policy Center, which found that the rate of adverse events from mifepristone is at least 22 times higher than the FDA’s reported rate of less than 0.5%.

    “The grounds for dismissal sought are mostly procedural in nature,” Hawley wrote in his letter, referring to a lawsuit filed by Missouri, Idaho, and Kansas to limit access to the drug. “I am troubled by the fact that the Justice Department has sided with the Biden administration’s position.”

    Pro-life advocates have long warned about the dangers of mifepristone, especially after Biden’s policies allowed the drug to be mailed without medical supervision.

    LifeNews.com reported yesterday that a pro-life group urged President Donald Trump to limit the abortion pill’s availability, citing cases where women have suffered severe complications or even died.

    Missouri, a state at the forefront of the legal battle, has seen a drastic decline in abortions since the 2022 Dobbs decision, with only 64 abortions performed between June 2022 and March 2024 under emergency exemptions. However, the state reported 186 complications from pill-based abortions between April 2018 and August 2023, according to litigation data. Hawley and other pro-life leaders argue that these statistics underscore the need for stricter oversight of mifepristone, which they say endangers women by allowing abortions without proper medical supervision.

    The senator’s letter to Bondi emphasized the role of states in protecting their citizens, particularly in light of Missouri’s recent voter decision to legalize abortion—a move Hawley acknowledged but said should not prevent safety measures.

    “Missouri’s litigation aims to reverse that policy and protect women,” he wrote, urging the Justice Department to support the state’s efforts rather than obstruct them.

    The post Josh Hawley Calls on Trump to Let States Stop Dangerous Abortion Pills appeared first on LifeNews.com.

  2. Site: Catholic Herald
    2 days 18 hours ago
    Author: The Catholic Herald

    The head of Catholics in England and Wales has taken the solemn oath of secrecy inside the Sistine Chapel as the conclave to select the successor to Pope Francis begins.

    The view from St Peter’s Square as @CardinalNichols takes the solemn oath of secrecy inside the Sistine Chapel #conclave pic.twitter.com/slH5KAWyhh

    — Catholic Church (@catholicEW) May 7, 2025

    Cardinal Vincent Nicholas, Archbishop of Westminster and President of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales, is one of three English cardinals among the total of 133 cardinal electors who will choose the next head of the Roman Catholic Church.

    The cardinal electors all recite the oath, promising that if elected pope, they would faithfully fulfill the ministry of universal pastor of the Church, that they will follow the rules of the conclave scrupulously and keep secret the results of the votes.

    Only one round of voting will take place on Wednesday night, with four ballots on each subsequent day, two in the morning and two in the afternoon, until a new pope is selected. If the cardinals have not elected a new pope after 12-13 ballots, they will take a break for a day of prayer and reflection before continuing.

    A nun in St Peter’s Square as cardinals begin their conclave to elect a new pope, Vatican, 7 May 2025. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images.)

    The past two conclaves, in 2005 and 2013, were short, with a pope elected on the fourth and fifth ballots, resulting in a new pope within two and a half days.

    Though most cardinals have insisted that they believe this year’s conclave will also be short, many observers have speculated that it could also last longer, given that there are more cardinals, and many do not know each other.

    In this regard, the pre-conclave general congregation meetings have been essential, allowing the cardinals a chance to get to know one another and jointly discuss their vision for the Church, and the profile of the new pope.

    Once the doors to the Sistine Chapel close, cardinals will effectively be entirely shutoff from the rest of the world, with phone jamming systems and Wi-Fi blockers in place.

    They will also have no newspapers or television news available while they remain closed in together in the Santa Marta residence, to allow for complete privacy and to prevent the interference of any external factors that might sway the voting process.

    Cardinals’ deliberations end as conclave and discernment begins

    Photo: Faithful watch a giant screen displaying cardinals taking oath of secrecy inside the Sistine chapel, at St Peter’s Square on the first day of the conclave to elect the next pope, Vatican, 7 May 2025. (Photo by STEFANO RELLANDINI/AFP via Getty Images.)

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    The post Cardinal Nichols takes solemn oath of secrecy before first conclave vote first appeared on Catholic Herald.

    The post Cardinal Nichols takes solemn oath of secrecy before first conclave vote appeared first on Catholic Herald.

  3. Site: AsiaNews.it
    2 days 18 hours ago
    In a town of just 8,000 inhabitants in the state of Goa lie the roots of both the Indian Filipe Neri Ferrão and the Pakistani Joseph Coutts, who from this afternoon are participating as electors in the selection of the new pontiff. A sign of the Church of the peripheries, but also of the vitality of a community founded four centuries ago by Portuguese Franciscans. ...
  4. Site: Rorate Caeli
    2 days 18 hours ago
    The last couple weeks were the important ones for any hope of influence. Media articles lifting up good cardinals. Reports exposing bad cardinals. We can only hope the cardinal electors talked with their sheep, read up on their colleagues, chatted with their colleagues on strategy and came up with a Plan A, Plan B and Plan C, if not more.But at this point, there is no more news. Media will be Kenneth J. Wolfehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04483319369640034300noreply@blogger.com
  5. Site: Catholic Herald
    2 days 18 hours ago
    Author: Crux Staff

    A new law in the US state of Washington which requires “members of the clergy” to report to police cases of child abuse or neglect learned in the confessional is being looked at by the US Justice Department to see if it violates the First Amendment of the United States.

    Senate Bill 5375 passed by margins of 64-31 in the House and 28-20 in the Senate, and was signed by Democratic Governor Bob Ferguson, a Catholic, on Friday.

    “Protecting our kids, first, is the most important thing. This bill protects Washingtonians from abuse and harm,” Ferguson said.

    The Bill offered no exception for the absolute seal of confidentiality that applies to Catholic priests.

    Archbishop Paul D. Etienne of Seattle issued a statement referring to the quote of Saint Peter in the Acts of the Apostles: “We must obey God rather than men.”

    “This is our stance now in the face of this new law. Catholic clergy may not violate the seal of confession – or they will be excommunicated from the Church,” Etienne said.

    “All Catholics must know and be assured that their confessions remain sacred, secure, confidential and protected by the law of the Church,” he said.

    The archbishop said the Catholic Church agrees with the goal of protecting children and preventing child abuse.

    “The Archdiocese of Seattle remains committed to reporting child sexual abuse, working with victim survivors towards healing and protecting all minors and vulnerable people. Our policies already require priests to be mandatory reporters, but not if this information is obtained during confession,” Etienne said.

    The archbishop said the Catholic Church in the US has been committed to preventing sexual abuse for many decades, reporting incidents of abuse to law enforcement and cooperating with civil authorities.

    “While we remain committed to protecting minors and all vulnerable people from abuse, priests cannot comply with this law if the knowledge of abuse is obtained during the Sacrament of Reconciliation,” he said.

    The First Amendment of the US Constitution states, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”

    Etienne said that with the new law, the State of Washington is specifically targeting religious conduct by inserting the government into the Catholic tradition, namely, the highly defined ritual of the Sacrament of Reconciliation.

    “The state is now requiring priests to violate an essential element of the rite, the confidential communication between the priest and penitent in which the absolution of sin is offered,” the archbishop said.

    In a statement, the US Justice Department said the Washington State Senate Bill 5375 “appears on its face to violate the First Amendment”.

    “Washington State’s new law adds ‘members of the clergy’ to a list of other professionals who are required to report information received in a confessional setting relating to child abuse or neglect to law enforcement or other state authorities, with no exception for the absolute seal of confidentiality that applies to Catholic Priests,” the government statement says.

    “Furthermore, the State of Washington’s new law singles out ‘members of the clergy’ as the only ‘supervisors’ who may not rely on applicable legal privileges, including religious confessions, as a defence to mandatory reporting,” the State Department continues.

    It said the Civil Rights Division will investigate the apparent conflict between Washington State’s new law with the free exercise of religion under the First Amendment, which it called “a cornerstone of the United States Constitution.”

    Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division said SB 5375 demands that Catholic priests “violate their deeply held faith in order to obey the law”, while “a violation of the Constitution and a breach of the free exercise of religion cannot stand under our Constitutional system of government”.

    “Worse, the law appears to single out clergy as not entitled to assert applicable privileges, as compared to other reporting professionals. We take this matter very seriously and look forward to Washington State’s cooperation with our investigation,” he said.

    The main sponsor of the Bill, Democrat Noel Frame, defended the new law’s requirement for priests to violate the seal of the confessional.

    “There are some things that it doesn’t matter what religion you are in, you never put somebody’s conscience over the protection of a child,” she told reporters.

    “It really said the Church is not above the law, no one is above the law, especially when it comes to protecting children,” Frame said.

    Photo A priest listens to a faithful in a confessional ahead of the mass celebrated for the beatification of Alvaro del Portillo on September 26, 2014. (Photo by GERARD JULIEN / AFP)

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    The post US Justice Department reviews state law forcing priests to break confessional seal first appeared on Catholic Herald.

    The post US Justice Department reviews state law forcing priests to break confessional seal appeared first on Catholic Herald.

  6. Site: LifeNews
    2 days 18 hours ago
    Author: Grace Porto

    Kansas City’s Archbishop Joseph Naumann will offer the closing Mass and the opening prayer for the gala at the 54th National Right to Life (NRL) Conference in Overland Park, Kansas, June 20-21.

    The NRL website states that Archbishop Naumann has “consistently challenged pro-abortion Catholic politicians and spearheaded pro-life efforts and ministries in Kansas and throughout the country.”

    When serving as the pro-life coordinator in the Archdiocese of St. Louis from 1984 to 1995, Archbishop Naumann helped establish a Project Rachel ministry and the Lifeline Coalition, the website adds.

    HELP LIFENEWS SAVE BABIES FROM ABORTION! Please help LifeNews.com with a donation!

    The NRL conference organizers say the event prepares participants to advocate for life.

    “Across two dynamic days, we’ll spotlight developments on the medical, scientific, political, legislative, and grassroots fronts, giving attendees a comprehensive view of the challenges and opportunities ahead,” the website states. “You’ll hear directly from national leaders to local advocates from those shaping the conversation in courts, classrooms, communities, and the media.”

    After the closing Mass, the conference will conclude with a gala, where the NRL will present a pro-life leader with the Proudly Pro-life Award.

    LifeNews Note: Grace Porto writes for CatholicVote, where this column originally appeared.

    The post Archbishop Joseph Naumann Will Headline Pro-Life Event appeared first on LifeNews.com.

  7. Site: Rorate Caeli
    2 days 19 hours ago
    New Catholichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04118576661605931910noreply@blogger.com
  8. Site: LifeNews
    2 days 19 hours ago
    Author: Rachel Quackenbush

    ProPublica has received a 2025 Pulitzer Prize for a report critics say falsely blamed a Georgia woman’s death on pro-life legislation — despite evidence that her fatal complications stemmed from the abortion pill.

    The reporting team, which included Kavitha Surana, Lizzie Presser, Cassandra Jaramillo, and Stacy Kranitz, was awarded the prize for coverage the Associated Press described as “reporting on pregnant women who died after doctors delayed urgent care in states with strict abortion laws,” according to Shawn Fleetwood of The Federalist.

    Left unmentioned was that the story at the center of the award has been widely challenged for its misleading framing.

    ProPublica centered its reporting on the 2022 death of Amber Thurman, a Georgia mother whose passing it attributed to alleged confusion about the state’s abortion laws. The story ran just weeks before the 2024 presidential election.

    Get the latest pro-life news and information on X (Twitter). //

    However, Thurman “died on the table during a surgery only needed because she suffered severe complications from ingesting abortion pills associated with sometimes fatal complications,” according to Federalist’s Jordan Boyd.

    Last week, the Ethics and Public Policy Center released the largest known study of the abortion pill, revealing that more than 10% of women who take mifepristone experience sepsis, hemorrhage, or other serious complications — a rate that is 22 times higher than the FDA approved drug label’s claim of “less than 0.5 percent.”

    “Thanks to the Biden administration’s radically relaxed abortion pill expansions, Thurman was able to induce abortion hours away at home unsupervised,” Boyd noted.

    CatholicVote previously reported that prominent pro-life leaders decried the media’s handling of Thurman’s story, calling it a case of “medical negligence and misinformation.” Analysts pointed out that Thurman’s death was not the result of pro-life policy, but of a dangerous lack of oversight in the administration of chemical abortion drugs.

    After former Vice President Kamala Harris falsely claimed during the 2024 campaign that Donald Trump’s abortion policies caused Thurman’s death, The Wall Street Journal ran a fact-check exposing the inaccuracy.

    ProPublica’s award follows what Fleetwood described as a growing trend of journalism prizes being awarded to politically driven narratives.

    “If Americans needed further proof that the Pulitzer Prize has become nothing more than a glorified gold sticker given to the media’s biggest left-wing propagandists,” Fleetwood wrote, “the award’s 2025 winners are sure to convince them.”

    LifeNews Note: Rachel Quackenbush writes for CatholicVote, where this column originally appeared.

    The post Liberal Media Wins Pulitzer for Lying About Abortion Bans appeared first on LifeNews.com.

  9. Site: non veni pacem
    2 days 19 hours ago
    Author: Mark Docherty

    From Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers back in 1981.  Which is as long ago as 1981 was to 1937. Dang.

    Keep praying, folks.

