Copy Desk Daily, Feb. 15, 2019

Our team of copy editors reads and posts most of what you see on the websites for National Catholic Reporter and Global Sisters Report (the NCR project focusing on women religious). The Copy Desk Daily provides insight on recommended news and opinion articles that have crossed our desks on their way to you.

Today, Feb. 15, is Jeanne Atkinson's last day as executive director of the Catholic Legal Immigration Network, a role she has served since March 2013. Maria Benevento reports on Atkinson's tenure and impact at the nation's largest network of nonprofit immigration programs.

Read: Under Jeanne Atkinson, CLINIC has ramped up efforts to help immigrants


NCR's choice for 2018's Catholic Newsmaker of the Year was former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick. We received many letters to the editor. At the link below, you'll find reactions from your fellow NCR readers. 

Read: Your thoughts on McCarrick as NCR Newsmaker of the Year


During a talk at Purdue, Howard Schultz asked if anyone in the room believed the government is working well. No one raised their hand. Michael Sean Winters wishes that he had been there. He has a hypothetical reply for Schultz.

Read: We do not need another businessman in the White House, Mr. Schultz


Some of my favorite science-fiction movies are stories about humans and cyborgs, like "Robocop" and "The Terminator." I've been curious what critics would say about Robert Rodriguez's cyborg-centric "Alita: Battle Angel." Sr. Rose Pacatte -- a Terminator fan herself -- was not a fan.

Read: Derivative dystopia: 'Alita' needed better characters for its visual spectacle


"Unless church officials can come to recognize the standpoint of privilege and power that they occupy, and how it might be distorting their understanding of priesthood, of equality, of sex and sex abuse it is hard in the current moment to see a way out of the crisis they have created," Michele Dillon writes. "Euphemization has enabled the hierarchy to mask the double truths — celibacy/sexual activity and priestly service/power — that have sustained its consecrated status for many generations of Catholics."

Read: The Catholic Church's euphemization of power

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