The Iona Blog

Mother’s Day in the world of gender-neutral parenting

Mother’s Day in Ireland was marked last Sunday, but what are we now marking on that day given the radically new view of the family and of parenthood that exists in Irish law following the passage last year of the marriage referendum and the Children and Family Relationships Act? Instead of celebrating ‘Mother’s Day’ and...

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If the No side won a ‘moral victory’ in the 1983 abortion referendum, so did the No side last year

There is an interesting clip on YouTube of the late Adrian Hardiman on RTE on the day of the count for the 1983 pro-life referendum. Hardiman (RIP) will be a sore loss to the Supreme Court because he was that very rare thing in Irish public life; a classical liberal who believed in limited government....

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No gain in GE16 for being pro-choice, no loss for being pro-life

GE 16 saw a number of prominent socially liberal politicians lose their seats. Alan Shatter, Aodhán Ó Ríordáin, Jerry Buttimer, James Reilly, Alex White and Anne Ferris each took very public positions in favour of gay marriage and abortion during the last term, and each lost a seat in one of the most socially liberal...

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State schools would be no more neutral than Church schools

Joe Humphreys writing in The Irish Times on Tuesday claims that the Catholic Church need have no fear of secularism. He is writing in opposition to public funding of denominational education. He admits that secularism can be hard to define, and so indeed is ‘liberal democracy’. He quotes Rabbi Jonathan Sacks in his favour but...

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Why does The Irish Times feel it has more right than bishops to tell people how to vote?

The Irish Times in its leader today is pleased that the Catholic Church isn’t telling people how to vote. It says this is a sign of a “humbler” Church. One wonders if the Irish Times will follow suit and not tell its readers how to vote in this election or next time a referendum comes...

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Thinking and voting as Christians at election time

The bishop of Cork and Ross, John Buckley, issued an excellent statement a few days ago to coincide with the General Election campaign. In it, he tackles issues such as the right to life, housing and immigration. He urges Catholics to “engage with them [politicians] when they call looking for our vote. Our priorities and...

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Admitting that the natural ties matter after all

When you can’t have a child of your own,  is it better to adopt or use a surrogate? This is the question a gay couple ask of an upmarket agony aunt in the New York Times magazine. The couple’s concern (and it is a concern that could just as easily apply to a straight couple)...

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The latest very flawed rulings of the Broadcasting Authority (part 2)

The previous blog dealt with a complaint the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland (BAI) rejected in relation to a RTE Ray D’Arcy Show item on the marriage referendum. This blog focuses on another complaint made in relation to the same show but this time on an item which dealt with abortion. Again, the BAI gets it...

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The latest very flawed rulings of the BAI

Last week the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland (BAI) released its latest batch of decisions relating to complaints made against broadcasters. Very often the complaints allege that a particular broadcast failed the test of objectivity and impartiality. The BAI upheld none of the five complaints it investigated. Two of the complaints related to RTE’s Ray D’Arcy Show:...

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Constitution does not stop death cert being issued for unborn child in road accident case

Earlier this week it emerged that an Irish family sought a death certificate for an unborn child killed along with her mother in a horrendous car accident. The coroner declined the request and instead offered to register the death as a stillbirth. The family are taking the matter to the High Court on Constitutional grounds....

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