  10. Site: OnePeterFive
    2 days 19 hours ago
    Author: John C. Rao, PhD

    Theresa Ickinger, a post-conciliar champion of the Faith active in many realms, spoke at one of my first Roman Forum meetings in the early 1970s. I cannot remember which of her battles she recounted to us, but I do recall that it took place in Philadelphia. She noted that after discussions with the church authorities brought about the usual depressing failure, she regained her courage by…

    Source

  11. Site: Rorate Caeli
    2 days 19 hours ago
    by Aurelio PorfiriRome, May 7, 2025Today, the Italian newspaper La Repubblica, which leans progressive, still listed Cardinal Pietro Parolin, former Secretary of State, as the frontrunner, and noted a rise in support for the Patriarch of Jerusalem, Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa. According to journalist Iacopo Scaramuzzi, La Repubblica’s Vatican correspondent and author of the article, FilipinoNew Catholichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04118576661605931910noreply@blogger.com
  12. Site: Henrymakow.com
    2 days 19 hours ago

    extinction.jpeg
    Please send links and comments to hmakow@gmail.com


    Every nation that backs Israel 
    is morally complicit in genocide 
    and morally defenceless against 
    the genocide planned for them.

    Trump, Netanyahu and Putin belong to Chabad, a satanic Jewish supremacist cult 
    that believes non-Satanists are squatters on their planet. 

    Former Housing Official: U.S. Government Has Built a $21 TRILLION Underground City for the Wealthy and Powerful to Live If a "Near-Extinction Event" Occurs (VIDEO)


    "We have built an extraordinary number of underground bases and, supposedly, transportation systems," she said. "Some of these are documented as part of the national security infrastructure, but I think there are many more in the United States and all over the world."

    Fitts added that she and a team of investigators spent between 2021 and 2023 collecting "all the data and all the information on underground bases." She estimated they had found roughly 170 in America and under the ocean around America.

    "We systematically went through and tried to guesstimate our guess of how many underground bases (there are), both underground in the United States, but also underground under the ocean around the United States," she stated. "And our estimate was 170 with a transportation network connecting them."
    -----
    Michael Snyder--Why Is The Underground Facility Where Government Leaders Would Take Shelter During An Extinction-Level Event "Getting An Upgrade"?


    "I think that it is worth noting that Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem visited Mount Weather just last month...Mount Weather, which is also known as the High Point Special Facility, has both above- and below-ground facilities as part of its 564-acre site, and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem visited the complex in early April, posing for photos outside with the complex's fulltime fire department and armed FEMA security guards.

    Of course Mount Weather is not the only underground facility that exists. According to USA Today, Mount Weather is actually "part of a network of underground facilities scattered across the United States designed to protect federal leaders during a crisis"...

    mount-weather2.png
    Buried in the Blue Ridge Mountains 64 miles west of Washington, D.C., Mount Weather is part of a network of underground facilities scattered across the United States designed to protect federal leaders during a crisis. It takes less than 30 minutes by helicopter to reach Mount Weather from Capitol Hill. One of our most prominent "continuity of government" facilities is located in Colorado..."

    --
     Kevin Barrett- Israel committing most fully-documented genocide in human history
     

    "Israel" is committing the most fully-documented genocide in human history. Never before has a nation announced its willingness to exterminate helpless civilians, and documented its deliberate mass murders of those civilians and the destruction and deprivation of their food, water, power, shelter, and medical facilities, the way "Israel" has. Nor has any group so shamelessly reveled in rape and sexual abuse, murdering women and dressing up in their clothing, and torturing helpless people to death--proudly bragging about it and posting war crimes to social media--the extent that "Israel" has. And certainly no people has ever vaunted its lust for murdering children the way "Israel" does. In short, "Israel" has become the most cartoonishly evil nation in the history of humanity. Yet because criminal Jewish-Zionist oligarchs rule the West, and use their financial power to torment those who speak even mildly against them, most of the world has stood by helplessly."
     -------
    Today's Bigger Picture Implications on How Mossad Blackmail Operations Killed Virginia Giuffre, Part 2


    ---
    Stephen Miller's America First Legal (AFL) has filed a bombshell lawsuit against Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr., in his capacity as Presiding Officer of the Judicial Conference of the United States, and Robert J. Conrad, Director of the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts.

    The lawsuit accuses the powerful duo of running what AFL describes as an "unconstitutional shadow agency" and violating federal transparency laws.

    The lawsuit, filed on April 22, slams the Judicial Conference of the United States and its administrative arm--both overseen by Chief Justice Roberts--as rogue "executive agencies" that have collaborated with far-left lawmakers to wage lawfare against conservative Supreme Court justices.


    -
    pietro-parolin-vance-shake.jpg
    JD Vance and Cardinal Pietro Parolin demonstrate 
    the Masonic thumb-on-knuckle handshake that Satanists use to identify each other


    Will the next pope be good for the Jews?
    A look at a few of the frontrunners, and their statements on antisemitism, Israel and theology


    ---
     
    -
    Asia's Economic Realignment: China, Japan and ASEAN Nations Push for De-Dollarization and Regional Sovereignty
    The global majority seeks to decouple from the United States as economic coercion escalates under President Trump


    The U.S. continued use of the dollar as a geopolitical tool through sanctions and restrictive trade policies has not gone unnoticed. This policy continuity has only strengthened the resolve of countries across Asia to forge alternative economic pathways.

    ---

    force-fed-holo-soup.png
    Manitoba to make Holocaust education mandatory in secondary schools starting fall 2025


    Manitoba is the sixth province in Canada to make Holocaust studies mandatory in secondary schools.

    Other provinces that have committed to making Holocaust education a mandatory component of their curriculum include Ontario, B.C, New Brunswick, Saskatchewan and Alberta. 

    The Northwest Territories has also added Holocaust education to its Grade 6 curriculum, making it the only territory to do so.

    The new curriculum will take effect in September 2025.


    Makow- Zionists funded Hitler and the Nazis to trick Jews into going to Israel. This holocaust education is designed to guilt the goyim into giving Jews special privileges. Meanwhile Jewish genocide of Christians in Russia or Palestinians is not taught. Public education is brainwashing and will die.

    -
    Preparing the goyim to die for Israel

    US Supreme Court backs Trump's transgender military ban

    The 6-3 decision allows the Pentagon to discharge current personnel and reject new recruits with "gender dysphoria"

    -

    top-one-per-cent.jpeg

    -
    The 2019 film 'Unplanned' dealt with the reality of abortion, when an abortion clinic receptionist is ordered to participate in an abortion procedure. Grim watching though it is, the reality in Alberta is that even if a child survives the 'procedure,' they are as a matter of policy left to die anyway, writes Richard Dur


    DUR: Surely it cannot be that babies born alive after an abortion, are left to die?
    'But in Alberta, that is the policy of Alberta Health Services... Inhumanity knows no bounds.'

    -


  13. Site: OnePeterFive
    2 days 19 hours ago
    Author: Aurelio Porfiri

    With the Mass Pro Eligendo Pontifice in the morning and the procession of the Cardinals into the Sistine Chapel, the Conclave of May 7, 2025, officially begins. Cardinal Re, Dean of the Sacred College, gave a speech urging his fellow cardinals not to be guided by personal considerations. I imagine the Cardinals enter with minds full not only of what has been discussed during the General…

    Source

  14. Site: Mises Institute
    2 days 19 hours ago
    Author: Jonathan Newman
    Not only are Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) cultists dishonest about the role of money, they also are dishonest about money‘s history. By taking issue with Carl Menger‘s historical version, they expose their own ignorance of how money came about.
  15. Site: Steyn Online
    2 days 19 hours ago
    Mark takes questions from Steyn Club members around the planet...
  16. Site: Steyn Online
    2 days 19 hours ago
    If you missed today's edition of Steyn's Clubland Q&A live around the planet, here's the action replay...
  17. Site: Steyn Online
    2 days 19 hours ago
    Welcome to Part Six of our birthday audio entertainment in Tales for Our Time...
  18. Site: Steyn Online
    2 days 19 hours ago
    The Conclave Watch begins...
  19. Site: LifeNews
    2 days 19 hours ago
    Author: Rachel Quackenbush

    Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte signed legislation May 1 that protects families and faith-based adoption and foster care providers from government discrimination based on their religious or moral beliefs.

    The new law, HB 655, ensures that individuals and organizations with faith-based convictions about human sexuality can continue offering homes to children in need without fear of exclusion by state or local officials, Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) reported.

    Get the latest pro-life news and information on X (Twitter).

    “Every child deserves a loving home that can provide them stability and opportunities to grow,” ADF Senior Counsel Greg Chafuen said. “The sad reality is that in some states, the government can discriminate against people of faith, allowing vulnerable children to suffer.”

    Chafuen commended Montana lawmakers and pro-family advocates for their leadership in passing the bill.

    “Montana has taken critical steps to prioritize the well-being of kids by prohibiting state and local government officials from discriminating against adoption and foster care providers and parents simply because of their religious beliefs and moral convictions,” he said.

    He added that protecting religious liberty in the foster care system expands the pool of families and organizations available to serve vulnerable children.

    “By signing this law,” Chafuen said, “Gov. Gianforte is ensuring that Montanan children benefit from as many adoption and foster care agencies as possible — faith-based and non-faith-based.”

    The post Montana Governor Signs Law to Stop Discrimination Against Christian Families Who Adopt Children appeared first on LifeNews.com.

  20. Site: Rorate Caeli
    2 days 19 hours ago
     Cardinal Pietro Parolin is the front runner -- no doubt about that. As Rorate said days ago on X/Twitter:There is no doubt Parolin is the front runner, as Ratzinger in 2005 (for the same reasons), and Bergoglio in 13 (because he had been the second-place in 05).Since there is no runner-up now (Scola being over 80), this is Parolin’s to lose. (Twitter)There seems to be an assumption by some New Catholichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04118576661605931910noreply@blogger.com
  21. Site: Ron Paul Institute - Featured Articles
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: Jeffrey A. Tucker

    The American system of medical-care delivery has no name. It is neither single payer nor based on private enterprise. It is a patchwork of cockamamie carrots and sticks, agencies and incentives, exceptions and accounting tricks, cajoles and punishments, cobbled together over some 50-100 years of legislation that itself was a product of pressure-group pushes, graft, loopholes, mandates, and subsidies. 

    It’s not even a clean public-private partnership. It’s a public-private-nonprofit-grifter-payola regulatory cacophony of confusion and chaos over which pharmaceutical companies and professional lobbyists exercise the dominant influence. 

    Still it quasi-functions. It hobbles along year after year with ever more expense and administrators, with ever worse results. Absolutely no one would design such a thing from the ground up. No one is particularly happy with it but neither is there much push to change it fundamentally. 

    The Covid years devastated trust or, perhaps, just pulled back the veil. Every poll confirms it, e.g. a Harvard/Northwestern poll showed that trust fell from 71.5% in April 2020 to 40.1% by January 2024 across all groups. The reality is likely far worse. Everyone is asking how to restore trust. 

    The last time centralized reform was attempted was 15 years ago. The debates about Obamacare minted a healthcare expert daily and generated think-tank blueprints reflecting every ideological bias. The final product of a thousand pages, in which no one group got its way, was shoved through with great huzzahs on one side and boos on the other. It resulted in more coverage, yes, but also cost increases anywhere between 50 and 500 percent depending on how one chooses to measure it.

    No one can produce evidence that it has made America more healthy. A statistical tour through chronic disease data, or a casual walk through a mall or airport, proves that. 

    The debate over the Affordable Care Act pretty well exhausted the appetite for far-reaching reform. And maybe that is a good thing because the drive today is not for one system for everyone but a realization that the needs are so diverse and diffuse that it would likely have more success with a series of parallel systems that emerge from the ground up. 

    Thus has most of the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) agenda focused on matters that individuals and families can do themselves. They include being more scrupulous about diet, exercise, sleep, sunshine, and caution about prescription medications, whether for mental or physical maladies. The movement against mandates is at the core simply because it now (versus a few years ago) pertains to children and relates directly to the grave concern about ill-health and the rise of autism. 

    Again, this is a more productive conversation than going back to the drawing board to reform a system that has no name and hardly anyone understands in its totality. It recognizes something crucial, namely that health is not granted by a system of government or a large insurer but rather emerges from individual decisions and habits. In large part and with the exception of unpredictable twists of fate, much of what we call health is mainly within our own control. 

    Given that insight, we have a better starting point in which to discuss real policy reforms that can give people a greater degree of control than they currently have under the existing bureaucratic patchwork of programs, mandates, agencies, and bureaucratized systems. Here are eight examples that can make a massive difference and should be favored regardless of ideological bias. 

