
Colleges Dispense ‘Morning-After’ Pills in Vending Machines
The push for ‘reproductive wellness’ on campuses has led to vending machines dispensing pills that can end human lives.
The push for ‘reproductive wellness’ on campuses has led to vending machines dispensing pills that can end human lives.
The Vatican and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops have warned for years that emergency contraceptives could induce abortions in early pregnancies, which pharmaceutical companies have consistently denied.
A routine errand brings a sad reminder of our culture’s darkening moral landscape.
Though plans have not yet been finalized, the university’s student government has proposed purchasing the pills in bulk and selling them in a campus community hall.
A Catholic nurse practitioner is suing CVS and one of its medical clinics for firing her after she refused to prescribe abortion-inducing drugs to customers.
The “morning-after pill” is an emergency contraceptive taken after sexual activity to prevent a pregnancy.
NEWS ANALYSIS: Critics of the German bishops’ conference contend that the entity has become more of a temporal power than a spiritual one.
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