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The Catholic peace organization said it stands "in solidarity with our siblings in Minneapolis who are protesting white supremacy with their voices and their bodies, and we recommit ourselves to working to dismantle systemic racism in all its forms."
A conversation with The Atlantic’s Emma Green.
Jon M. Sweeney
A spy story that sounds like a novel, but is true to life.
Memorial of Ludwig van Beethoven in Vienna (photo: iStock)
For a solution, it is best to experience how Beethoven’s works sound.
How to expand health coverage while containing costs is one of the great unanswered questions in American politics.
Isabelle Senechal
From bleeding sunsets in Texas to golden wheatfields in Oklahoma to the rolling plains of western Nebraska, Marie Mutsuki Mockett’s new book documents every stop in the wheat harvesters’ odyssey with striking lyricism and intricate detail.
During a time of political polarization, writes Matt Malone S.J., it is more often the serious business of governing that is a distraction—from the partisan combat that has become our all-consuming pastime.
We can no longer tolerate the serious problems that result from a broken and fragmented health care financing system.
Did the old “normal” way of doing things exhaust all possibilities for communal celebration? Is that what we want to return to, even if doing so were possible?
For the first time in over two months, the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem reopens, despite the uncertainty some people still have about the effects of the pandemic on public health and the local economy.