    1. Liberalize generic therapeutics from prescription control and make them over the counter. People are not idiots, though the US’s prescription system presumes they are. Fourteen states are working toward making Ivermectin and other common medicines like Hydroxychloroquine more available, thus liberating people from dependency on medical services. With the ubiquity of AI and quality medical information everywhere at our fingertips – no longer monopolized by the lab coats – we are better positioned to care for ourselves in our own interest. Probably hundreds of generics that people take routinely could be so regarded. 
    2. In many countries, pharmacies have nurses and doctors available for diagnostics, which seems like a much better system than ours. It is far easier to get routine medical care in Mexico than it is in the US. This should not be the case, but regulatory barriers limit pharmacists’ roles in diagnostics or prescribing. Liberalizing the system and breaking down professional barriers and regulated buckets could better serve the healthcare consumer. 
    3. Allow employers to offer employees an opt-out of mandated health insurance. The mandates are hugely expensive for employers. Every employer with more than 50 employees must comply. We don’t even have to change the mandate but simply permit options for the workers. Allowing their workers an extra $5-10 thousand or so in salary and wages would be accepted by many and give the direct primary care industry a boost. This would lower costs and boost job options. 
    4. Permit anyone to make contributions toward a Health Savings Account, not just people with high-deductible health plans (as it stands today). The HSA is a bit of an annoyance – its troubling how government uses the tax system to direct spending choices – but it at least allows some tax-free choice that can otherwise earn money in financial markets. It makes no sense why these should not be open to anyone, even and especially people who elect against expensive coverage. It would serve as a substitute for insurance and add to the country’s store of savings and capital. 
    5. Permit insurers to offer catastrophic-only plans to people of all ages. For that matter, health insurers need to be free from the shackles of predefined plans that are inclusive of services that most people do not want or need. A catastrophic-only plan would be selected by many. This might be the worst aspect of Obamacare, and it needs to go. We should be able to buy health insurance the way we buy any other good or service, which is to say, according to our own perceived needs, risk aversion, and willingness to pay.
    6. Put actuaries to work not just on large groups of people but on individuals, and allow premiums to adjust based on actual individualized health risks. This would strongly incentivize better living. For example, there could be discounts for people who join and use gyms, follow a keto diet, don’t abuse substances, and so on. Reward them and many more will join in better practices. It’s possible that this could happen even without repealing the non-discrimination for pre-existing conditions. Simply reward people with lower premiums for being less likely to use medical services. 
    7. Eliminate legal indemnifications from pharmaceutical harm. The rest would take care of itself. 
    8. Permit non-allopathic services providers such as naturopaths and homeopaths to enlist to be paid with insurance money. This would save insurance companies millions if not billions of dollars. Such doctors rely on supplements and alternatives, not drugs, that cost far less. And they help people fix their lifestyle choices. This fits where the market is going in any case, as people are seeking out a greater range of opinion. 

    None of these eight reforms rub hard on ideological wounds. All are about respecting individual choice, which is the essence of health. They can all be pursued without touching existing entitlement systems and legacy welfare provision. They would amount to the first major steps toward creating parallel systems of experimentation, all within the framework of the existing system. It seems like they should earn bipartisan support. 

    Reprinted with permission from Brownstone Institute.

  22. Site: Rorate Caeli
    2 days 20 hours ago
     Main excerpts below:Catholics Who Prefer Latin Mass Pin Hopes on a New Pope Ruth GrahamThe New York TimesMay 7, 2025 (page A12)About 140 people came to the Sweetest Heart of Mary church in Detroit for the Traditional Latin Mass at noon the Sunday after Easter. Incense and organ music wafted through the ornate sanctuary, built by Polish Catholics in the late 19th century. It was a New Catholichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04118576661605931910noreply@blogger.com
  23. Site: LifeNews
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: Hannah Hiester

    Republican Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin vetoed two legislative packages May 2 that would have established a “right to contraception” in the state and forced insurance companies to cover contraception without exceptions for religious organizations.

    According to Dogwood, the state’s Democratic-controlled General Assembly passed the first package, House Bill 1716 and Senate Bill 1105, earlier this year. The package would have allowed birth control pills, IUDs, and other methods of contraception and banned restrictions on its sale or distribution. While he wrote in his official veto statement that he supports access to contraception, Youngkin vetoed it on the grounds that contraception is already protected by the U.S. Constitution, adding that the bill “contains significant flaws by creating overly broad rights of action.”

    “The legislation also fails to include adequate conscience clause protections for health care providers and weakens the fundamental right of parents to guide the upbringing and care of their children, which the General Assembly refused to adopt,” he wrote.

    Get the latest pro-life news and information on X (Twitter). //

    Youngkin vetoed a similar bill almost exactly a year ago. This year, he also vetoed a second package that sought to require health insurance plans that cover outpatient prescription drugs to also cover contraceptives.

    According to his veto statement, Youngkin had asked the General Assembly to include a conscience clause in the bill that would have exempted organizations with religious beliefs about contraception from covering it.

    “Without such protections, many organizations would be forced to violate their religious or ethical beliefs about contraception should this bill have become law,” Youngkin stated. “These entities would thus be forced to choose between following the law or following their deeply and sincerely held beliefs — a choice the Commonwealth must not require them to make.”

    However, state legislators refused to add the amendment to the bill, resulting in the veto.

    “In a divided government, no one is going to get 100 percent of what they want, and we must work across the aisle to serve the common interests of Virginians,” Youngkin stated in a news release. “For the 38 bills that would damage the interests of the Commonwealth and her citizens, I am exercising my constitutional duty to veto these bills.”

    LifeNews Note: Hannah Hiester writes for CatholicVote, where this column originally appeared.

    The post Gov. Glenn Youngkin Praised for Vetoing Two Pro-Abortion Bills appeared first on LifeNews.com.

  24. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    Gold Soars To Another New High, What's The Message?

    Authored by Mike Shedlock via MishTalk.com,

    There are three messages. Do you see them?

    Three Messages

    1. Gold does not believe the Fed is under control

    2. Gold does not believe Congress is under control

    3. Gold does not believe Trump is under control

    And neither do I.

    Think!

    • If you think either Congress will do anything about soaring deficits, then think again.

    • If you think DOGE will do anything about soaring deficits, then think again.

    • If you think Trump will do anything about soaring deficits, then think again.

    • If you think tariffs will offset spending that Trump demands and Congress will deliver, then think again.

    • If you think the Fed will stop monetizing the debt, then think again.

    Buying Votes for a “Big Beautiful Bill”

    Trump will buy as many votes as it takes to get support for his “big beautiful bill”.

    Number one on the table is restoration of State and Local Tax (SALT) deductions. This benefits Democrats and Republicans in Big Blue states, especially New York.

    The Committee for a Responsible Budget estimates full restoration of SALT would cost $920 billion over 10 years.

    The TCJA tax extension will cost $3.9 trillion.

    Why stop there?

    Trump wants to but more votes with no tax on tips, no tax on Social Security benefits, and new deductions for interest on auto loans.

    No DOGE to the Rescue

    To pay for all of this DOGE has come up with $150 billion in alleged savings of which only about $12 billion is real.

    For discussion, please see How Much Money Has DOGE Really Saved, and Where Will it Go?

    Let’s do some fact checks on DOGE claims and reality.

    Trump Promises $1 trillion in Defense Spending for Next Year

    Also note Trump Promises $1 trillion in Defense Spending for Next Year

    Even bigger budget deficits are now in store due to the first $1 trillion defense budget.

    Meanwhile, the lies that it will pay for itself continue along with praise from the cult.

    For discussion of the truly absurd, please see Lutnick Says Tariffs Can Eliminate the IRS and Balance the Budget

    Lutnick: “We’re going to make the External Revenue Service replace the Internal Revenue Service.”

    And finally Republicans Have One Chance to Reform Medicaid, They Will Blow It

    Republicans, including Trump, won’t fix anything if it costs votes.

    There is no political will by Congress or Trump to do anything about deficits out of control.

    If you think we are headed for a currency crisis, then you are thinking correctly.

    Don’t ask me when, because no one knows. But the message is unmistakable.

    *  *  *

    Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge.

    Tyler Durden Wed, 05/07/2025 - 09:25
  25. Site: Ron Paul Institute - Featured Articles
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: John W. And Nisha Whitehead

    “A standing military force, with an overgrown Executive will not long be safe companions to liberty.”—James Madison

    We are being frog-marched into tyranny at the end of a loaded gun. Or rather, hundreds of thousands of loaded guns.

    Let’s not mince words: President Trump’s April 28 executive order is the oldest trick in the authoritarian playbook: martial law masquerading as law and order.

    Officially titled “Strengthening and Unleashing America’s Law Enforcement to Pursue Criminals and Protect Innocent Citizens,” this order is a “heil Hitler” wrapped in the goosestepping, despotic trappings of national security.

    Don’t be fooled by Trump’s tough-on-crime rhetoric, cloaked in patriotic language and the promise of safety.

    This is the language of every strongman who’s ever ruled by force.

    The White House claims the order will “empower state and local law enforcement to relentlessly pursue criminals and protect American communities.” But under this administration, “criminal” increasingly includes anyone who dares to exercise their constitutional rights.

    The order doesn’t merely expand policing—it institutionalizes repression.

    It sets us squarely on the road to martial law.

    If allowed to stand, Trump’s executive order completes our shift from a nation of laws—where even the least among us had the right to due process—to a nation of enforcers: vigilantes with badges who treat “we the people” as suspects and subordinates.

    Without invoking the Insurrection Act or deploying active-duty military forces, Trump has accelerated the transformation of domestic police into his own paramilitary force.

    With the stroke of his presidential pen, he has laid the groundwork for a stealth version of martial law by:

    • Expanding police powers and legal protections;
    • Authorizing the DOJ to defend officers accused of civil rights violations;
    • Increasing the transfer of military equipment to local police;
    • Shielding law enforcement from judicial oversight;
    • Prioritizing law enforcement protection over civil liberties;
    • Embedding DHS and federal agents more deeply into local policing.

    All of this has occurred without congressional debate, judicial review, or constitutional scrutiny.

    For years, we have watched as the government transformed local law enforcement into extensions of the military: outfitted with military hardware and trained in battlefield tactics.

    However, this executive order goes one step further—creating not just a de facto standing army but Trump’s own army: loyal not to the Constitution or the people, but to the president.

    This is the very danger the Founders feared: a militarized police force answerable to a powerful executive, operating outside the bounds of the law.

    This is martial law without a declaration.

    Law enforcement today is equipped like the military, trained in battlefield tactics, and given broad discretion over who to target and how to respond. But these are not soldiers bound by the laws of war. They are civilian enforcers, wielding unchecked power with minimal oversight.

    And they are everywhere.

    Armored vehicles on neighborhood streets. Flashbang raids on family homes. Riot police in small towns. SWAT-style teams deployed by federal agencies. Drones overhead. Mass surveillance below.

    We are fast approaching a reality where constitutional rights exist in name only.

    In practice, we are ruled by a quasi-military bureaucracy empowered to:

    • Detain without trial;
    • Punish political dissent;
    • Seize property under civil asset forfeiture;
    • Classify critics as extremists or terrorists;
    • Conduct mass surveillance on the populace;
    • Raid homes in the name of “public safety”;
    • Use deadly force at the slightest provocation.

    In other words, we’ve got freedom in name only.

    It’s the same scenario nationwide: in big cities and small towns alike, militarized “warrior” cops—hyped up on power—ride roughshod over individual rights by exercising almost absolute discretion over who is a threat, what constitutes resistance, and how harshly they can deal with the citizens they were appointed to “serve and protect.”

    This nationwide epidemic of court-sanctioned police violence has already ensured that unarmed Americans—many of them mentally ill, elderly, disabled, or simply noncompliant—will continue to die at the hands of militarized police.

    From individuals shot for holding garden hoses, to those killed after calling 911 for help, these tragedies underscore a chilling truth: in a police state, the only truly “safe” person is one who offers no resistance at all.

    These killings are the inevitable result of a system that rewards vigilante aggression by warrior cops and punishes accountability.

    These so-called warrior cops, trained to act as judge, jury and executioner, increasingly outnumber those who still honor their oath to uphold the Constitution and serve the public.

    Now, under the cover of executive orders and nationalist rhetoric, that warrior mentality is being redirected toward a more dangerous mission: silencing political dissent.

    Emboldened by Trump’s call to reopen Alcatraz and target so-called “homegrown” threats, these foot soldiers of the police state are no longer going to be tasked with enforcing the law—they will be deployed to enforce political obedience.

    This is not a theory. It is a reality unfolding before our eyes.

    We are living in a creeping state of undeclared martial law.

    The militarization of police and federal agencies over recent decades has only accelerated the timeline toward authoritarianism.

    This is how freedom ends—not with a loud decree, but with the quiet, calculated erosion of every principle we once held sacred.

    We’ve come full circle—from resisting British redcoats to submitting to American forces with the same disdain for liberty.

    Our constitutional foundation is crumbling, and with it, any illusion that those in power still serve the public good.

    Congress, for its part, has abdicated its role as a constitutional check on executive power—passing sweeping authorizations with little scrutiny and failing to rein in executive overreach. The courts, too, have in the past sanctioned many of these abuses in the name of national security, public order, or qualified immunity. Instead of acting as constitutional safeguards, these institutions have largely become rubber stamps.

    Indeed, the president, Congress, the courts, and the police have come to embody the very abuse the Founders fought to resist. Only now are the courts beginning to show glimmers of allegiance to the Constitution.

    This is not about partisanship. This is about power without restraint.

    As tempting as it is to place full blame on Trump for this full-throttle shift into martial law, he is not the architect of this police state. He is its most shameless enabler—a useful frontman for the Deep State in its ongoing war on the American people.

    As we warn in Battlefield America: The War on the American People and A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State, we are sliding fast down a slippery slope to a Constitution-free America.

    We ignore these signs at our peril.

    Reprinted with permission from Rutherford Institute.

  26. Site: Fr. Z's Blog
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: frz@wdtprs.com (Fr. John Zuhlsdorf)
    Live video stream of the chimney of the Sistine Chapel  HERE BEST GUESS Wed 7 May – 1900-2000 (Rome) 1300-1400 (EDT)
  27. Site: AsiaNews.it
    2 days 20 hours ago
    India struck Pakistani territory overnight in response to the Pahalgam terror attack. Pakistan responded by shooting down planes and stressing that the victims were civilians, not terrorists as claimed by India. In Pakistan, activists, religious leaders and civil society groups harshly condemn the attack.
  28. Site: Fr. Z's Blog
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: frz@wdtprs.com (Fr. John Zuhlsdorf)
    You have probably heard about law in Washington that priests will be required to divulge to law enforcement anything about child abuse which they learned when hearing confessions (in the internal forum). Fox now reports HERE that priests who obey … Read More →
  29. Site: LifeNews
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: Steven Ertelt

    A Department of Justice attorney accused of orchestrating a campaign to imprison pro-life activists is now being compelled to testify before Congress, marking a significant moment for pro-life advocates who were unfairly targeted under the Biden administration.

