Religion

"'I’m so angry,' my second sister said, visibly shaking. 'I’m not kidding, I’m mad.' Our parents had been cruelest to her."
The San Bernardino bishop is the latest Catholic clergyman to push back against Trump's immigration raids.
The televangelist's multimillion-dollar ministry was crippled in the late 1980s after his encounters with prostitutes became public.
It’s also another victory for right-wing culture warriors who have been leading the movement to remove books from classrooms.
The Pontiff said bishops “must be firm and decisive in dealing with situations that can cause scandal and with every case of abuse, especially involving minors, and fully respect the legislation currently in force.”
“As a Christian, I don't think you can be both MAGA and Christian,” one person wrote in the comments of the video.
“I immediately hated my choice, but I did not yet believe it to be wrong.”
Of course, social media pontificated about the pontiff's shout-out to his hometown.
Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote in dissent that it was a “grievous mistake” not to take up the appeal.
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