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Commonweal

Commonweal

Magazine | United States | Centre-Left

Liberal Catholic magazine offering independent commentary on religion, politics, and culture.

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Discussions from Commonweal

Politics

‘How Will You Say No?’

‘How Will You Say No?’ A line of religious leaders knelt on the concrete in front of the Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport, their breath visible as they prayed the Our Father in sub-zero temperatures. They had gathered Friday to protest the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration enforcement, which had already resulted in one death in their city. A second person, ICU nurse Alex Pretti, would be killed by ICE the next day. About one hundred of these faith leaders, Religion News ...

United States
Geopolitics

Cruel and Indiscriminate

Cruel and Indiscriminate While the recent attack on Venezuela and the capture of President Nicolás Maduro have been a startling and disturbing escalation of U.S. antagonism toward the country, U.S. economic sanctions against Venezuela for the past two decades have done considerable damage in their own right and serve as a precursor to the recent military aggression. Economic measures have often been employed in the context of warfare, sometimes with devastating effect, as in the siege of Leni...

Venezuela
Society

The Little Hours of Delaney Hall

The Little Hours of Delaney Hall O God, come to my assistance. The DHS detention center is in an industrial part of Newark, in between some warehouses and the county prison, a few hundred yards from where the Passaic River flows into the bay. This area must have been estuary before it was concrete—they tell me the stink was terrible when they had protests here in the summer. But on a January afternoon, there was only an occasional smell of gas when some valve was opened in the fuel depot acro...

United States
Geopolitics

The Damage Has Been Done

The Damage Has Been Done In a New Year’s Address that will go down in history, not for the temporal scope of its inflated banalities—“Everything seems easier when we look back at the past and perhaps even when we look into the future”—but for its questionable credulity, Danish prime minister Mette Frederiksen called NATO “stronger than ever before.” She praised recent progress on security in the North Atlantic, while warning that “Europe must be able to do even more by itself.” Then she said ...

Denmark
Politics

A Dangerous Distraction

A Dangerous Distraction For many critics of the Trump administration’s ever more violent and indiscriminate campaign of mass deportation, one of its most disturbing features has been the increased penchant of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers for hiding their faces during raids. Some have maintained that the proliferation of balaclava-clad ICE agents, who call to mind the “secret police” of totalitarian states, is yet another warning sign that the United States is descending ...

United States
Politics

Renee Good’s Dignity

Renee Good’s Dignity In the hours and days after Renee Good’s death, members of the Trump administration, without waiting for basic facts to be confirmed, spoke publicly in support of the ICE agent who shot the Minnesota mom three times in the face. But officials did more than mount a defense; they went on offense against the victim. Good was a “domestic terrorist,” said Department of Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem. “A deranged leftist” who was part of a left-wing network, according ...

United States
Economy

The 401(k) Is Tearing Society Apart

The 401(k) Is Tearing Society Apart It’s a financial-planning axiom that’s become virtually sacrosanct: you’re probably not saving enough for retirement. Starting as young as possible, you should scrimp and save and sacrifice like your future life depends on it—because it does. Given that Americans believe they need $1.26 million to comfortably retire yet only half of all households have any retirement savings at all, the advice may seem on point. But what if we’ve got it all wrong? Over the ...

United States
Education

Formulae that Don’t Formulate

The article critiques the limitations of formulaic approaches in various fields, arguing that rigid frameworks can stifle creativity and hinder genuine understanding and innovation.

United States
Culture

Raising the Bastions

Raising the Bastions The Swiss theologian Hans Urs von Balthasar is a figure at once admired and scorned in U.S. Catholicism. An ostensible “radical” before the Second Vatican Council, his postconciliar reputation has long invited the suspicions of liberal Catholics and the cautious, sometimes grudging respect of conservatives. Many theologians are deeply ambivalent about him. The surface of Balthasar’s texts seems to take different shapes depending on the light in which they’re read. It’s no...

United States
Politics

Grievance Politics, French Style

Grievance Politics, French Style Every French motorist is required to keep a reflective yellow vest (gilet jaune) in their car for safety in case of a roadside breakdown. But when gas prices went up sharply in 2018, these yellow vests took on a new meaning: French citizens started donning them as an act of protest, taking over traffic circles throughout the country. Already struggling to make ends meet, the protesters were worried about how they would afford to drive to work, and they needed ...

United States