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What is This QAnon Thing They re Talking About?

  Fair enough, but that’s a lot to process, and yet barely scratches the surface in terms of the wakadoodle ideas that QAnon adherents believe to be true. Consider just one of those ideas – known as, um, “Frazzledrip” as outlined by Michelle Goldberg of the New York Times: The lurid fantasy of Frazzledrip refers to an imaginary video said to show Hillary Clinton and her former aide, Huma Abedin, assaulting and disfiguring a young girl and drinking her blood. It holds that several cops saw the video and Clinton had them killed. Because: of course. Digging deeper. Here are several other descriptions that a variety of credible writers have employed in bids to wrestle the nature, scope and meaning of QAnon to the ground:

Books by Women Confront Churches Misuse of Power

Books by Women Confront Churches’ Misuse of Power By Ann Byle | Feb 19, 2021 Women’s issues, particularly those related to #ChurchToo and #MeToo, prompt religion publishers’ continuing interest in titles that address the silencing and abuse women face in the church and religious institutions. With #ChurchToo: How Purity Culture Upholds Abuse and How to Find Healing (Broadleaf, Mar.), author Emily Joy Allison turns over the rocks of the institutional church’s sexual dysfunction. Allison, who launched the #ChurchToo movement when she outed the pastor who abused her, reveals how sexualized violence in religious contexts is ubiquitous and uniquely traumatizing. She also lays the groundwork for healing for the church and survivors of sexual shame. “The answers are not simple, or fun,” she writes, “and they will not allow the existing power structures to be maintained. They require radical deconstruction of closely held beliefs and the willi

For Churchgoing Families, More Kids Aren t a Burden

The more children you have, the less you can give each one, and the worse they do. Right? Parents in pandemic isolation without the usual supports from schools, churches, and extended family will certainly resonate with the idea that their time, energy, and attention are split into ever-smaller slices with each child. It’s also the tradeoff anthropologists and economists have assumed when studying modern fertility patterns. But when John Shaver came across projections during his graduate studies that Hispanic Catholics and Muslims were on track to surpass white Christian subgroups and Jews, respectively, by the midcentury, he was perplexed.

Panelists say abortion debate has become too political, needs wider focus

Panelists say abortion debate has become too political, needs wider focus Gloria Purvis is seen in this 2017 file photo. Purvis was among the speakers in a Jan. 27, 2021, webinar sponsored by Fordham University on “Pro-Life, Pro-Choice, Post-Roe? New Prospects for the Abortion Debate in America.” (CNS photo/Dave Hrbacek, The Catholic Spirit) By Catholic News Service • Posted January 28, 2021 RYE, N.Y. (CNS) Overturning Roe v. Wade will not be the silver bullet many in the pro-life movement have hoped for. Even if the Supreme Court delivers a symbolic repudiation of its 1973 ruling, abortion will continue with state oversight and passions will run high on the extremes of the debate, according to speakers on a Jan. 27 webinar.

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