    Sanjay Patel, a DOJ attorney, faces scrutiny for his alleged role in what pro-life groups call a deliberate scheme to prosecute and jail activists under the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act.

    The House Judiciary Committee, led by Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, issued a demand for Patel, along with Special Counsel David Weiss and other Biden-Harris DOJ officials, to appear and address claims of misconduct and weaponization of federal law enforcement against pro-life Americans.

    LifeNews is on GETTR. Please follow us for the latest pro-life news

    The controversy stems from the Biden administration’s aggressive use of the FACE Act to charge and convict 23 pro-life advocates, many of whom were sentenced to years in prison for peacefully protesting outside abortion clinics. Critics argue the law, intended to protect access to reproductive health facilities, was misused to silence pro-life voices.

    In January 2025, President Donald Trump signed an executive order pardoning all 23 individuals, condemning what he called Biden’s “lawfare” targeting elderly protesters and others engaged in nonviolent demonstrations.

    “This is a great honor to sign this,” Trump said, emphasizing the need to restore justice for those he described as wrongfully persecuted.

    The pardons followed formal requests from the Thomas More Society, which submitted detailed appeals highlighting the activists’ moral character and the excessive nature of their prosecutions.

    Pro-life leaders hailed the pardons as a victory but stressed that accountability for DOJ officials like Patel remains critical.

    The House Judiciary Committee’s probe focuses on allegations that the Biden DOJ selectively enforced the FACE Act, ignoring attacks on pro-life pregnancy centers while aggressively pursuing activists. According to reports, over 100 crisis pregnancy centers and churches were attacked following the 2022 Dobbs decision overturning Roe v. Wade, yet few perpetrators faced prosecution.

    As Patel prepares to face congressional questioning, pro-life activists see the hearings as an opportunity to highlight what they view as systemic bias in the justice system.

    The hearings are expected to draw significant attention, with pro-life supporters calling for transparency and reform. For now, the 23 pardoned activists, including grandmother Joan Bell and ministry leader Bevelyn Williams, are free, but their advocates say the fight for justice continues.

    The post Biden Attorney Behind Putting Pro-Life Americans in Prison Forced to Testify Before Congress appeared first on LifeNews.com.

  30. Site: Mises Institute
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: Connor O'Keeffe
    Real ID is the latest example of the government using 9/11 as an excuse to grab more power.
  31. Site: Saint Louis Catholic
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: thetimman

    Friends, pray and have faith. In God’s perfect time, He will raise us up for the glory of His Name.

    Who knoweth but he will return, and forgive, and leave a blessing behind him, sacrifice and libation to the Lord your God?

  32. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    Pakistan Closes Airspace For 48 Hours, Authorizes Response To Indian Attack Which "Ignited Inferno In Region"

    Though aerial fighting between the nuclear-armed rivals does not appear to be sustained and ongoing at this point, Pakistan has closed its airspace for nearly all flights on Wednesday, in the aftermath of the Indian cross-border strikes which killed at least 26 people – including a 3-year-old girl – and wounded at least 46 other people, Pakistani authorities say based on the latest revised death toll. International carriers have also canceled flights to the region, and access to social media, including X, was temporarily blocked in Pakistan amid the assault. Heavy shelling is being reported along the Line of Control (LOC) separating the historic enemy nations.

    The true casualty toll could be higher, as a Pakistani militant chief targeted in the attacks on 'terror camps' said 10 of his relatives, including five children, were killed. The Islamist group Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) was one of the groups targeted, and its leader Masood Azhar said his older sister, brother-in-law, his nephew and niece are among the dead.

    Pakistan says that civilians were harmed and targeted that mosques were hit across six locations in its territory, and so has the right to respond to aggression. Indian has said it attack nine terror sites, but has been careful to stipulate these were non-military locations, and is now seeking de-escalation.

    A building in Muridke, Pakistan, that was damaged by an Indian missile strike

    Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has ordered his armed forces to prepare a plan for "self-defense" with "corresponding actions" in order "avenge the loss of innocent Pakistani lives". The order was issued after an emergency National Security Commitee (NSC) meeting on Wednesday.

    "Pakistan reserves the right to respond, in self-defense, at a time, place, and manner of its choosing to avenge the loss of innocent Pakistani lives and blatant violation of its sovereignty," the NSC readout said. "The Armed Forces of Pakistan have duly been authorized to undertake corresponding actions in this regard."

    Pakistan's Government Security Committee has charged that India has "ignited an inferno in the region". These do indeed seem to be fighting words.

    What India has dubbed 'Operation Sindoor' is intended to be limited, Indian leaders have said, but it's highly questionable whether it was a 'success' - given that India lost at least one or possibly up to five fighter jets.

    The conflict between India and Pakistan has begun.

    Israel encouraged India to do this, because it benefits strategically in various ways, that involve Turkey/Iran. It also may be the death nell for China's belt and road initiative if Syria wasn't alreadypic.twitter.com/yIh8rRBiac

    — Syrian Girl (@Partisangirl) May 7, 2025

    Social media images and footage, including issued by AFP, appear to confirm that aircraft were downed but without further clear or verified details:

    Pakistani military sources later said they shot down five Indian Air Force jets and one drone in “self-defense,” claiming three Rafale jets – sophisticated multi-role fighters made in France – were among those downed as well as a MiG-29 and an SU-30 fighter.

    A local resident and government official told CNN that an unidentified fighter aircraft had crashed on a school building in Indian-administered Kashmir.

    Metal debris in the Pulwama district of Indian-administered Kashmir on Wednesday, via Reuters

    "Pakistani officials released a video showing smoke rising from apparent wreckage that officials claimed was one of the downed planes," Washington Post also writes. "The claims could not be independently verified, and the Indian government had no immediate response."

    While India has hailed the operation an appropriate response to the terror attacks in Indian-administered Kashmir which left 25 Indians and one Nepali dead, New Delhi is assuring the world that it will "retaliate resolutely" if Pakistan strikes back.

    But Pakistan could be readying to do just that, as it is now a no-fly zone for the next 48 hours.

    According to a regional source, "During, and shortly after India's strikes on Pakistani terror camps - between 1:05 am IST and 1:30 am IST - all flights to Islamabad and Lahore were diverted to Karachi Airport, where flight ops came under severe stress. Following this, the entire airspace was shut down, except few essential flights."

    Airspace cleared over Pakistan. Via CNN

    Below are some notable quotes from Pakistan’s PM Sharif in his emergency address to the country’s parliament:

    • “On April 22, Pahalgam … had a sad incident. Indian media and politicians went on to make false allegations against Pakistan. They tried to show the world that, God forbid, Pakistan is behind this incident.”
    • “I said [at the time] Pakistan has no linkages with this incident, and I went on to say that if anyone has any issues, then they should go ahead with an international commission and Pakistan will cooperate so that things could come clear.”
    • “Last night, they [India] had, all in all, 80 jets with which they attacked six places in Pakistan, including two in [Pakistani-administered Kashmir].”
    • “The Pakistani side was completely ready. …Our jets did not [leave] our airspace.”
    • “The moment the Indian side released payloads, we engaged their jets and shot five Indian jets … some of which fell in Indian-occupied Kashmir and one in Bathinda.”
    Mosque partially damaged by an Indian missile strike on the outskirts of Bahawalpur, Pakistan. AP

    Increasing the state of tensions further, India on Wednesday is holding mock air raid and other emergency drills across dozens of districts near the Pakistani border considered high risk, the Indian Express newspaper reports.

    Strike locations via Al Jazeera map:

    Below is a compilation of reactions from world leaders via CNN:

    • United States: President Donald Trump called India’s military operation against Pakistan “a shame.” US Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke to the national security advisers from India and Pakistan and urged “both to keep lines of communication open and avoid escalation.”
    • United Arab Emirates: The UAE has asked for India and Pakistan “to exercise restraint, de-escalate tensions, and avoid further escalation that could threaten regional and international peace.”
    • United Nations: UN Secretary-General António Guterres has “expressed deep concern over Indian military operations across the Line of Control and the international border with Pakistan.”
    • Japan: Yoshimasa Hayashi, Japanese chief cabinet secretary, said Tokyo was “deeply concerned this incident could incite retaliation and escalate to a full-scale military conflict” and urged both India and Pakistan “to exercise restraint and stabilize the situation through dialogue.”
    • China: China has expressed regret over India’s military action against Pakistan and said it’s concerned about the current developments. “India and Pakistan are neighbors that cannot be moved, and both are also China’s neighbors,” a spokesperson for China’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement Wednesday. China has been trying to improve relations with India as part of a broader diplomatic push to counter pressure from the Trump administration. Pakistan, meanwhile, is one of China’s closest partners and a key supporter of its Belt and Road Initiative.
    • Russia: Russia’s foreign ministry said it was deeply concerned about the growing military confrontation between India and Pakistan and called for both countries to show restraint, Russian state media TASS reported. The Kremlin has close relations with both India and Pakistan, but has been historically close to New Delhi, dating back to the Soviet era. Russia is also one of India’s key arms suppliers.
    • Turkey: The Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it was following the developments “with concern,” warning that India’s overnight attacks “raises the risk of an all-out war.” “We condemn such provocative steps as well as attacks targeting civilians and civilian infrastructure.” It added that it echoed Pakistan’s calls for an investigation into the April 22 terrorist attack.

    Shelling is reportedly ongoing near the Line of Control (LOC), and social media users have captured daytime explosions in border villages and towns.

    CONFIRMED: Pakistan used Chinese long-range air-to-air missile PL-15E against India.

    Parts of the missile fell in Hoshiarpur, Punjab, India. Photo (1st and 2nd) provided by Indian media.

    The PL-15 has a range of 200-300 km for the domestic version and about 145 km for the… pic.twitter.com/51YXEuFrAv

    — Clash Report (@clashreport) May 7, 2025

    Meanwhile, Bloomberg observes of regional south Asian markets that "Pakistan stocks slumped as India conducted targeted military strikes against the nation. Shares in India were relatively steady after the strikes." And the Philippines’ key stock index "gained as much as 1.8% after the country’s central bank chief said further reductions in interest rates were on the table for this year."

    *  *  *

    Best sellers at ZH Store last week:

    Tyler Durden Wed, 05/07/2025 - 09:05
  33. Site: AsiaNews.it
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Since December, Sister Liza Ruedas, a nun of the Daughters of Charity, has launched an awareness campaign ahead of the midterm elections scheduled for May 12. The goal is to increase 'awareness and participation in political change.' The Catholic Church of the Philippines has consecrated itself to Divine Mercy in the face of the "serious challenges" facing both the country and the world.
  34. Site: AsiaNews.it
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Since December, Sister Liza Ruedas, a nun of the Daughters of Charity, has launched an awareness campaign ahead of the midterm elections scheduled for May 12. The goal is to increase 'awareness and participation in political change.' The Catholic Church of the Philippines has consecrated itself to Divine Mercy in the face of the "serious challenges" facing both the country and the world.
  35. Site: Mundabor's blog
    2 days 20 hours ago
    Author: Mundabor
    I was watching this morning the video of Trump’s meeting with Carney in front of the journalists. Carney started by saying that Canada imports a lot from the US, which was likely meant to make Canada feel indispensable in some way. Look here, pal. You need us. We are so important to you. You better […]
  36. Site: Mises Institute
    2 days 20 hours ago
    "the Committee decided to maintain the target range for the federal funds rate at 4-1/4 to 4-1/2 percent." Click here for post-FOMC press conference.
  37. Site: Catholic Herald
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Author: Elise Ann Allen/ Crux

    One of the most senior cardinals has stressed the importance of unity and prayed that the conclave will bestow a new pontiff who reminds the world of human and spiritual values by awakening consciences.

    His comments came during a special Mass on 7 May prior to the start of the conclave that will open this afternoon in Rome to elect the next pope.

    During the Mass celebrated pro eligendo Romano Pontifice – “for electing the new pope” – Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, 91, Dean of the College of Cardinals, highlighted that they were standing above St. Peter’s tomb.

    In that spot, and on the cusp of casting their first vote for the new pontiff, “We feel united with the entire People of God in their sense of faith, love for the pope and confident expectation,” he said.

    “We are here to invoke the help of the Holy Spirit, to implore his light and strength so that the pope elected may be he whom the Church and humanity need at this difficult and complex turning
    point in history,” he said.

    Re described how the conclave takes place amid several global conflicts and a changing geopolitical situation, as old alliances appear to be dissolving while new ones yet to be fully understood are slowly taking shape.

    Cardinale Giovanni Battista Re leads the special Mass prior to the start of the conclave, at St Peter’s Basilica, Vatican, 7 May 2025 (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)

    After Wednesday’s Mass, the 133 cardinals who will elect the next pope will have time for lunch, rest and to finish moving into the Vatican’s Saint Martha guesthouse before the official start of the conclave later that afternoon.

    Calling the election of the pope one of “the highest human and ecclesial responsibility”, Re in his homily stressed the importance of prayer in the process and the need to set aside “every personal consideration”, and instead prioritise the good of the Church, and of humanity.

