The New Yorker

A BOMBSHELL DOCUMENT AT THE VATICAN SYNOD, New Yorker, October 13, 2014

Since Jorge Mario Bergoglio became Pope Francis, a little more than a year and a half ago, the Argentine has radically changed the tone and the mood surrounding the Catholic Church. But the question remained: How would he handle the difficult doctrinal issues of sexuality and family life that have divided the Catholic world? We are…

Continue reading

IN NEW YORK, RENZI MANIA OR RENZI REMORSE?, New Yorker, September 27, 2014

Matteo Renzi, the Prime Minister of Italy, quite self-consciously made Silicon Valley the first stop of his first official American visit: “not New York, not Washington, not Boston,” Renzi pointed out, somewhat undiplomatically, to his audience at the Council on Foreign Relations, in New York, a decidedly more staid group than the ones that he…

Continue reading

CAN THE FRENCH TALK ABOUT RACE?, New Yorker, July 11, 2014

Quietly, the French Ministry of Higher Education last month signed off on implementing a law that had been passed nearly a year earlier but had been gathering dust within the bureaucracy. Many in the ministry had hoped that it would die a quiet and unnoticed death. Following a model developed in Texas and California, the…

Continue reading

THE POPE EXCOMMUNICATES THE MAFIA, FINALLY, New Yorker, June 24, 2014

In some ways, it is surprising that Pope Francis made news by travelling to Calabria and excommunicating members of the Mafia. He went to a town where members of a local Mafia group, known as the ’Ndrangheta, had murdered a three-year-old boy, together with his grandfather, and burned their bodies, in a case tied up…

Continue reading