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8 votes
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First Muslim superhero returns after seventy years – just in time to take down a few Nazis
7 votes -
Emerging consensus on LGBT issues: Findings from the 2017 American Values Atlas
4 votes -
Kindertransport children to get 2,500 euros in compensation from German government
4 votes -
Australian Cardinal George Pell convicted of child sex abuse offences - but reporting of this is banned in Australia.
So... here's an article I read in my newspaper earlier this week: "Why the media is unable to report on a case that has generated huge interest online". As you might imagine, this left me quite...
So... here's an article I read in my newspaper earlier this week: "Why the media is unable to report on a case that has generated huge interest online". As you might imagine, this left me quite unenlightened. I had no way of knowing or guessing what this case was, or who was involved. It was only a few days later, in conversation with some people I work with, that I found out what had happened.
And this is the first chance I've had since then to sit down and research the story for myself.
In short, Cardinal George Pell, the most senior Catholic Church official to stand trial for sexual abuse, has been convicted of sexual abuse offences relating to his time as Archbishop of Melbourne in the late 1990s.
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From the National Catholic Reporter: "Cardinal Pell found guilty of sex abuse, expected to appeal, reports say"
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From the Washington Post: "Australian court convicts once-powerful Vatican official on sex-abuse-related charges"
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From the Daily Beast: https://www.thedailybeast.com/vatican-no-3-cardinal-george-pell-on-trial-for-historical-child-sex-charges (I can't confirm this one - it's reportedly geo-blocked for Australian readers)
However, the Victorian court hearing the case has imposed a suppression order on the case, which applies in every jurisdiction in Australia. We have seen no reporting of the case as it proceeded, and no reporting of the outcome.
Before some people start assuming that this is protecting the Church, it's related to the right of an accused person to a free trial. Cardinal Pell is facing another trial in a few months for further charges of sexual abuse on a minor (relating to his time as a priest in Ballarat in the 1970s), and the court feels that reporting the outcome of this trial will potentially influence any possible jurors for that trial. Those possible jurors should go into that trial without any preconceived ideas of the accused person's guilt - and reporting that he is guilty of similar charges will undermine his right to a fair trial.
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From the Washington Post: "A top cardinal’s sex-abuse conviction is huge news in Australia. But the media can’t report it there."
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From the New York Post: "Australian media barred from covering cardinal’s conviction for sex abuse
All that we in Australia are being told is "George Pell removed from Pope Francis's cardinal advisory body". It's obvious why he was removed... if you know about the conviction.
32 votes -
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China holding 800k Muslim minorities in internment camps
15 votes -
An Indonesian city has launched a new campaign to "cleanse" LGBT people of their "social sickness" through religious exorcisms
7 votes -
What should America do with its empty church buildings?
13 votes -
Tens of thousands protest in India for controversial Hindu temple
6 votes -
Gay student gets standing ovation after coming out in front of whole Catholic school
17 votes -
'They ordered me to get an abortion': A Chinese woman's ordeal in Xinjiang
12 votes -
Inside the Flat Earth Conference, where the world’s oldest conspiracy theory is hot again
9 votes -
American exorcism
4 votes -
Jonestown’s victims have a lesson to teach us, so I listened
10 votes -
New research confirms substantial majority of Scottish people are not religious and not spiritual
19 votes -
Humanists going all the way: AHA to defend church-state separation at the US Supreme Court
11 votes -
Pope vs. pope: How Francis and Benedict’s simmering conflict could split the Catholic Church
14 votes -
Yevgeny Vodolazkin: Russia’s prize-winning novelist on Orthodoxy, death and playing with time
4 votes -
The Roman pomerium
4 votes -
The name ‘Mormon’: Why all the fuss, and why now?
8 votes -
Pakistan’s ultra-Islamist party blocked roads in major cities for a third day on Friday in protest against the acquittal of a Christian woman on death row for blasphemy allegations
8 votes -
Satellite images expose China's network of re-education camps
4 votes -
‘I’m Dr. Cohen’: The powerful humanity of the Jewish hospital staff that treated Robert Bowers
9 votes -
Calling prophet Muhammad a pedophile does not fall within freedom of speech: European court
39 votes -
Anti-semitisim comes to a city of tolerance
13 votes -
Pittsburgh synagogue shooting leaves at least four dead, official says
34 votes -
Why are Americans still uncomfortable with atheism?
18 votes -
Sydney Anglicans ban same-sex marriage on hundreds of church properties
5 votes -
China's hidden camps. What's happened to the vanished Uighurs of Xinjiang?
9 votes -
What Maniac does (and doesn't) get right about the Bible and the Gnostics
5 votes -
Sydney Anglicans to ban same-sex marriage, yoga on all church property
3 votes -
Sydney Anglicans set to ban gay weddings and pro-LGBTI advocacy on church property
2 votes -
One man’s (very polite) fight against media Islamophobia
5 votes -
Premier of Québec, François Legault, says crucifix 'not religious symbol'
11 votes -
China breaks silence on Muslim detention camps, calling them ‘humane’
9 votes -
Scott Morrison will change the law to ban religious schools from expelling gay students
10 votes -
Newly discovered letter by Galileo shows that he lightly edited his original words to appease the Catholic Church
10 votes -
Catholic Church has lost more members than any other religion in the US
15 votes -
Religious freedom review enshrines right of schools to turn away gay children and teachers
Religious freedom review enshrines right of schools to turn away gay children and teachers How religion will divide the Liberals and inflame the Parliament
3 votes -
India deports seven Rohingya men to Myanmar
In a first, India to deport 7 Rohingya men to Myanmar 7 Rohingya Muslims deported to Myanmar from Manipur's Moreh; illegal immigrant says 'happy to leave India' India under fire as it deports...
8 votes -
Turning her Baha’i faith into precedent, lawyer helps women gain asylum
4 votes -
Considering interfaith relations between Jews, Christians, and Muslims: an interview with Patrick J. Ryan, S.J.
2 votes -
Western Christianity isn't dying out from natural causes. It's dying of suicide.
Original article in 'The Telegraph': Western Christianity isn't dying out from natural causes. It's dying of suicide. Same article syndicated in 'The Age': Why Western Christianity has a death...
Original article in 'The Telegraph': Western Christianity isn't dying out from natural causes. It's dying of suicide.
Same article syndicated in 'The Age': Why Western Christianity has a death wish. (in case the paywall on the Telegraph article blocks you)
16 votes -
Religious Beliefs-Rational or Irrational?
10 votes -
Australia's Catholic priests are pushing for optional celibacy, married priests, with a plan to take the issues to the Vatican
11 votes -
'I just expected better': Reimagining a Muslim female superhero
10 votes -
Why Tibetan Buddhism is facing up to its own abuse scandal
9 votes -
What drives the priest behind those controversial church signs: Father Rod Bower is famous for the thought-provoking signs outside his church at Gosford, on the New South Wales Central Coast.
7 votes -
Jehovah’s Witness girl could receive blood against her will during childbirth
8 votes -
China is treating Islam like a mental illness
12 votes