    He reflected on the day’s Gospel reading, in which Jesus tells his disciples “love one another as I have loved you,” adding that, “no one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.”

    With this instruction, Jesus transformed the old teaching not to do something to others that one would not have done to oneself into “something positive” and new, he said.

    “The love that Jesus reveals knows no limits and must characterise the thoughts and actions of all his disciples, who must always show authentic love in their behaviour and commit themselves to building a new civilisation, what Paul VI called the ‘civilisation of love,’” he said.

    In this sense, Re said, “love is the only force capable of changing the world.”

    Jesus gave an example of this love, he said, while humbling himself to wash the disciples’ feet during the Last Supper, “without discrimination” and without excluding Judas, despite knowing that Judas would betray him.

    This serves as a reminder, Re said, “that the fundamental quality of pastors is love to the point of complete self-giving.”

    Re said the readings were an invitation to cardinals electing the pope “to fraternal love, to mutual help and to commitment to ecclesial communion and universal human fraternity”.

    Faithful attend the special mass for the election of the Roman Pontiff, prior to the start of the conclave, at St Peter’s Basilica, Vatican, 7 May 2025 (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)

    “Among the tasks of every successor of Peter is that of fostering communion: communion of all Christians with Christ; communion of the bishops with the pope; communion of the bishops among themselves,” he said.

    Re insisted that this “is not a self-referential communion”, but is rather one “entirely directed towards communion among persons, peoples and cultures, with a concern that the Church should always be a home and school of communion”.

    It also represents a strong call “to maintain the unity of the Church on the path traced out by Christ to the apostles,” he said, saying unity within the Church “is willed by Christ”.

    This is a type of unity, he said, “that does not mean uniformity, but a firm and profound communion in diversity, provided that full fidelity to the Gospel is maintained”.

    Each pope who is elected continues to carry forward Jesus’s mandate to Peter and is a representative of Christ on earth and is “the rock on which the Church is built”, Re said.

    The election of a new pope, then, is “not a simple succession of persons”, but, rather, it is always “the apostle Peter who returns”, he said.

    Addressing the cardinals who will elect the new pope, Re said they must remember that “everything is conducive to an awareness of the presence of God, in whose sight each person will one day be judged,” adding that this is why the voting takes place before Michelangelo’s famed fresco of the Final Judgement.

    “Let us pray, then, that the Holy Spirit, who in the last hundred years has given us a series of truly holy and great pontiffs, will give us a new pope according to God’s heart for the good of the Church and of humanity,” he said.

    Re also prayed that God would give the Church a new pope who “knows how best to awaken the consciences of all and the moral and spiritual energies in today’s society, characterised by great technological progress but which tends to forget God.”

    “Today’s world expects much from the Church regarding the safeguarding of those fundamental human and spiritual values without which human coexistence will not be better nor bring good to future generations,” he said.

    He closed his homily asking for the Virgin Mary’s intercession so that God would “will enlighten the minds of the Cardinal electors and help them agree on the pope that our time needs”.

    RELATED: Does the Holy Spirit choose the Pope? Pope Benedict’s surprising answer

    Photo: Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re enjoys conversation with faithful before the May candlelight Rosary Procession around St Peter’s Square on May 03, 2025 in Vatican City, Vatican. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)

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    The post Top cardinal prays for a pope who can ‘awaken’ consciences first appeared on Catholic Herald.

    The post Top cardinal prays for a pope who can ‘awaken’ consciences appeared first on Catholic Herald.

  38. Site: AsiaNews.it
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Along the banks of the Amur River and on Sakhalin Island, small ethnic groups have lived since time immemorial, braving extreme cold and remaining distant from modern-day Russia while preserving animist religious traditions. Documented by great 19th-century Russian explorers, today they are a small people of only a few hundred individuals who speak their own language. And they believe that even if they vanish, they will reunite with the cycles of nature.
  39. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    Judge Blocks Department Of Education From Canceling COVID-Related School Aid

    Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times,

    A federal judge on May 6 blocked the U.S. Department of Education from canceling more than $1 billion in funding that was allocated to help address the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on primary schools and students.

    U.S. District Judge Edgardo Ramos entered a preliminary injunction that prohibits the Department of Education from enforcing its recission of extensions for the funding that had been granted in January by the prior administration.

    Education officials also cannot modify the previously-approved extensions without giving the states at least 14 days notice, the judge said.

    Congress allocated funds to states to distribute to schools to address problems stemming from the pandemic. The more than $276 billion was distributed to states through an education stabilization fund. Under laws passed by Congress, states had until Sept. 30, 2024, to designate the money, and until Jan. 28, 2025, to access funds to achieve the designations.

    States could ask for extensions for the latter deadline, and a number did so. The Department of Education granted extensions to at least 16 states, and Washington, enabling them to access the money through March 2026. 

    Education Secretary Linda McMahon informed the states in March that the extensions were being rescinded because additional review had determined they were “not justified” in part because the pandemic is over, although the states could reapply for extensions.

    The plaintiffs—New York, Oregon, 13 other states, Washington, and Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro—said that they were facing being cut off from more than $1 billion if a preliminary injunction was not entered.

    In a memorandum in support of their motion for an injunction, they said that the Department of Education’s shift with regards to the extension requests was arbitrary and capricious, in violation of federal law. The change “assumes incorrectly that all [the] appropriations were intended only for use during the pandemic” and “lacks any reasoned explanation,” they wrote.

    Lawyers for the government said in response that the actions were not arbitrary and capricious.

    “The Department’s actions are not arbitrary, capricious, or contrary to law because recission of the prior extension was within the Department’s discretion and did not conflict with the relevant appropriations statutes,” they said in a brief.

    The lawyers also said that the plaintiffs would not be irreparably harmed absent an injunction because they can still reapply for a fresh extension, but have chosen not to do so.

    The Department of Justice, which represents agencies in court, did not respond to a request for comment on the ruling by publication time.

    New York Attorney General Letitia James, a Democrat, said in a statement that “this is a major win for our students and teachers who are counting on this funding to help them succeed.”

    Tyler Durden Wed, 05/07/2025 - 08:45
  40. Site: AsiaNews.it
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Today's headlines:the Burmese junta extends the ceasefire due to the earthquake (so far never respected); In Turkey, popular support grows for Imamoglu in a hypothetical two-man race against Erdogan for the presidency; Seoul's High Court postpones the trial of presidential candidate Lee Jae-myung;Nepal among the countries in the world where climate change 'inaction' is most evident;Bangkok closes a popular tourist site near the Laos border due to armed clashes.
  41. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    Futures Rise Ahead Of FOMC, Boosted By Trade War De-escalation, China Stimmies

    US equity futures are higher while global market are mixed ahead of the FOMC decision later today, following news tariff talks between the US and China will begin, and after a surprise stimulus by China. As of 8:00am, S&P and Nasdaq futures are 0.6% higher (though off the highs) on reports Bessent will meet Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng in Switzerland this weekend in the first confirmed talks between the two superpowers. Bessent later said on Fox News that the meeting will be more about de-escalation than any sort of big trade deal. In premarket trading Mag7 names and Semis are leading the markets higher while RTY appears to be squeezing into outperformance. Cyclicals are poised for a strong session, too. Overnight China’s PBOC cut its reverse repo rates and lowered lender reserve ratio to help stimulate growth. India conducted military strikes in Pakistan in which Pakistan said it shot down five Indian jets. Attention shifts to the Powell and the FOMC at 2pm which is expected to yield no surprises as the CB preaches patience. Focus during the 2:30pm press conference will be on any commentary on how long Powell intends to wait for further clarity re tariffs/impacts (reminder no SEP). Bond yields are higher alongside a stronger USD which snapped three days of declines as the Taiwan Dollar slid for a second day. Commodities are bid higher led by Ags and Energy; gold/silver are modestly lower after another powerful breakout earlier this week.

    In premarket trading, Magnificent Seven stocks are all higher (Tesla +1.3%, Apple +1.2%, Amazon +1.2%, Meta +0.9%, Nvidia +0.6%, Alphabet +0.6%, Microsoft +0.5%). Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) rose 1.6% after Nvidia’s closest rival in AI processors gave a strong revenue forecast for the current period, boosted by demand for high-end computers capable of creating and running AI software. Sarepta Therapeutics plunged 19% after the maker of rare disease treatments cut its net product revenue forecast for the year. Here are some other notable premarket movers:

    • Apellis Pharmaceuticals (APLS) falls 13% after posting disappointing 1Q revenue.
    • Arista Networks (ANET) declines 5% as analysts note that the company’s forecast is being clouded by a tariff overhang and will prove to be conservative.
    • Charles River Laboratories (CRL) rises 15% after the company entered a cooperation agreement with Elliott Investment Management. The company also launched a strategic review.
    • Electronic Arts (EA) gains 4% after the video-game company issued annual net bookings guidance that came ahead of consensus expectations.
    • Klaviyo (KVYO) climbs 4% after the marketing automation company boosted its full-year revenue forecast.
    • Marvell (MRVL) falls 7% after the company narrowed its first quarter 2026 guidance range to be about $1.875 billion within a range of plus or minus 2%, versus the prior range of plus or minus 5%.
    • ODP Corp. (ODP) rises 8% after the office products company reported sales for the first quarter that beat the average analyst estimate.
    • Oscar Health (OSCR) rallies 21% after the health insurer reported total revenue and adjusted Ebitda for the first quarter that beat the average analyst estimate.
    • Porch Group (PRCH) rises 21% after the home-services software company reported first-quarter revenue that beat expectations and raised its full-year revenue forecast.
    • Teradata (TDC) falls 5% after the infrastructure software company gave a second-quarter outlook that is weaker than expected.
    • Uber Technologies Inc. (UBER) drops 2% after posting weaker-than-expected quarterly gross bookings and slower gains in its rideshare business, raising the possibility of a consumer pullback amid souring sentiment about the economy.
    • Vestis (VSTS) tumbles 25% after the uniform services firm issued a revenue forecast for the current quarter that trailed Wall Street expectations. The company also eliminated its dividend in an effort to strengthen its balance sheet.
    • Walt Disney Co. (DIS) gains 6% after reporting fiscal second-quarter results that beat Wall Street estimates and raising its outlook for the full year, citing strong performances from theme parks and streaming TV.
    • Zeekr’s US-listed shares (ZK) rallies 11% as Geely Auto said it wants to take the Chinese electric vehicle company private.

    Today's highlight is the FOMC decision, where the Fed is expected to do nothing (full preview here): Powell will repeat the message that tariffs pose risks to both sides of the Fed’s dual mandate and they intend to wait for further clarity. While the FOMC appears to be setting a higher bar for rate cuts than during the 2019 trade war, Goldman does not think that high inflation would deter it from cutting if the unemployment rate begins to trend higher as the tariff shock hits the economy (full FOMC preview here).

    “The Fed will bang on the same message again: they won’t cut rates, and they will try to push back the moment where they will need to as long as possible,” said François Rimeu, senior strategist at Credit Mutuel Asset Management. “In that sense, there is somehow a disconnect between the market expecting multiple cuts this year and inflation expectations which remain high for the second half of the year.”

    Overnight sentiment was boosted after US and Chinese officials announced they will meet this week in Switzerland. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told Fox News the meeting will focus on de-escalation rather than reaching a deal, but said the current tariff rates aren’t sustainable. Sentiment was also lifted by a reduction in China’s policy rate, as Beijing unveiled several measures to support its economy. 

    “It’s clear that the US and China want to have some sort of de-escalation and the rhetoric has eased a little bit, so the move upwards can definitely continue,” said Justin Onuekwusi, chief investment officer at St James’s Place. The Chinese rate cut is an added positive, showing that “China recognizes the need to prevent a slowdown in growth,” he said. 

    In Europe, the Stoxx 600 falls 0.3%, led lower by health care and retail stocks while miners and auto stocks outperform. Pharmaceutical stocks followed their US peers lower after the US Food and Drug Administration named Vinay Prasad, a hematologist oncologist and critic of the Covid-19 vaccine for children, as the next director of the Center for Biologics and Research. Here are the most notable movers:

    • Novo Nordisk shares rise as much as 6.5%, the biggest gainer in Europe’s benchmark Stoxx 600 gauge by index points, as some analysts say a guidance cut from the Danish drugmaker was already priced in.
    • Ahold Delhaize shares gain as much as 5%, extending recent gains to hit a fresh 2002-high, after the Dutch retailer posted earnings ahead of expectations in the first quarter.
    • Sampo shares jump as much as 3.7%, gaining for a sixth consecutive session and hitting a new all-time high, after the Finnish insurer delivered earnings that surpassed expectations in the first quarter.
    • Pandora shares gain as much as 5.5% after the Danish jeweler reported a slight first-quarter earnings beat, with US like-for-like sales sequentially accelerating.
    • Amplifon shares rise as much as 5.6%, adding to Tuesday’s 6.3% advance following the hearing-aid retailer’s 1Q results, reiterated guidance and expectations for strong French market growth from the second quarter onward.
    • Auto1 shares rally as much as 11% to the highest since 2021, after the used car platform raised its full-year guidance for gross profit and adj. Ebitda.
    • Pharmaceutical stocks follow US peers lower after Vinay Prasad, a hematologist oncologist and critic of the Covid-19 vaccine for children, was named as the FDA’s next director of the Center for Biologics and Research.
    • Sea-freight stocks decline on the prospect of lower shipping rates after President Donald Trump said the US would stop its bombing campaign against Houthis in Yemen.
    • Ambu shares slump as much as 13%, the most in six months, as performance by the Danish medical equipment company’s endoscopy businesses disappointed.
    • Tomra shares drop as much as 13% following first-quarter results which came in significantly below expectations, with DNB Markets noting in particular “negative deviation” from the firm’s recycling segment.
    • BioMerieux shares fall as much as 2.9% as RBC downgrades the French biotech company to sector perform from outperform, saying that risks to margin aren’t fully reflected in consensus estimates.
    • Storebrand shares drop as much as 3.8% after the Norwegian insurer and asset manager reported profits below expectations in the first quarter, following a disappointing performance across its most important business lines.
    • Fresenius SE shares slipped as much as 1.7% as an in line earnings update with unchanged guidance wasn’t enough to further fuel this year’s rally in the dialysis company.

