Abortion
Can We Talk about Abortion?
An exchange
Pass the Cudgel
We’re still debating whether what we’re doing in Libya can rightly be described as war, though bombs dropped amid an “intervention” are just as deadly. But where’s the debate over whether it’s fair or accurate to assert that Republicans in Congress have not-so-stealthily declared a “war on women”?
Fetal Positions
A review of Ourselves Unborn, by Sara Dubow
Uncertainty Principle
The bishops, health care & prudence
Indefensible
Moral teaching after ‘Humanae Vitae’
A Fatal Conflict
When a patient arrives in extremis at a Catholic hospital in the rare situation reflected in the case of the Arizona woman whose life was endangered by her pregnancy, a conflict arises between the patient’s life and Catholic health care’s right to religious liberty in following its own precepts.
Single-issue Church?
A review of George Dennis O'Brien's book The Church and Abortion
Culture War Dispatch
Open hearts & minds at Princeton
The Rush to Repeal
Liberals may lament the administration’s failure to make progress on immigration and climate-change legislation in this congressional session, but it may be time to shift energies to protecting what has already been passed.
Devil's Advocates
Helen Alvaré accuses me and Commonweal of being naive about the new health-care reform law, and suggests our analysis of the legislation is politically motivated. She's wrong.
Catholic Unity
Might the USCCB be wrong about the health-care law?
The Unwanted
Extending the argument against sex-selective abortion
A Pattern of Missteps
Compromise is not a dirty word in democratic politics, nor is the balancing of conflicting goods foreign to the church’s tradition of casuistic moral reasoning. So why do so many American bishops appear to spurn both in their prolife advocacy? Do they really think the hardest line is always the best one, or the most persuasive?
Episcopal Oversight
How the bishops conference gets health-care legislation wrong
No Coward
In praise of Rep. Bart Stupak's courage
Unbalanced
If this film, which contrasts kindly abortion-clinic workers with loony prolife activists, is what passes for an evenhanded view of both sides of the abortion debate, prolifers still have a long way to go with the media.
Listen to the Sisters
The bishops' take on the health-care bill is wrong
Crying Wolf
The health-care debate has been costly for prolife groups.
Prolife, Yes, & Pro-reform
Why abortion shouldn't derail health-care reform
'Abortion Neutral'?
Could the issue of abortion derail health-care reform legislation?
The Right to Refuse
How broad should conscience protections be?
Bad Law
What would the Freedom of Choice Act do?
Bishops & the Election
Is there a double standard at work?
Abortion Conundrums
Is the Supreme Court’s decision a step toward overturning Roe, or something more complicated?
Regulating Abortion
Are we in for another thirty years of abortion wars?
Kansas Matters
A look inside the prolife movement in the heartland. Can the prolife tent be enlarged?
A Guide for Catholic Voters
Abortion isn’t the only issue to consider when casting your ballot.
Prolife & Prochoice
Senator Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) just created headlines calling for prolife and prochoice groups to work together to reduce unwanted pregnancies. William J. Byron, SJ, former president of the Catholic University of America, agrees that it’s time for people on both sides of the abortion issue to find some common ground.
Persuade or Coerce?
In Mario Cuomo’s spirited rebuttal to Kenneth Woodward, he summons the work of Thomas Aquinas, who wrote that good law must be enforceable, otherwise contempt for all laws could be engendered. “As I understood my religion,” Cuomo writes, commenting on his time as governor, “it required me to accept the restraints imposed by my religion in my own life, but it did not require that I seek to impose them on all New Yorkers-Catholic or not.”
Catholics, Politics & Abortion
Can Catholic politicians be both personally opposed to abortion and unwilling to act against Roe v. Wade? Long-time religion journalist Kenneth Woodward says no, and takes on former governor of New York Mario Cuomo.
...Dear Bishops
In the Editors’ open letter to the U.S. Catholic bishops, clarification is sought from the bishops on their own teaching on abortion. They call for greater clarification on whether the bishops intend to translate Catholic moral teaching and enactment into civil law.
Dear Senator Kerry...
In their open letter to John Kerry, the Editors of Commonweal have some questions for the first Catholic presidential candidate in forty-four years.
Grass-roots Eugenics
Is eugenics is making a comeback in the guise of selective abortion? More and more parents are choosing to abort babies because they are physically or mentally handicapped. The editors address a disturbing trend.
Kerry, the Catholic
"Defending a Catholic politician’s access to the Eucharist is not the same thing as defending his or her support for unrestricted access to abortion. Sad to say, Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry’s position on the legal status of abortion is extreme." The Editors address Kerry’s "Catholic problem."
Denying Communion to Politicians
Who could blame the bishops for wanting to do something about abortion? Frans Jozef van Beeck asks. But denying Communion to prochoice Catholic politicians won’t do. This blanket condemnation smacks of the pastoral debacle of Humanae vitae.
Communion politics
What do bishops who propose refusing the Eucharist to prochoice politicians hope to accomplish?

