Just War

  • Just war theory – more like confession than permission

    Just war theory was always reluctant permission, not a green light. Resorting to military force is never a display of international strength, but an open admission of bankruptcy. By prioritizing weapons modern states confess that the essential, slower work of human connection was abandoned far too soon.

    Just war theory – more like confession than permission
  • Trump’s attacks elevate Pope Leo

    Donald Trump’s repeated derogatory remarks about Pope Leo have paradoxically transformed the pontiff from a figure of mild curiosity into a confirmed world leader. His steady appeals to the just war tradition now command mainstream media attention rather than being buried in back pages.

    Trump’s attacks elevate Pope Leo
  • Why the Iran war is immoral

    A hospital is not a fortress. A school is not an armory. A child eating breakfast is not collateral damage waiting to happen. The just war tradition draws these lines in indelible ink, yet the fog of war keeps producing erasers — and generals willing to use them.

    Why the Iran war is immoral
  • The peace of the Resurrection and the call to end war

    The argument that enemies hide among civilians does not grant unlimited permission to inflict mass casualties on noncombatants. Civilian infrastructure like power grids and food supply chains cannot be obliterated simply because soldiers also depend on electricity and sustenance to carry out their operations.

    The peace of the Resurrection and the call to end war
  • How Iran broke Trump’s alliance with Catholic America

    At an Easter vigil for peace, Cardinal McElroy preached that the United States entered the Iran war by choice, not necessity, and failed to exhaust negotiation. He called both its initiation and continuation morally illegitimate.

    How Iran broke Trump’s alliance with Catholic America
  • A passive voice is how we hide from the wars we choose

    We have constructed an entire vocabulary of evasion around war. Violence “erupts,” conflicts “spiral,” casualties get “reported” — all passive, all subjectless. Leo XIV punctures that fog by insisting someone chose this, restoring human agency and accountability to every act of destruction.

    A passive voice is how we hide from the wars we choose

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