Why Food and Gas Prices Won’t Drop Any Time Soon

Currents News Staff

New federal forecasts show food prices will likely keep climbing. The average cost of gas will stay high or may even rise. The USDA now predicts grocery prices will increase up to four percent throughout this year and the average cost of dining out could set a new record.

That’s partly because Ukraine and Russia usually export a lot of the world’s wheat and corn.

“It will have global context, impact, beyond anything we’ve seen since World War II,” said U.N. World Food Programme Executive Director David Beasley.

China’s new COVID-19 lockdowns are making it hard for supply chains to recover from the pandemic. Oil prices dipped a bit this week after Russia said it would ease up its assault on parts of Ukraine.

“I think we should be clear eyed about the reality of what’s happening on the ground,” said White House Communications Director Kate Bedingfield. “And no one should be fooled by Russia’s announcements.”

Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said gas prices will fluctuate.

“It’s called rockets and feathers,” said Granholm, “meaning when the price goes up, price per barrel, that means your gas stations prices go up like a rocket. When the price goes down per barrel, the gas station prices come down like a feather.”

U.S. oil producers aren’t increasing drilling much to help. Company CEOs say investor pressure is retraining growth — according to a Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas survey.

“Because of gas!!!” said driver Albert Zupancic. “We are, as of right now, we are definitely not taking our family vacation this year. It will be more or less a trip to the lake.”

Catholic News Headlines for Tuesday, 3/29/22

Could the war in Ukraine be nearing its end? Why Russia has decided to de-escalate part of its military assault following peace talks.

Close to three dozen Russian asylum seekers crossed the border into the U.S. thanks to a secret deal between American and Mexican officials.

Pope Francis is helping to erase the pain of survivors of Catholic run indigenous schools in Canada.

A school bus up in flames — with kids still inside!

Peace Talks Progress: Russia Could Reduce Military Operations in Ukraine’s Capital

Currents News Staff

It’s a significant move on two fronts.

Russia is pulling back some forces from Kyiv and Chernihiv following the latest peace talks with Ukraine in Istanbul, with Turkey hailing the talks as the “most meaningful progress yet.”

More than a month into the invasion, many are crediting the underestimated resilience of the Ukrainian people.

“I do think that Ukraine is in a good negotiating position,” said Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth. “Much better than they would be had they not been able to push the Russians out of Kyiv.”

Paramount to Russia’s change in strategy is an agreement on “neutrality.” A Ukrainian presidential advisor is saying a meeting between Putin and Zelensky is now a “likelihood.”

But the shelling of northern cities continued on Tuesday even as the de-escalation was announced.

“You have just heard an explosion,” said Chernihiv mayor Vladyslav Atroshenko. “That means something has flown in to attack us. This isn’t us striking something. This is something that has come from the enemy side.”

U.S. officials believe Russian forces are pulling back in some areas of the North to focus on gains in the south and the east.

But Secretary of State Antony Blinken cautions this could be a deception.

“There is what Russia says, and there is what Russia does,” said Blinken. “We’re focused on the latter.”

Florida Governor Signs Bill Banning Gender Identity Lessons In School

Currents News Staff

Florida’s so called “Don’t Say Gay” measure, as critics have dubbed it, is now law. On Monday, Gov. Ron DeSantis appeared defiant at the bill signing after months of controversy.

“I don’t care what big corporations say,” said the governor. “Here I stand. I’m not backing down.”

DeSantis referenced Disney’s condemnation of the bill, which has also sparked student walkouts in some Florida schools.

The “Parental Rights in Education” law does not specifically ban the use of the word gay, but it does prohibit instruction on sexual orientation or gender identity in Kindergarten through third grade.

Supporters argue the measure gives parents greater oversight over what students learn and discuss at school and that LGBTQ-related topics should be left for families to discuss at home.

“Parents have a fundamental role in the education, health care and well being of their children,” said Gov. DeSantis.

But opponents say the measure negatively impacts an already marginalized community. So far, at least one LGBTQ rights group, Equality Florida, has threatened legal action against the legislation.

“You’re clearly singling out,” said Jeff Delmay of Equality Florida, “clearly discriminating against, in this situation and we feel it.”

Meanwhile, the Trevor Project, a non-profit organization that works on suicide prevention among LGBTQ youth released a statement saying “LGBTQ youth in Florida deserve better. They deserve to see their history, their families and themselves reflected in the classroom.”

Catholic News Headlines for Monday, 3/28/22

Pope Francis met with representatives of Canada’s Indigenous community this morning – the first of several meetings scheduled throughout the week.

Representatives from both Ukraine and Russia met in Turkey for talks today.

New York City Mayor Eric Adams is defending his new NYPD anti-gun units by showing video of a mom and baby being robbed by two gunmen.

Pope Francis Meets With Canadian Indigenous Hoping to Bring Peace to Residential School Survivors

By Currents News Staff and Cindy Wooden 

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Members of the Métis National Council gave Pope Francis a set of beaded moccasins and asked him to walk with them on the path of truth, justice and healing of Canada’s Indigenous communities and their relationship with the Catholic Church, said Cassidy Caron, president of the council.

Led by two fiddlers, the delegates walked from under the colonnade of St. Peter’s Square to a prearranged spot where dozens of reporters waited to hear about their meeting March 28 with Pope Francis.

