Veterans Deserve Care and Support, Not Abortion, Say U.S. Bishops’ President and Pro-Life Chairman

| 08/5/2025

By: The Good Newsroom

The proposed rule would restore the prior, long-standing policy that prevented VA and civilian dependents’ health benefits from including abortion

Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins is pictured during a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington on January 21, 2025.
Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins is pictured during a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington on January 21, 2025. (OSV News photo/Evelyn Hockstein, Reuters)

WASHINGTON – “The women and men who served our country, to defend innocent life, deserve quality health care and supportive resources, not the violence of abortion,“ said Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), and Bishop Daniel E. Thomas, chairman of the USCCB’s Committee on Pro-Life Activities, in response to a proposed rule published by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) on Monday.

In 2022, the VA and dependents’ civilian health benefits were changed to include abortion. The proposed rule would restore the prior, long-standing policy that prevented VA and civilian dependents’ health benefits from including abortion.

“The women and men who served our country to defend innocent life deserve quality health care and supportive resources, not the violence of abortion. Veterans’ health facilities must not be places of death, but places of great hope. We are grateful that the Department of Veterans Affairs is stepping up to protect preborn children and families once again from taxpayer-funded, elective abortion, and look forward to reviewing the new proposed rule in full.”

“Unless we are very careful, we are the ghosts of Hiroshima,” said author Charles Pellegrino.

By:

Steven Schwankert

| 08/06/2025

Deacon Halter had long heard the call of the diaconate and answered it by being ordained a deacon at Saint Patrick's Cathedral in 2001.

By:

The Good Newsroom

| 08/06/2025

El mensaje del Papa fue enviado cuando personas de todo el mundo se reunían para conmemorar solemnemente el 80.º aniversario del bombardeo estadounidense de Hiroshima, el 6 de agosto de 1945, y de Nagasaki, el 9 de agosto de 1945.

By:

Our Sunday Visitor

| 08/06/2025