    Asian stocks fluctuated, as Chinese shares pared earlier gains driven by the central bank’s stimulus and a confirmation of trade talks with the US. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index erased a climb of as much as 0.7% to trade little changed, as concerns over trade uncertainties remained. TSMC, Hitachi and AIA Group were the biggest positive contributors, while Sony Group, Alibaba Group and Toyota Motor weighed most on the gauge. While Chinese stocks pared early gains sparked by a cut in interest rates and measures to support the economy, the onshore CSI 300 Index remained among the biggest gainers in the region. Sentiment also got a boost as senior officials agreed to hold trade talks with the US later this week. Prospects for a de-escalation in US-China trade tensions have also raised optimism over trade deals for other countries, helping to lift benchmarks in South Korea, Japan and Australia. Elsewhere, Pakistan stocks slumped as India conducted targeted military strikes against the nation. Shares in India were relatively steady after the strikes. Meanwhile, the Philippines’ key stock index gained as much as 1.8% after the country’s central bank chief said further reductions in interest rates were on the table for this year.

    In FX, the Bloomberg’s dollar index rose 0.2% snapping a three-day losing streak; investors see a possibility that the talks will lead to a dialing back of tariffs between the two countries, which could support the dollar. Traders also awaited a Federal Reserve meeting later on Wednesday, where officials are expected to hold interest rates unchanged but could offer clues on this year’s monetary-easing path. The yen is the weakest of the G-10 currencies, falling 0.6% against the greenback as haven assets underperform.

    In rates, treasuries fall ahead of the Federal Reserve decision, with losses led by the front-end, extending Tuesday’s late flattening move. US 2- to 7-year yields are 2bp-3bp higher on the day with long-end little changed, flattening 5s30s curve by about 2bp; the 10-year near 4.32% is about 2bp lower than Tuesday’s auction result. The Treasury auction cycle is on hiatus until Thursday due to Federal Reserve policy announcement at 2pm New York time and Chair Powell’s news conference 30 minutes later. Fed policy announcement is widely expected to produce no change in the fed funds target range; traders in recent days have been pushing rate-cut expectations into next year, collapsing SOFR Dec25/Dec26 spreads. Treasury auction cycle concludes Thursday with $25 billion 30-year new issue, following strong demand for the 10-year.

    In commodities, oil prices advance, with WTI rising 0.8% and topping $60 a barrel at one stage for the first time in a week. Spot gold falls $57 to around $3,374/oz.

    The US economic calendar includes March consumer credit at 3pm. We get earnings from Disney and Uber.

    Market Snapshot

    • S&P 500 mini +0.5%
    • Nasdaq 100 mini +0.6%
    • Russell 2000 mini +0.9%
    • Stoxx Europe 600 -0.3%
    • DAX -0.1%
    • CAC 40 -0.6%
    • 10-year Treasury yield +2 basis points at 4.32%
    • VIX -0.4 points at 24.34
    • Bloomberg Dollar Index +0.3% at 1220.28
    • euro -0.1% at $1.1353
    • WTI crude +0.7% at $59.5/barrel

    Top Overnight News

    • India conducted military strikes that hit nine targets in Pakistan, which said it shot down five jets in retaliation. New Delhi said it targeted known terror camps, but Islamabad said 26 civilians were killed and called the move an “act of war.” BBG
    • US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer will travel later this week to Switzerland for trade talks with China led by Vice Premier He Lifeng, seeking to de-escalate a tariff standoff that has threatened to hammer both economies. It will be the first confirmed trade talks between the countries since Trump’s early April tariff announcements. BBG
    • Chinese authorities announced on Wednesday a raft of stimulus measures, including interest rate cuts and a major liquidity injection, as Beijing steps up efforts to soften the economic damage caused by the trade war with the United States. RTRS
    • The yield gap between 10- and 30-year Japanese government bonds hit a record. BBG
    • The UK and the US are close to agreeing a trade pact that would cushion the impact of Trump’s “liberation day” tariffs by granting lower-tariff quotas for British car and steel exports, according to officials in London and Washington. FT
    • German factory orders rose 3.6% in March, beating forecasts and signaling strength in the run up to US tariff announcements. BBG
    • Traders are betting on a slower pace of Fed rate cuts this year amid economic resilience. Money markets are pricing three quarter-point reductions in 2025, one fewer than at the start of April. BBG
    • Watching Biotech: Group down ~8.5% yesterday (3 sigma) following the appointment of Vinay Prasad to be the director of CBER (this is the seat Peter Marks previously held). Biopharma was already heavy to start the week following the Trump pharma tariff commentary on Monday. A lot of focus centering around Prasad’s less industry-friendly views on accelerate drug approvals, negative views on vaccines among other criticisms of the FDA

    Tariffs/Trade

    • China's Ministry of Commerce confirmed US-China trade talks with Vice Premier He Lifeng to visit Switzerland from May 9th-12th and will visit France from May 12th-16th for economic and financial dialogue.
    • Chinese Foreign Ministry (on Geneva talks) says meeting was requested by the US; US should stop threatening if it wants a deal. holding tariff talks with the US before curb's removal, says, China's position has not changed.
    • US Treasury Secretary Bessent and Trade Representative Greer are to meet with China's lead representatives on economic matters later this week in Switzerland, while Bessent confirmed he is meeting the Chinese team on Saturday in Switzerland and said they agreed to talk on Saturday and will agree on Sunday what they are going to talk about. Bessent said his sense is this will be about de-escalation and said they have got to de-escalate before they can move forward, as well as noted that the US doesn’t want to decouple from China over textiles and similar goods but does want to decouple over strategic industries. Furthermore, he said trade frictions can go down, Americans can get fairer deals, and everything is on the table.
    • Mexico's agricultural minister said he met with US counterpart Rollins and reached agreements that will be beneficial to both countries.

    A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk

    APAC stocks traded mostly higher as participants digested the PBoC's announcement to loosen monetary policy and reports of upcoming US-China talks this week but with the gains capped amid geopolitical escalation between India and Pakistan. ASX 200 eked mild gains as outperformance in the commodity-related sectors was partially offset by losses in healthcare and tech, while the top-weighted financials industry was kept afloat post-NAB earnings. Nikkei 225 was underpinned at the open as Japanese markets reopened from the four-day weekend although momentum waned shortly after in the absence of any major pertinent catalysts for Japan. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were underpinned following reports that the US and China will meet for talks on Saturday involving US Treasury Secretary Bessent, USTR Greer and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng, while there was also encouragement from the briefing by Chinese officials where PBoC Governor Pan announced to cut RRR by 50bps and the policy interest rate by 10bps.

    Top Asian News

    • PBoC Governor Pan announced to cut RRR by 50bps effective May 15th and to cut the policy interest rate by 10bps effective on May 8th with the 7-day reverse repo rate lowered to 1.40% (from 1.50%) and interest rates on Standing Lending Facility across all tenors lowered by 10bps. Pan stated that the policy rate cut will lead to a Loan Prime Rate cut of 10bps and the RRR cut will release about CNY 1tln in liquidity. Pan also noted that they will cut the personal housing provision fund rate by 25bps and will set up CNY 500bln in re-lending loans for elderly care and service consumption. Furthermore, the total quota of two monetary policy tools to support capital markets will be raised to CNY 800bln and they will lower interest rates on structural policy tools by 25bps with re-lending rates lowered by 25bps effective today, while Pan also stated that China will use multiple policy tools to make dynamic adjustments and will guide commercial banks to lower deposit rates.
    • China’s financial regulator said they will expand the pilot scheme to allow insurance companies to invest in stock markets and will take further steps to stabilise the property market, while they will guide financial institutions to maintain steady financing support for the property market, guide banks to provide financing support for foreign trade companies affected by US tariffs and will approve CNY 60bln in long-term insurance funds into the stock market.
    • China’s securities regulator said US tariff policy has brought great pressure to China’s capital markets but added that they will consolidate good momentum in capital markets and that China will roll out reform measures for tech boards. Furthermore, they will forcefully promote long-term capital into the stock market and said ample preparations have been made for dealing with external shocks.
    • RBNZ Financial Stability Report stated that risks to the financial system have increased over the past six months and while the global economic environment has become more volatile, New Zealand's financial institutions are in a strong position to support the economy. RBNZ also stated that banks have strong capital and liquidity buffers in place to maintain credit flows even if conditions deteriorate further.
    • PBoC says FX reserves USD 3.282tln end-April (prev. USD 3.241tln), gold reserves USD 243.59bln end-April (prev. USD 229.59bln)

    European bourses (STOXX 600 -0.3%) opened mostly lower and has traded sideways throughout the morning thus far. There have been a few updates to keep traders busy; 1) US and China are set to hold talks in Switzerland over trade, 2) China announced new easing measures amid global economic uncertainty; the PBoC is to cut its RRR by 50bps and reduce its 7-day reverse repo by 10bps (other measures were also announced), 3) India launched air strikes on Pakistan. European sectors are mixed and with the breadth of the market fairly narrow aside from the top/bottom performers. Autos takes the top spot, lifted by post-earning strength in BMW (+3.5%). Healthcare is pressured as traders react to the FDA appointing Vinay Prasad as its new vaccine chief. Elsewhere, Novo Nordisk (+5%) gains despite reporting a mixed set of Q1 results, cutting guidance and said it would not be conducting a buyback programme in 2025.

    Top European News

    • German Defence Minister Pistorius is reportedly seeking a drastic increase in German annual defence budget; aims for over EUR 60bln/year in defence spending from 2025, according to Reuters sources.
    • Germany's BaFin says financial institutions are generally currently in a strong position; uncertainty is extremely high and will remain so; possibility that problems in the non-banking sector have an impact on banks cannot be ruled out.
    • Germany's VDMA says March orders +4% Y/Y (domestic -3%, foreign +6%).

    FX

    • DXY is attempting to claw back some of Tuesday's losses that were seen alongside a pullback in US yields. Recent optimism has been spurred by news that US and China trade talks are to take place in Switzerland from May 9th-12th. For today's US agenda, US Treasury Secretary Bessent is due to testify before the House. Thereafter, all eyes will be on the FOMC whereby expectations are for the Bank to stand pat on rates with Fed Chair Powell continuing to note that the Fed is well-positioned to wait for greater clarity before considering altering its policy stance. DXY is currently tucked within yesterday's 99.17-100.09 range.
    • EUR is flat vs. the USD after a session of gains on Tuesday which saw the pair advance from an opening level of 1.1314 to a peak at 1.1381 alongside a softening in US yields. From a domestic perspective, CDU Leader Merz was elected Chancellor in the second-round parliamentary vote.
    • JPY the laggard across the majors with USD/JPY back above the 143 mark. The domestic story for Japan is a quiet one as market participants returned from the four-day weekend. USD/JPY has ventured as high as 143.35 but is still some way off Tuesday's best at 144.27.
    • GBP is a touch softer vs. the USD and EUR, giving back some of yesterday's gains which were triggered by a Reuters report that the EU and UK have agreed to hold annual summits to discuss their relationship. Shortly after, the UK reached a free trade agreement with India, with India set to cut tariffs on 90% of UK imports. Thereafter, reports suggested that the UK is closing in on US trade pact with lower tariff quotas for cars and steel. The totality of the potential deals underpinned Cable sending the pair to a 1.3402 peak before returning to a 1.33 handle; currently oscillating around the 1.3350 mark.
    • Antipodeans are both softer vs. the USD and unable to benefit from the PBoC's decision to cut the RRR by 50bps, the 7-day reverse repo rate by 10bps and other easing measures. From a domestic perspective, NZ published mixed Employment data and a softer-than-expected Labour Cost Index but had little follow-through into NZD.

    Fixed Income

    • USTs traded without direction overnight but as traders digest the latest US-China trade talk updates and China's latest monetary policy package, US paper has been coming under some modest pressure. USTs are at the bottom end of a relatively narrow 111-04 to 111-11+ band. Focus for today will be on the FOMC (expected to keep rates steady).
    • Bunds were initially firmer, but only modestly so and unable to make a foothold above the 131.00 handle. As such, Bunds are shy of Tuesday’s 131.08 best when Merz failed to become Chancellor in the first vote - but secured the role in a second vote. Similar to USTs, Bunds were pressured in the European morning and found themselves back towards their 130.79 base. Thereafter a strong outing from France saw Bunds bounce back towards a session high of 131.09.
    • Gilts opened higher by a handful of ticks given the read across from peers at the time. However, the benchmark then waned in-line with peers but with magnitudes slightly less pronounced; nonetheless, Gilts briefly took out Tuesday’s 92.82 base to a 92.79 low. Before making its way back above 93.00 on a strong auction.
    • France sells EUR 12bln vs. exp. EUR 10-12bln 3.20% 2035, 1.25% 2038, 4.50% 2041 OATs.
    • UK sells GBP 4.5bln 4.375% 2030 Gilts: b/c 3.23x (prev. 2.95x), average yield 3.977% (prev. 4.142%) & tail 0.4bps (prev. 1.0bps).

