The Iona Blog

Maria Steen discusses the issue of abortion on the Pat Kenny Show

On Monday, Maria Steen (pictured) of The Iona Institute discussed the issue of abortion on the Pat Kenny Show on Newstalk. Among the specific issues discussed was the suspended sentence given to a woman in Belfast who terminated her pregnancy at her home using an abortion pill. She also accused Amnesty International Ireland of “scaremongering”...

Read more...

How IVF leads inevitably to eugenics and ‘designer babies’

By David Quinn When the first ‘test tube baby’ was born in 1978, the world ‘oohed’ and ‘aahed’. That was understandable, but the widespread delight that an infertile couple had achieved their dream of having a baby tended to squash the very real ethical concerns that In Vitro Fertilisation ought to give rise to. One...

Read more...

A State agency’s unjust attack on religious ethos

State discrimination against religious views and bodies is becoming an issue. Recent reports indicate that Tusla (the Child and Family Agency) is set to withdraw public funding from the Boyle Family Life Centre, an ethos-based service provider of the Diocese of Elphin, which serves the practical needs of both the parish community and the wider...

Read more...

The ethical pitfalls of surrogacy as revealed at a recent surrogacy conference

A previous post reported on the proceedings of a recent surrogacy conference in Dublin. It is fair to say that most people would find at least some of the information revealed at the conference quite shocking. This blog will examine a few of the ethical issues raised by surrogacy, including issues that were directly raised...

Read more...

The ‘spiritual’ are the second biggest faith group in Ireland

RTE’s exit poll conducted on the day of the General Election throws up some very interesting data concerning religion and political affiliation. More on that very shortly, but for me the most striking thing is that it was the first poll I’ve come across that distinguished between the non-religious who call themselves ‘atheists’ or ‘agnostics’,...

Read more...

Reporting from Ireland’s first commercial surrogacy conference

Ireland’s first ever commercial surrogacy conference took place last week in Dublin. (It also dealt with ‘altruistic’ surrogacy). The event was organised by a group called “Families through Surrogacy” which call itself a non-profit group. However, the conference sponsors, variously categorised as “platinum”, “gold” and “silver” sponsors, are composed of big surrogacy firms from the...

Read more...

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...

Read more...

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....

Read more...

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...

Read more...

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...

Read more...
1 70 71 72 73 74 151