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3 weeks ago |
eppc.org | Aaron Kheriaty |Andrew Walker |George Weigel |Nathanael Blake
Published April 2, 2025 First Things One in six couples wanting to conceive a child find themselves, after a year or more of trying to get pregnant, unable to do so. The anguish of infertility is hard to understand for those who have not experienced it.
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3 weeks ago |
eppc.org | Aaron Kheriaty |Andrew Walker |George Weigel |Nathanael Blake
Published March 28, 2025 Catholic Exchange In my last article I began to unpack the meaning of the brief prayer, doce me passionem Tuam—teach me Your suffering—a simple aspiration we can pray many times a day.
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1 month ago |
eppc.org | Aaron Kheriaty |Natalie Dodson |Alexandra DeSanctis |Stanley Kurtz
Published March 21, 2025 Catholic Exchange In the first part of this series I introduced the brief prayer, doce me passionem Tuam—teach me Your suffering—a simple aspiration we can say many times a day.
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Jan 15, 2025 |
aaronkheriaty.substack.com | Aaron Kheriaty
Joy Pullman over at The Federalist has written an excellent piece on recent developments in our free speech case and another related case, describing what these reveal about government censorship. The article opens:Government pressure on national communications monopolies to mute Americans’ critiques of government began in Barack Obama’s presidency and continues today, say court documents filed Dec. 23. Federal documents uncovered by separate litigation on Dec.
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Nov 28, 2024 |
eppc.org | Aaron Kheriaty |Hannes Sarv |George Weigel |Alexandra DeSanctis
Published November 28, 2024 Freedom Research The following profile was published on Freedom Research by Hannes Sarv. US psychiatrist, medical and bioethics expert, and former University of California professor, Dr Aaron Kheriaty, says that nowadays it doesn’t matter so much what one’s political views are or which party one supports.
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Oct 31, 2024 |
brownstone.org | Aaron Kheriaty
Longtime readers of Human Flourishing may recall that Alison Morrow, an Emmy Award-winning journalist, was the first person to interview me after I filed my lawsuit challenging the University of California’s vaccine mandate in court. YouTube censored this interview, as I explained in a post at the time. This instance of censorship, among others, was cited in my Missouri v. Biden testimony.
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Oct 18, 2024 |
heartlanddailynews.com | Aaron Kheriaty
By Aaron Kheriaty, M.D.Americans are rapidly losing trust in the medical profession. The percentage of U.S. adults who are confident medical scientists act in the best interests of the public declined from 40 percent in 2020 to 29 percent in 2022, according to Pew research. A 2021 survey by the American Board of Internal Medicine found one in six people—including physicians—no longer trust doctors, and one in three do not trust the health care system.
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Oct 18, 2024 |
heartland.org | Aaron Kheriaty
By Aaron Kheriaty, M.D.Americans are rapidly losing trust in the medical profession. The percentage of U.S. adults who are confident medical scientists act in the best interests of the public declined from 40 percent in 2020 to 29 percent in 2022, according to Pew research. A 2021 survey by the American Board of Internal Medicine found one in six people—including physicians—no longer trust doctors, and one in three do not trust the health care system.
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Oct 5, 2024 |
fhicommunications.com | Aaron Kheriaty
As I explored in two recent posts (“The Managerialist Revolution in Medicine” and “Why We Are Sick“), our medical institutions—from hospitals and licensing boards to medical schools and professional societies—are failing us. The complex of problems in many of these institutions makes reform or repair, in the short term at least, impractical and perhaps impossible. Too many vested financial or other interests will not readily relinquish their territory.
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Oct 4, 2024 |
brownstone.org | Aaron Kheriaty
As I explored in two recent posts (“The Managerialist Revolution in Medicine” and “Why We Are Sick“), our medical institutions—from hospitals and licensing boards to medical schools and professional societies—are failing us. The complex of problems in many of these institutions makes reform or repair, in the short term at least, impractical and perhaps impossible. Too many vested financial or other interests will not readily relinquish their territory.