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Contundente sentencia avala rezar cerca de los abortorios en España  

El juzgado de lo Penal número 1 de Vitoria ha emitido una contundente sentencia absolutoria que avala el rezo pacífico de los abortorios en España. 

León XIV: La identidad europea “sólo puede entenderse y promoverse en referencia a sus raíces judeocristianas”

El Pontífice dejó claro que proteger las raíces cristianas de Europa no supone “restaurar una época pasada”

Disability advocates sue Delaware over allegedly ‘discriminatory’ assisted suicide law 

“For patients with serious disabilities, this law will put us at risk of deadly discrimination," says Daniese McMullin-Powell, a polio survivor who has used a wheelchair for most of her life. / Credit: Institute for Patients' Rights

CNA Staff, Dec 10, 2025 / 06:10 am (CNA).

Several disability and patient advocacy groups filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court in Delaware on Dec. 8 alleging that Delaware’s new physician-assisted suicide law discriminates against people with disabilities. 

In May 2025, Delaware passed a bill legalizing physician-assisted suicide for terminally ill adults with a prognosis of six months or less to live. The law, which goes into effect Jan. 1, 2026, allows patients to self-administer lethal medication. 

The 74-page complaint alleges that the new law is unconstitutional under both Delaware and federal law and violates the Americans with Disabilities Act as well as the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause, among other challenges.  

Plaintiffs include the Institute for Patients’ Rights; The Freedom Center for Independent Living, Inc., in Middletown; the Delaware chapter of ADAPT; Not Dead Yet; United Spinal Association, the National Council on Independent Living; and disability advocate Sean Curran.

The lawsuit, which names Gov. Matthew Meyer and the Delaware Department of Health and Human Services as two of several defendants, said that “people with life-threatening disabilities” are at “imminent risk” because of Delaware's new law.   

“Throughout the country, a state-endorsed narrative is rapidly spreading that threatens people with disabilities: namely, that people with life-threatening disabilities should be directed to suicide help and not suicide prevention,” the lawsuit read.

Challenging Delaware's new assisted suicide law are (first row) Daniese McMullin-Powell (at left) and William C. Powell (at right). They are joined, standing from left to right in the second row, by William Green, Esq., Theodore Kittila, Esq., and Matt Vallière. Credit: Courtesy of Institute for Patients' Rights
Challenging Delaware's new assisted suicide law are (first row) Daniese McMullin-Powell (at left) and William C. Powell (at right). They are joined, standing from left to right in the second row, by William Green, Esq., Theodore Kittila, Esq., and Matt Vallière. Credit: Courtesy of Institute for Patients' Rights

“At its core, this is discrimination plain and simple,” the lawsuit continued. “With cuts in healthcare spending at the federal level, persons with life-threatening disabilities are now more vulnerable than ever.”

The lawsuit alleges that, under the new law, people with life-threatening disabilities who express suicidal thoughts will be treated differently than other people who express suicidal thoughts. The new law lacks requirements for mental health screening for depression or other mental illness, “all of which are necessary for informed consent and a truly autonomous choice,” according to the lawsuit. 

Curran, a Delaware resident who has lived with a severe spinal cord injury for 36 years, called the law “repugnant.”

“The act tells people like me that they should qualify for suicide help, not suicide prevention,” said Curran, who is a quadriplegic, meaning he is paralyzed in all four limbs.

"The act devalues people like me," Curran continued in a press release shared with CNA. “I have led a full life despite my disability.” 

Daniese McMullin-Powell, who is representing Delaware ADAPT in the lawsuit, said that the medical system already neglects people with disabilities.  

“We do not need exacerbate its brokenness by adding an element where some patients are steered toward suicide,” said McMullin-Powell, who is a polio survivor and has used a wheelchair for most of her life. 

“For patients with serious disabilities, this law will put us at risk of deadly discrimination from doctors and insurance companies in Delaware to make subjective and speculative judgments based on their perception of our quality of life,” McMullin-Powell said, according to the press release. 

The legal group Ted Kittila of Halloran Farkas + Kittila LLP, who are representing the plaintiffs, called the law “ill-considered” and said it will “cause real harm to people who need real help.”

“For too long, assisted suicide has been pitched as an act of mercy,” the group said in the press release. “For those in the disability community, it represents a real threat of continued discrimination.”  

The office of Gov. Meyer did not respond to a request for comment in time for publication.

El Papa León XIV pide un alto el fuego inmediato entre Tailandia y Camboya

“Expreso mi cercanía en la oración a estas queridas poblaciones y pido a las partes que cesen inmediatamente el fuego y reanuden el diálogo”, dijo el Pontífice

Catequesis del Papa León XIV sobre la Pascua de Cristo y la pregunta acerca de la muerte

León XIV continuó con el ciclo de catequesis sobre la relación entre la resurrección de Cristo y los desafíos del mundo actual.

Mons. Rico no participó en el manifiesto crítico con Doctrina de la Fe sobre María Corredentora 

El Obispo de Asidonia-Jerez (España), Mons. Rico, afirma no haber participado en el manifiesto crítico con la Nota doctrinal Mater Populi fidelis del Dicasterio para la Doctrina de la Fe. 

El Papa critica el transhumanismo y asegura que la muerte “no se opone a la vida”

El Santo Padre reflexionó sobre el sentido cristiano de la muerte que es “parte constitutiva de ella como paso a la vida eterna”.

La religión se mantiene estable en Estados Unidos, revela nuevo estudio

El número de adultos estadounidenses que se identifican con el cristianismo, con otra religión o sin religión se ha mantenido estable, según un nuevo informe del Pew Research Center.

En este lugar ocurrió el milagro de la estampación de la Virgen de Guadalupe

Aunque millones de fieles reconocen al Cerro del Tepeyac en la Ciudad de México como el sitio de las apariciones de la Virgen de Guadalupe, no muchos saben que el milagro de la estampación de su imagen no ocurrió ahí, sino en un lugar hoy prácticamente olvidado.

22 millones de personas veneraron la reliquia de San Judas Tadeo que recorrió México

Alrededor de 22.000.000 personas acudieron a venerar la reliquia de primer grado de San Judas Tadeo, que recorrió México desde el 29 de julio de 2024 y que en los próximos días partirá de regreso a Roma (Italia).