Essayer OR - Gratuit
'THE POLITICS HAVE COME TO US'
Reason magazine
|February 2025
HOW A CHRISTIAN CHARITY IN EL PASO ENDED UP AT WAR WITH THE TEXAS GOVERNMENT FOR HELPING UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANTS
ELPASO IS the U.S.-Mexico border in miniature: Once a permeable landscape, the Texas city is now separated from its sister to the south—Ciudad Juárez— by a harsh apparatus of walls and wire. Thousands of people travel between the two cities daily, splitting their lives between two nations, all while debates rage over who may cross the border and how.
When five young Catholics set out to help El Paso’s most vulnerable residents in the late 1970s, these questions weren’t their primary concerns. “They were reading the Bible and saying, ‘Where do we encounter God in this world? If we take our faith seriously, what kind of actions does that call us to?’” says Mary Fontana, a member of the board of directors (and longtime volunteer) at Annunciation House, a nonprofit that shelters and aids migrants.
“They kept returning to the idea that the God that they read about in the scriptures in the Bible was someone who identified first and foremost with the poor. And then they looked around their community of El Paso and said, ‘Who are the poor in our midst?’” In El Paso, that “was primarily people who are undocumented,” Fontana explains.
The Catholic Diocese of El Paso loaned the group a vacant floor in an old building, and in 1978 Annunciation House opened its doors. Its mission is “to provide hospitality and accompaniment for the poor in migration,” says Fontana, offering “shelter, food, and clothing” to the city’s “poorest of the poor.” Annunciation House says it has helped “hundreds of thousands of refugees” since its founding. This was meant to be a humanitarian mission-something many churches and religiously informed nonprofits view as an expression of faith rather than politics.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition February 2025 de Reason magazine.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Reason magazine
Reason magazine
AI vs. Paperwork
AT SEPTEMBER'S NATIONAL Conservatism Conference, Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) argued Al “threatens the common man's liberty” and that “only humans should advise on critical medical treatments.” Yet Al promises to enhance the human experience by reducing the price of critical services like health care.
1 mins
December 2025
Reason magazine
Q&A Katie Engelhart
THE CANADIAN PULITZER Prize-winning journalist Katie Engelhart wrote the new book The Inevitable: Dispatches on the Right to Die.
3 mins
December 2025
Reason magazine
What Happened After Greta Rideout's Husband Raped Her
WOMAN SHOWS up at the police station and says she would like to press charges for rape.
6 mins
December 2025
Reason magazine
An Alarmingly Broad View of 'Public Health'
DEFENDING COVID-19 POLICIES against legal challenges, government officials relied heavily on Jacobson v. Massachusetts, a 1905 case in which the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a smallpox vaccine mandate imposed by the Cambridge Board of Health.
3 mins
December 2025
Reason magazine
'He Never Got To Go 'Home'
INSIDE TEXAS' SECRETIVE \"CIVIL COMMITMENT\" SYSTEM
25 mins
December 2025
Reason magazine
Inside Vernor Vinge's FBI File
VERNOR VINGE-THE Hugo Award-winning science fiction author who passed away in March 2024—imagined a world where individuals, not governments, held the power.
1 mins
December 2025
Reason magazine
Will Tariffs Steal Christmas?
SANTA CLAUS MIGHT be able to evade customs checkpoints as he magically smuggles toys into the country for the good boys and girls-but everyone else doing Christmas shopping this year could run into some problems.
2 mins
December 2025
Reason magazine
THEY THOUGHT LEGAL WEED MEANT FREEDOM. THEN THE DRONES CAME.
A CALIFORNIA COUNTY TRIED TO USE DRONES TO FIND ILLEGAL MARIJUANA OPERATIONS, BUT IT PUNISHED BUILDING CODE VIOLATIONS INSTEAD.
18 mins
December 2025
Reason magazine
Thank This Klansman for Your Freedom of Speech
A TWO-BIT BIGOT'S SUPREME COURT VICTORY REVERBERATES IN CONTEMPORARY DEBATES.
20 mins
December 2025
Reason magazine
The Art of the Presidential Health Cover-Up
WHEN THE St. Petersburg Times first launched PolitiFact in 2007, its purpose was to assess the veracity of statements made by “members of Congress, the president, cabinet secretaries, lobbyists, people who testify before Congress and anyone else who speaks up in Washington.”
3 mins
December 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
