Madrid, Spain, May 27, 2021 / 18:01 pm (CNA).
A bill proposed last week by the ruling Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party would criminalize “harassment” of women entering abortion clinics.
The bill was introduced May 21 by the PSOE’s coalition in the Congress of Deputies, the lower house of Spain’s legislature, would criminalize “harassing women going to clinics for the voluntary interruption of pregnancy.”
Penalties for what would be deemed harassment would include jail terms of three months to a year, or community service from 31 to 80 days. Depending on circumstances, an individual could also be barred from a particular location for between six months and three years.
Papa Francisco recebeu pessoalmente logo e terço da JMJ Lisboa 2023
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Vatican asks dioceses to promote local World Youth Day celebrations
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Dispatch from the Dead Letter Office 05/18/2021 at 9:34 PM Posted by Kevin Edward White
THE MCCARRICK REPORT HOLDS NO ONE ACCOUNTABLE
By Pieter Vree, New Oxford Review, May 2021
In November 2020 the Vatican released its long-anticipated “Report on the Holy See’s Institutional Knowledge and Decision-Making Related to Former Cardinal Theodore Edgar McCarrick.” It was immediately evident that something screwy was afoot. Consider the timing. Vatican insiders said the report had been completed some six months earlier and was gathering dust on Pope Francis’s desk through the spring, summer, and early fall. That prompted the
Los Angeles Times to ask, “What’s the Pope waiting for?” (July 27, 2020).
Kevin and Jessica Farrell are off to a shining start with their new Mesa business, Grateful Glitters.
They started the business, which sells polyester glitter and other craft supplies, as an online venture in October 2019 and four months later opened their first storefront near University Drive and Greenfield Road.
âI wanted to start making glitter tumblers and Kevin looked into it and said, âWell, we can have an endless supply of glitter for you,ââ said Jessica. âSo, it went from there.â
Kevin said they had opened only a
few months before the pandemic struck Arizona.
âOnce that hit, we were able to remain open,â he said. âWe were providing glitter and other products to people who were using them as their own home-based businesses.â