    Commodities

    • Firm trade across the crude complex (albeit with futures recently waning off highs) despite a relatively quiet market, softer Dollar pre-FOMC, and amid modest gains across most equity bourses, with the gains largely facilitated by developments overnight in trade, geopolitics, and with China loosening its monetary policy. WTI resides in a USD 58.94-60.26/bbl range while Brent sits in a USD 62.41-63.25/bbl parameter.
    • Spot gold reverted to beneath the USD 3,400/oz level with pressure seen shortly after futures trading resumed as markets were jolted by reports that US and Chinese officials are to conduct talks later this week in Switzerland. Spot gold trades in a USD 3,360.20-3,422.14/oz range at the time of writing vs Tuesday's USD 3,322.76-3,4335.06/oz parameter.
    • Copper futures swung between gains and losses overnight and ultimately declined and remained subdued heading into European hours despite the PBoC's RRR and policy rate cut announcements, albeit following a short rally since the end of April. 3M LME currently resides in a USD 9,446.95-9,584.08/t range awaiting the FOMC in the absence of macro impulses.
    • US Private inventory data (bbls): Crude -4.5mln (exp. -2.5mln), Distillate +2.2mln (exp. -2.7mln), Gasoline -2.0mln (exp. -1.5mln), Cushing -0.9mln.
    • Venezuela restarted a key gasoline production unit at its second-largest refinery after being shut down for a year.

    Geopolitics: Middle East

    • US President Trump said Houthis decided that they don't want to do this anymore and that he told the military to stop attacks against Houthis, while he added that he is not planning to stop in Israel during his Middle East trip and they are talking to Israeli PM Netanyahu about a lot of things right now. Trump said it is crunch time for Iran and he hopes Iran does what is right, as well as stated that Iran will not have nuclear weapons.

    Geopolitics: Ukraine

    • Explosions were heard in Kyiv after Ukraine's air force warned of a missile attack, while Ukraine's military reported apartments are on fire after a Russian drone attack.

    Geopolitics: India vs Pakistan

    • An Indian missile attack on Pakistani-controlled territory has killed at least 26 civilians and left 46 injured, Pakistan officials have said, via Sky News.
    • India launched 'Operation Sindoor' in which it hit terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir, while the Indian army announced that Pakistan violated the ceasefire agreement again in the Poonch-Rajouri area and it was responding appropriately in a calibrated manner. Furthermore, a Pakistan military spokesman noted there were exchanges of fire with Indian troops at multiple places along the ceasefire line in Kashmir and announced that five Indian aircraft were shot down.
    • Pakistan's Army Chief said they will respond to India at the time, place and in a way of Pakistan's choice, via Sky News Arabia.
    • Pakistan Government Security Committee says India has "ignited an inferno in the region", the responsibility for ensuing consequences shall lie squarely with India. Authorised the military to undertake corresponding action.

    Economic Data :

    • 7:00 am: May 2 MBA Mortgage Applications, prior -4.2%
    • 2:00 pm: May 7 FOMC Rate Decision (Upper Bound), est. 4.5%, prior 4.5%
    • 2:00 pm: May 7 FOMC Rate Decision (Lower Bound), est. 4.25%, prior 4.25%
    • 3:00 pm: Mar Consumer Credit, est. 9.39b, prior -0.81b

    Central Banks

    • 2:00 pm: FOMC Rate Decision (Upper Bound)

    DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

    Feel free to file this under first world problems but after renovating a wonderful but old house 7 years ago, things are slowly requiring maintenance. Roof leaks, paintwork peeling, windows mysteriously cracking, and lights going without obvious replacement bulbs have been the main ones. However over the weekend the tumble dryer "conked out" irrepairably. I grumbled at the cost of a new one, but accepted it, only to find that we built our kitchen area units around the specific size of this tumble dryer and that they now only make bigger ones or far too small ones. So if I want dry clothes from now on we have to redesign the kitchen units and get them remade. As such if you see me over the next few months (or years) don't be surprised if I've refused and just walk around in wet clothes.

    As we hit another FOMC day, market sentiment has seen another round trip (unlike my defunct tumble dryer) over the past 24 hours, with the S&P 500 (-0.77%) falling back for a second day as concerns about the economic outlook resurfaced but with futures erasing most of these losses overnight on news that US and China will this week begin talks to de-escalate the tariff standoff. The sides announced talks in Switzerland on Saturday and Sunday, led by Treasury Secretary Bessent and Trade Representative Greer on the US side and Vice Premier Lifeng on China’s. This would mark the first substantive talks between the world’s two largest economies since the prohibitive 125% tariffs were introduced a month ago. Bessent suggested last night that the talks would focus on de-escalation rather than a big trade deal “but we’ve got to de-escalate before we move forward”. China’s Commerce Ministry called on the US to “show sincerity” in the talks. Markets have advanced on the news, with futures on the S&P 500 and NASDAQ +0.60% and +0.66% higher respectively as I type.

    Sticking with China, overnight the PBOC announced a package of support measures, including a 10bps policy rate cut, a 0.5pp reserve requirement ratio cut and a expansion of lending facilities for the services and consumer sectors. The moves signal a clear shift towards looser monetary policy in response to the trade shock and have similarities to the PBOC response last September, when China moved to announce a broad set of support measures to address its growth slowdown.

    Chinese stocks are leading gains in Asia with the Hang Seng +0.50% after spiking over +2% at the open with the Shanghai (+0.64%) seeing similar moves. Elsewhere, the KOSPI (+0.35%) and the S&P/ASX 200 (+0.48%) are also gaining with the Nikkei (+0.09%) lagging a bit after a holiday. Indian equities have turned slightly positive after being lower earlier post military strikes on Pakistan "terror camps". Pakistan claimed to have shot down Indian fighter planes in response. Obviously this is an incredibly tense situation with both countries being nuclear powers so one to watch closely. There is an Indian press conference at 10.30am local time where it's expected they'll call the action proportionate and will respond to claims Pakistan shot down fighters in response.

    In terms of overnight data, the final au Jibun Bank Japan Services PMI for April returned to growth, climbing to 52.4 from March's flat 50.0. This figure, which surpassed the preliminary 52.2, indicates stronger orders within the service sector, a marked difference from the persistent challenges faced by manufacturers.

    Looking back to yesterday’s market losses now, those were in part a reaction to some weak corporate earnings, but investors were also wondering when we’d actually start to see the results of any trade deals, with the S&P 500 initially down over -1% in the first half hour of trading. That was then pared back after Treasury Secretary Bessent said some “very good” offers had been made in trade negotiations by other countries, while the FT reported that the US and UK were close to a deal that would cushion the impact of tariffs by granting lower-tariff quotas for British car and steel exports. There was a brief pop higher just after Europe went home that nearly took back flat for the day on Trump's quotes over an announcement that will be "as big as it gets" between Thursday and Monday. It's not clear whether this is the overnight China talks news or whether something else is in the wings. However intriguing this was, the pop soon faded. On top of that, there was more news on the retaliation front too, as Bloomberg reported that the EU were planning to hit around €100bn of US goods with tariffs if the trade talks failed.

    This concern was evident across multiple asset classes. For instance, investors priced in more rate cuts from the Fed this year, with the amount expected by December up +5.1bps on the day to 81bps. In turn, that led front-end yields to fall back too, with the 2yr Treasury yield down -4.9bps to 3.78%. The 10yr yield (-4.8bps) was steady until a decent auction helped it rally and close at 4.30%. Lower yields added to a renewed decline in the US dollar, which lost ground against all G10 currencies, though this morning the dollar index (+0.30%) is on course to erase about half of yesterday’s -0.59% decline.

    Even as investors were pricing in more rate cuts, inflation concerns again mounted, with the 1yr US inflation swap up +4.9bps on the day to 3.32%. That came as oil prices staged a recovery, with Brent crude up +3.19% on the day to $62.15/bbl, picking up from their 4-year low on Monday, after a major independent US oil producer predicted that US shale production will drop in the coming months. And gold prices (+2.93%) rose to a new record close of $3,432/oz, though they are -1.42% lower overnight following the news of the US-China talks.

    Elsewhere, there was plenty happening yesterday in Germany as Friedrich Merz was confirmed as the new Chancellor by the Bundestag. However that doesn't tell anything like the full story, as in a big surprise, he failed to obtain enough support on the first ballot, which is the first time that’s happened since WWII. In that initial vote, Merz only won 310 votes, short of the absolute majority of 316, despite the fact that the coalition parties hold 328 seats between them. As it was a secret ballot, it was unclear which lawmakers were responsible, and German equities slumped in the aftermath, with the DAX hitting an intraday low of -2.07%. That was even more aggressive for the MDAX of German mid-caps, which slumped to an intraday low of -3.13%. In essence, the fear was that if the coalition couldn't even confirm their new leader then it would raise doubts over how it could push through the more difficult parts of its policy agenda and govern effectively. However, after initially being told that no second vote could happen before Friday, the situation evolved and Merz was then confirmed with 325 votes in a second ballot, and German equities pared back their losses, with the DAX only closing -0.41% lower. Our economists note that if the new government now swiftly implements its 100-day program with the urgently needed relief measures for the German economy, the fact that it took two attempts to elect a chancellor will quickly fade into the background. However a warning shot has possibly been fired.

    Elsewhere in Europe, there was a bit more optimism after the final PMIs came in stronger than the flash readings. So that suggested the economic damage from the tariff uncertainty wasn’t as strong as feared . For instance, the Euro Area composite PMI came in at 50.4 (vs. flash 50.1), and the services PMI was revised up to 50.1 (vs. flash 49.7), putting it back in expansionary territory. So that helped European markets see more of a risk-on move yesterday, with the STOXX 600 only down -0.18%. Strikingly, the UK’s FTSE 100 (+0.01%) just about managed to maintain its longest-ever winning run, having now risen for 16 consecutive sessions. Meanwhile on the rates side, yields on 10yr bunds (+2.3bps), OATs (+2.2bps) and BTPs (+2.5bps) all moved higher.

    Looking forward, the main highlight today will be the Fed’s latest policy decision. They’re widely expected to leave rates unchanged, but this is the first meeting since Liberation Day and the subsequent market turmoil, so it’ll be really important to gauge how the Fed are thinking about it and their reaction function. Our US economists think that the overall tone is likely to echo comments from Chair Powell and his colleagues in recent weeks. So he’s likely to emphasise the inflation side of the dual mandate, which could include repeating his comment that the Fed has an “obligation” to ensure tariff-driven inflation does not become more persistent. The signal will be that the labour market needs to weaken for the Fed to contemplate cuts.

    In terms of the rest of the day ahead, data releases include Euro Area retail sales and German factory orders for March. And earnings releases include Walt Disney and Uber

    Tyler Durden Wed, 05/07/2025 - 08:32
  42. Site: PaulCraigRoberts.org
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Author: pcr3

    Are the Peace Deals Real?

    Paul Craig Roberts

    Some Russian journalists, such as the astute Ekaterina Blinova, are wondering about the reality of the Ukraine “peace negotiations.”  Trump’s promised peace in 24 hours has been replaced with Trump sending more weapons to Ukraine and more threats to the Kremlin.  Journalist Blinova notes that two US Patriot air defense systems, one from Israel, are on the way to Ukraine along with US $310 million for support of the US F-16s sent to Ukraine, and another $50 million in arms.  How, Blinova asks, is this in support of peace negotiations? Isn’t it instead encouragement to Zelensky to continue the conflict?  https://sputnikglobe.com/20250505/is-trump-selling-out-to-zelensky-and-neocons-1121984537.html 

    In this way Blinova raises the question whether Trump’s “peace negotiations” are intended to fail so that war can continue.  

    Previously, Blinova had raised the question:  “Did US Deep State Allow Trump to Win?”  https://sputnikglobe.com/20241112/did-us-deep-state-allow-trump-to-win-1120861699.html 

    Blinova noted that the institutionalized American establishment preferred Trump to Kamala, because Trump has the pro-American image, unlike Kamala, and Trump can marshal support for America’s profitable wars for hegemony. Blinova wrote:  

    “Some commentators presume that the US establishment sees Trump and his popularity as a convenient vehicle for new overseas campaigns as part of his efforts to ‘make America great again’. Patriots often think of greatness in terms of military dominance, they say.”

    One doesn’t get this kind of reality analysis in the American or Western media where the presstitutes conform to the official narrative.  

    My question is whether Russian journalists, such as Ekaterina Blinova, can succeed in penetrating the Kremlin’s consciousness where to be included in the Western world sometimes seems to be a greater achievement than the defense of Russian sovereignty. 

    For more than three years Putin has steadfastly refused to fight a war in order to win it.  I have suggested that he hoped to use the war for negotiations that would deliver his goal of a new Yalta, a mutual understanding with the West.  I have said that, if this is Putin’s goal, it is a delusion that ignores Washington’s doctrine of hegemony.

    If Putin has such a fixed idea, it will serve him and Russia badly.  Perhaps Putin should listen to Russian journalists instead of to his advisors.

    In the digital world in which we live, reality continues to slip away from us. If we are not more careful our life will also slip away from us.

