The protests of the Yellow Vest movement are rooted not in President Macron’s failure to explain his policies, but rather in their fundamental injustice
In spite of all the ambition and selfishness that New York supposedly represents, I’ve found that the city’s density has encouraged me to forget myself.
Pawel provides a sympathetic and affectionate group portrait of the Browns, based on their own letters and diaries as well as testimony of relatives and friends
Amazon, a company too big and wealthy to have any just claim to public money, has made an art form of subsidizing corporate expansion with taxpayer funding
The midterm elections show that democracy is still very much alive in the United States; but the Democrats need to offer messaging adequate to the moment
A recent retrospective at the Whitney Museum centers on the activist legacy of New York City artist David Wojnarowicz, but also reveals his latent Catholicism
Synod delegates have become increasingly outspoken about young people on the margins, calling particular attention to the suffering of migrants and refugees
The work of the twentieth-century Jesuit theologian provides a theological critique of ethno-nationalism, and serves as a model for resisting racism today
Traditional Catholic moral theology holds that only individuals can sin. But their choices are made within a matrix of structures, some good, others less so
As more Americans consider health care a right, Trump’s appointees and congressional allies are quietly dismantling the safety net that protects millions
The Catholics on the Supreme Court, along with some bishops, neglect church teaching on social justice, collective bargaining, and the dignity of labor
As Georgetown’s example shows, Catholic colleges and universities have an opportunity to provide much needed moral leadership to higher education and workers’ rights
After selling trillions of fraudulent securities and almost triggering a 1929-scale Depression, how did no one from the world’s greatest banks go to prison?