[Related: Pope Francis to Listen to Canadian Indigenous Before Addressing Group]

The delegates from the Métis National Council and the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami had separate meetings with the pope March 28. The delegation from the Assembly of First Nations was scheduled to meet him March 31.

The delegations’ trip to Rome, accompanied by six Canadian bishops, was designed to give them an opportunity to explain to Pope Francis how the communities live and struggle today and how the Catholic Church and its institutions contributed to those struggles, especially by running residential schools where the Indigenous languages and cultural expressions were banned and where many students experienced abuse.

Before their meetings, leaders of all the groups said they want an apology from the pope for the Catholic Church’s role in running the schools. About 60% of the 139 schools across Canada were run by Catholic religious orders or dioceses. According to the government, which funded the schools, more than 150,000 First Nations, Métis and Inuit children were forced to attend the schools between the 1870s and 1997.

The groups want Pope Francis to go to Canada and publicly apologize there for the church’s treatment of Indigenous peoples and its collaboration with colonizers. The Vatican has said Pope Francis is willing to make the trip, although it has not said when.

The three groups together, along with family members and supporters, were to meet again with the pope April 1 to hear his response to what they had shared.

First Nations, Inuit and Métis also want “unfettered access” to the records of the church-run schools, said Caron, president of the Métis organization.

She led her community’s meeting with the pope wearing a jacket with traditional beading that had been given to her for the occasion.

She said three of the delegates, survivors of residential schools, shared their stories with the pope. They “did an incredible job of standing up and telling their truth. They were so brave and so courageous.”

“We invited Pope Francis and Catholics all around the world to join us, the Métis nation, on our pathway of truth, justice and healing, and we hope that in committing to us, committing to real action, that the church can finally begin its own pathway toward meaningful and lasting reconciliation,” Caron told reporters.

“The only words he spoke back to us in English … were ‘truth, justice and healing’ and I take that as a personal commitment,” she said. “So, he has personally committed to those three actions.”

Too many members of the community have already died “without ever having their truths heard and their pain acknowledged,” she said. The time to acknowledge what happened and to apologize is “long overdue, it is never too late to do the right thing.”

After Pope Francis had spent about an hour each with the Métis and Inuit delegations, the Vatican press office said, the pope had wanted to listen and “to create space for painful stories brought by the survivors.”

Natan Obed, president of the the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, told reporters later that the organization representing 65,000 Inuit in Canada asked Pope Francis for an apology, restitution for the church’s role in running the schools, and for assistance in getting Oblate Father Johannes Rivoire, who has been accused of child sexual abuse, to return to Canada to face charges. The priest apparently is in France.

Obed said he introduced the group to the pope by explaining that there are many Inuit who are practicing Catholics, who have a strong faith, which helps them be positive influences on their communities. But, “there also are many who are still struggling to have any sort of relationship with the Catholic Church because of the trauma that they themselves have experienced or the trauma that their loved ones have experienced.”

Martha Greig, a residential school survivor and one of the delegates, told reporters that while she is convinced forgiveness is an essential part of healing, many Inuit are not ready to hear that.

“But a genuine, heartfelt apology would be a first step” in helping survivors and their families move toward forgiveness and reconciliation, Greig said.

The children were taken from their families and put in the schools to learn “how to be a ‘white person,’ which we cannot be. We are Inuit.”

The delegation entered the papal library and lighted a qulliq, a traditional Inuit lamp. And at the end of the meeting, they recited the Lord’s Prayer in Inuktitut, their language, Obed said. They gave Pope Francis a seal skin liturgical stole and a rosary case, also made of seal skin.

Bishop Raymond Poisson of Saint-Jérôme, Quebec, president of the Canadian bishops’ conference, accompanied the delegations. He described the atmosphere as one of “mutual affection.”

Archbishop Donald Bolan of Regina, Saskatchewan, who also was present, said, “A lot of hard truths were spoken but they were spoken in a very gracious and in a very poignant and in a very powerful way.”

Bishop William McGrattan of Calgary, Alberta, vice president of the bishops’ conference, told reporters that the pope jokingly told the Inuit that if he does go to Canada, he does not want to go to the Arctic in the winter.

“He does want to come,” the bishop said, “but he would like to come at a time when it’s not so cold.”

Ukraine President Zelenskyy Says He’s Ready to Accept Neutral Non-Nuclear Status

Currents News Staff

As Russia intensifies missile strikes on Ukrainian cities in the west and the east, heavy fighting also continues in the south, where the mayor of the port city of Mariupol has called for a complete evacuation of the remaining population.

A weeks-long siege by Russian forces has flattened the city, leaving an unknown number of civilians dead and forcing hundreds of thousands of people from their homes.

Intense fighting also continues in the suburbs of Kyiv as Russian forces attempt to establish a corridor around the capital to block supply routes, according to a Ukrainian defense official.

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy says he’s ready to accept a neutral, non-nuclear status as part of a peace deal with Russia, but any agreement would have to put Ukrainian people in a referendum.

“This was the first point of principle for the Russian Federation, as I recall, and as far as I remember, they started the war because of this,” said Zelensky.

Meanwhile, President Joe Biden triggered a political storm after going off-script during a speech in Poland.

“For God’s sake, this man cannot remain in power,” President Biden said.

White House officials and Biden himself are trying to downplay the remarks saying he was really arguing that Vladimir Putin can’t be allowed to exercise his power over neighboring countries.