  43. Site: PaulCraigRoberts.org
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Author: pcr3

    Three Wars Are On The Table

    Nima and I continue our discussion of the absurdities of our time, absurdities that can destroy mankind.

    https://www.youtube.com/live/d7VbgDPWbv4

  44. Site: PaulCraigRoberts.org
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Author: pcr3

    The NIH Is a Criminal Organization that Should Be Exterminated

    The inhumane criminals who tortured dogs are the same Satanic creatures who murdered and maimed millions with the Covid “vaccine.”

    https://x.com/AFpost/status/1919395030164234549 

  45. Site: Zero Hedge
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Author: Tyler Durden
    "Not Under Command": Maersk Container Ship Adrift Off US East Coast After Engine Room Explosion

    A 335.5-meter container ship has been adrift off the U.S. East Coast for more than a week after an engine room explosion knocked out its propulsion system.

    "The MAERSK SANA, a containership en route from Newark, USA to Singapore, remains not under command in the Atlantic off Bermuda" after "an engine room explosion disabled her propulsion on April 28," the ship tracking website MarineTraffic wrote on X.

    MarineTraffic provided more clarity on Sana's status:

    "The vessel came to a halt at 13:35 UTC that day and has been drifting ever since. MarineTraffic data confirms no signs of resumed movement, and her remote mid-ocean position has delayed the arrival of salvage assistance. A tug was dispatched from Mexico, according to reports, but with the  Maersk Sana positioned in the middle of the ocean, response time has stretched over days." 

    According to Maersk's statement, a towage vessel is expected to make contact with the Maersk Sana this week. At the time of the engine room explosion, the 8,450-TEU vessel, built in 2004 and flagged in Singapore, was sailing Maersk's Transpacific TP11 service. 

    "Safety is of paramount importance, and we will take the learnings from our investigation to avoid similar incidents in the future," Maersk said.

    No details were provided about the source of the engine room explosion.

    Tyler Durden Wed, 05/07/2025 - 08:05
  46. Site: Novus Motus Liturgicus
    2 days 21 hours ago
    In spite of attempts to suppress it, the traditional Latin Mass is here to stay. It may not be as widespread as it was in the halcyon days of Summorum Pontificum, but neither is it exactly hidden under a bushel, as the early Christians were during the Roman persecutions. In many cites, gigantic parishes run by former Ecclesia Dei institutes are packed with faithful every Sunday. No, this is not Peter Kwasniewskihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02068005370670549612noreply@blogger.com0
  47. Site: Catholic Herald
    2 days 21 hours ago
    Author: Charles Collins/Crux

    As the cardinals of the Catholic Church gather in conclave for the election of a successor to Pope Francis, various issues facing the Vatican are on their minds, one of which is likely to be the Holy See’s present frosty relations with Israel.

    Relations with the State of Israel are at their lowest level since diplomatic relations were established just over 30 years ago, a chill that followed the Oct. 7 surprise attack in 2023 by Gaza-based Hamas militants that left 1,200 Israelis dead and more than 250 taken as hostages and led to the subsequent Israeli invasion of Gaza.

    Of the roughly 100 hostages who remain in Gaza, a third are believed to be dead, according to Israeli Defense Forces.

    Following those events of Oct. 7, Israel immediately launched a retaliatory offensive in Gaza to oust Hamas from leadership, with the subsequent conflict resulting in the deaths of over 60,000 people in Gaza, according to Palestinian estimates.

    Immediately after the October 2023 attack by Hamas, Christian leaders in the Holy Land issued a statement calling “for the cessation of all violent and military activities that bring harm to both Palestinian and Israeli civilians”.

    The Israeli embassy to the Holy See accused that statement of reflecting “immoral linguistic ambiguity”.

    In February 2024, Vatican Secretary of State Italian Cardinal Pietro Parolin told reporters that it was time for Israel to change its strategy in Gaza, explaining “other paths have to be found to resolve the problem of Gaza, the problem of Palestine”.

    Israel’s Embassy to the Holy See responded to Parolin’s remarks, calling it “a deplorable declaration”.

    Pope Francis also drew criticism from Israel for his own remarks.

    “According to some experts,” Pope Francis said in a book released last year, “what is happening in Gaza has the characteristics of a genocide,” and the pontiff called for an investigation to see if “it fits into the technical definition formulated by jurists and international bodies”.

    Also in the book, Francis said he was “thinking above all of those who leave Gaza in the midst of the famine that has struck their Palestinian brothers and sisters given the difficulty of getting food and aid into their territory”.

    In his last public appearance at Easter, Francis’s statement said the Holy Land was “wounded by conflict” and home to an “endless outburst of violence”.

    His message gave particular attention to the people of Gaza and to its Christian community and enclave where “the terrible conflict continues to cause death and destruction and to create a dramatic and deplorable humanitarian situation”.

    Francis made calls to the Christians in Gaza almost daily during the entirety of the Hamas-Israel war. Even after his death, the pope showed his support by donating his popemobile to the Gaza medical efforts.

    All of these actions tried Israel’s patience with the Vatican.

    After the death of Pope Francis, the official Israeli account on X shared a photo of the pontiff at the Western Wall in Jerusalem, captioned: “May his memory be a blessing.”

    The was quickly deleted by the Israeli government, and an official statement from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu came four days later: “The State of Israel expresses its deepest condolences to the Catholic Church and the Catholic community worldwide at the passing of Pope Francis. May he rest in peace.”

    Why is the deteriorating relationship a major concern facing the next pope, especially given its proximate cause?

    Most of the world – the United States being a notable exception – has condemned the Israeli harsh efforts in Gaza, which has killed tens of thousands of people, most of them civilians.

    One reason the next pope is likely to be concerned by the current frosty situation may be the effect it is having on Catholic-Jewish relations.

    The Holy See was late in establishing diplomatic relations with Israel, and the “Fundamental Agreement Between the Holy See and the State of Israel” signed in 1993 specifically tied the relationship between the two states to the “unique nature of the relationship between the Catholic Church and the Jewish people, and of the historic process of reconciliation and growth in mutual understanding and friendship between Catholics and Jews”.

    Another reason is the deteriorating relationship between Israel and the Palestinians, which will affect the place of Christians in the Holy Land.

    Donald Trump himself has been able to throw gasoline on the conflict by calling for the depopulation of Gaza, and putting it under US rule, pledging he could make it the “Riviera of the Middle East”.

    Although most of the world thinks this is absurd, around 70 per cent of the people of Gaza are technically refugees and therefore do not have a right to permanent status in their current residence (most of them claim a “right to return” to Israel, which the Israeli government will never give them).

    If Trump somehow gets to go through with his plan – which involves resettling Palestinians from Gaza, many of whom are displaced even in the Strip, in other Arab nations – this will affect the West Bank, where over 25 per cent of the Palestinians are technically refugees. If they were removed, the Israeli population in the West Bank would increase to around 25 per cent.

    This would make the Two-State Solution impossible, and also destroy any possibility of any form of an international protectorate over Jerusalem – a proposal the Holy See has supported since shortly after the UN advanced the idea of treating Jerusalem as a corpus separatum in the late 1940s.

    More broadly, the persistent instability and intense violence in the Holy Land adversely affects the small – and shrinking – Christian population, as well as the places considered sacred by the world’s Churches.

    Hence it could well be that the new pope will soon find the need to be closely involved with the homeland of Jesus Christ.

    Photo: MAY 26: (ISRAEL OUT) In this handout provided by the Israeli Government Press Office (GPO), Pope Francis speaks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as he departs at Ben Gurion International Airport on May 26, 2014 in Tel Aviv, Israel. (Photo by Kobi Gideon/GPO via Getty Images)

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    The post Relations with Israel at historic low as Holy See awaits new pope first appeared on Catholic Herald.

    The post Relations with Israel at historic low as Holy See awaits new pope appeared first on Catholic Herald.

  48. Site: Catholic Herald
    2 days 22 hours ago
    Author: Simon Caldwell

    New York’s cardinal has severely criticised a vote to allow assisted suicide across New York State, describing the proposed law as “a disaster waiting to happen”.

    Cardinal Timothy Dolan said that the Medical Aid in Dying Bill would turn doctors from “healers into killers” and will put pressure on “the sick, elderly and the depressed to end their own lives”.

    The Bill is “contrary to everything we cherish” and “a terrible idea” the cardinal said after members of the New York State Assembly voted 81-67 in favour of the Bill.

    “It is a classic Pandora’s Box; once opened, its consequences cannot be contained,” he said, writing from Rome for First Things.

    He said: “Doctors would be forced to lie on death certificates by claiming the cause of death was the person’s underlying illness and not what actually killed him or her – the lethal combination of drugs.

    “Any legislation that requires doctors to lie for the record cannot be good for the public.”

    He added: “It sends a message to our young people – who are already struggling through an unprecedented mental health crisis – that life is disposable and that it’s perfectly alright to end your life if you find it burdensome or feel hopeless.”

    The Catholic Church in America, explained Cardinal Dolan, has a long and proud history in health care, opening the country’s first hospitals and caring for the “casualties of war, measles, homelessness, illness, violence, AIDS, and all diseases and ailments known to man”.

    “State-sanctioned suicide turns everything society knows and believes about medicine on its head,” he said.

    “Doctors go from healers to killers…This legislation doesn’t require doctors to ask people if they’ve contemplated suicide before or find out if they’ve ever been treated for depression, paranoia, dementia, anxiety, anorexia, or any other mental health condition.

    “And nowhere does the bill say a medical consultation must be in person, meaning it could happen by Zoom.

    “How is this compassion? Is it any wonder that insurance providers are often supporters of assisted suicide legislation, wanting to protect their bottom line from patients who might live an extra few weeks or months with proper care?”

    Cardinal Dolan continued: “Elected officials have a duty to carefully consider the effects of the legislation before them.

    “What is proposed as compassion for the suffering terminally ill, once enacted, becomes almost a duty, as the elderly, the disabled, and the sick feel pressured to end their lives and stop being an inconvenience to others.

    “We’ve seen this happen in other states and countries that have enacted this fearsome legislation. Remember how abortion supporters’ mantra of ‘safe, legal, and rare’ was quickly cast aside, and now abortion is imposed, frequent and something to be celebrated. The same is true for assisted suicide.”

    The Bill, sponsored by assemblywoman Amy Paulin and state senator Brad Hoylman-Sigal, has yet to pass through the State senate where it will meet with robust opposition, though supporters are confident it will succeed.

    The remarks of Cardinal Dolan come as the British government published a 149-page impact assessment of legalising assisted suicide in England and Wales.

    The report predicted that if Labour MP Kim Leadbeater’s Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill became law, more than 4,500 patients each year would initially commit suicide with the assistance of medics.

    It said £90 million could be consequently saved in the first decade, with £59.6 million shaved off NHS expenditure and state pension payments reduced by £18.3 million.

    MPs will gather for the Report Stage of the Bill on 16 May before voting a final time at Third Reading, after which, if passed, the Bill will progress without hindrance into law.

    The bishops of England and Wales are deeply opposed to the Bill, describing it as “deeply flawed”, and have urged Catholics to write again and without delay to their MPs to ask them to reject it.

    Photo: Archbishop of New York cardinal Timothy Dolan presides over a Mass in his own titular Church ‘Nostra Signora di Guadalupe a Monte Mario’ at the northern outskirts of Rome on May 04, 2025 in Rome, Italy. (Photo by Franco Origlia/Getty Images)

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    The post Cardinal Dolan slams NY assisted suicide bill: “healers into killers” and a “pandora’s box” first appeared on Catholic Herald.

    The post Cardinal Dolan slams NY assisted suicide bill: “healers into killers” and a “pandora’s box” appeared first on Catholic Herald.

  49. Site: southern orders
    2 days 22 hours ago

     


  50. Site: Catholic Herald
    2 days 22 hours ago
    Author: The Catholic Herald

    Cardinal Vincent Nichols, Archbishop of Westminster and President of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales, is one of three English cardinals who will take part in the conclave that starts today to elect the next pope.

    In the following short reflection, recorded just before leaving for the Casa Santa Marta residence where the cardinals will stay during the conclave, Cardinal Nichols talks about the richness of the general congregations – the twelve pre-conclave meetings of the cardinals – how the qualities of Saints Peter and Paul provide many of the necessary characteristics to guide a new Pope.

    He also talks about how he will feel when those famous words “Extra Omnes” are proclaimed and the doors of the Sistine Chapel are closed to the outside world.

    Once the doors to the Sistine Chapel close, cardinals will effectively be entirely shutoff from the rest of the world, with phone jamming systems and Wi-Fi blockers in place.

    They will also have no newspapers or television news available while they remain closed in together in the Santa Marta residence, to allow for complete privacy and to prevent the interference of any external factors that might sway the voting process.

    Previously, at the end of April appearing on the BBC’s “Thought for the Day” program on Radio 4, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales spoke about how despite the “intimidating” prospect of participating in a conclave he was nonetheless looking forward to carrying out his duty to help choose Pope Francis’s successor.

    RELATED: Cardinal Nichols on conclave: ‘intimidating’ but it’s our duty

    Photo: Cardinal Vincent Nichols officiating the solemn Requiem Mass for Pope Francis at The Metropolitan Cathedral of the Most Precious Blood, also known as Westminster Cathedral, London, England, 21 April 2025. (Photo by Alishia Abodunde/Getty Images.)

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    The post Cardinal Nichols releases pre-conclave reflections first appeared on Catholic Herald.

    The post Cardinal Nichols releases pre-conclave reflections appeared first on Catholic Herald.

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