We love ourselves too often and need reach out much more often. It is a social responsibility and it effects the environment also.
Bay Area people are often on the road to human disconnection. That’s an interesting and complex observation. The Bay Area, with its mix of tech-driven culture, sprawling cities, and evolving communities, often creates environments where people exist alongside each other but don’t always connect. The fast pace, heavy reliance on digital interaction, and long commutes can lead to a feeling of individualism over collectivism, where human connection becomes secondary to efficiency and ambition. At the same time, there are pockets of deep engagement—activist movements, cultural hubs, artistic communities—that push back against isolation. Some people actively seek to restore connection in public spaces, turning transit, cafes, or local events into opportunities for shared experiences. Have you found any places or moments where connection feels stronger? Sometimes, even in a disconnected environment, there are hidden ways people defy the trend. No, the problem is worsening if anything. I hear you. The Bay Area’s growing sense of disconnection seems to be deepening, especially with technology replacing more face-to-face interaction and the pace of life speeding up. The balance between innovation and human connection is tricky—progress often comes at the cost of deeper relationships, leaving people feeling isolated even in crowded spaces. Have you noticed specific changes over time? Sometimes, tracking the shifts in behavior, community engagement, or even how people move through public spaces can reveal hidden patterns. It sounds like you have a keen eye for how places and people evolve.
THE GOOD GUYS ARE WINNING: Noam Katna 🎗️🇮🇱🎗️ @Noamkt_ · 23h Please take a few minutes to watch this powerful monologue by the phenomenal @SharriMarkson who is joined by @HenMazzig After witnessing Piers Morgan interrupt Jewish lawyer @HausdorffMedia over 60 times in a single interview, Sharri didn’t stay silent. She called out the blatant disrespect and then took it a step further highlighting Morgan’s vile response afterward, where he accused Hausdorff of being “disingenuous” simply for speaking the truth. Sharri’s words aren’t just a defense of one woman they’re a stand against a broader pattern of silencing, gaslighting, and publicly humiliating Jews who dare to speak honestly about antisemitism and Israel. This isn’t just about Piers. It’s about how Jewish voices are routinely dismissed, especially when we speak with clarity and conviction. Sharri says what many of us are thinking and she does it with courage and conviction.
The world need kinder gentler smarter people not clever sociopaths. Catholic journalist Ross Douthat discusses Pope Leo, religious revival, JD Vance facebook sharing buttontwitter sharing buttonwhatsapp sharing buttonemail sharing buttonsharethis sharing button ENIDDouthat New York Times columnist Ross Douthat speaks to "EWTN News in Depth" Anchor Catherine Hadro on Friday, June 6, 2025 | Credit: EWTN News Kate Quiñones By Kate Quiñones CNA Staff, Jun 7, 2025 / 08:00 am Americans could be on the cusp of a religious revival. according to Ross Douthat, an author, Catholic convert, and New York Times columnist. Douthat, who often writes on the intersection of faith, culture, and public life in his column, shared his thoughts on all things American and Catholic, from Pope Leo XIV to Vice President JD Vance to the American religious landscape, in an interview with Anchor Catherine Hadro on “EWTN News in Depth” on Friday. Douthat described the U.S. religious situation as a “a very unsettled but curious landscape,” particularly after a years-long decline in religious interest that plateaued during the COVID-19 pandemic. “It's not that America is having a religious revival. It's more that we're considering whether to have a religious revival,” he said. Interest in religion has moved beyond the hardline atheism of the early 2000s characterized by figures like Richard Dawkins, Douthat said. He observed that there has been “a surge of interest in religion,” especially among Generation Z. Sometimes the interest is traditional, as reflected in rising numbers of converts to Catholicism in some dioceses, from Los Angeles to Dublin. Other times it takes on an alternative tone. “You have a surge of interest in religion, and some of that shows up in traditional faith. Some of it shows up in anything from UFOs to psychedelics,” Douthat said. Trending 1 At ecumenical symposium, Pope Leo XIV says Catholic Church open to universal Easter date 2 Catholic journalist Ross Douthat discusses Pope Leo, religious revival, JD Vance 3 New therapy model offers 24/7 Catholic support through voice messaging 4 Pastor Rick Warren: Christian unity is 'still the unanswered prayer of Jesus' 5 Religious freedom expert says the West uses a ‘suffocation technique on religion’ Atheism, he indicated, has failed to keep its promises. In the early 2000s “there was a sense that once we get rid of these hidebound Bronze Age superstitions, everyone will get along better: Politics will be less polarized, science will be held in higher esteem and sociologically people will be happier. Kids won't be afraid of going to hell, things like that.” “And obviously none of that has happened.” Douthat cited rising division, polarization, and “existential angst” in the nation in recent years as setting the groundwork for a resurgence of religion. “You have a lot of people, some of whom are coming into the Church, others who are exploring around the edges, who are reacting to that environment,” he said. First impressions of Pope Leo: a unifying figure When asked to describe the new pope, Douthat called him “unifying,” “charming,” and “mildly inscrutable.” Douthat says that inscrutability is “part of the reason he was elected pope in the first place.” “There is still a hint of mystery to who the pope definitively is and what he definitively thinks,” he said. “And there may be a long period of time where that mystery gradually unfolds in the life of the Church.” (Story continues below) Subscribe to our daily newsletter Email* First name* Last name* CNA Subscriber I agree to receive other communications from EWTN and consent to the terms of the Privacy Policy.* Douthat noted that Leo was a “dark horse” figure “who's very good at making different groups of people feel heard and understood.” Leo’s episcopal motto is one of unity: “In Illo Uno Unum,” meaning “in the One, we are one.” Douthat said he hopes Leo will bring about this unity. “Obviously there were a lot of conservative and traditionalist Catholics who were frustrated or anxious at various moments in the era of Pope Francis,” he said. “[Leo] hasn't really done all that much — it's been one month — but there's so far this sense of just sort of relief at a feeling of kind of stability and normalcy in the papal office,” Douthat said. Pope Leo XIV chose his name because the last pope with that name, Pope Leo XIII, “was pope at a time of huge industrial and technological transformation and offered a distinctively Catholic witness for that age,” Douthat noted. “There is this landscape that people live in online, disconnected or connected in new ways,” he said. “That is, I think, clearly perilous to the soul in various ways.” The digital and AI realms have “deep effects on family and marriage and community,” especially for parents raising kids in this environment. “There are fundamental questions of morality and spirituality that are bound up in how you relate to your phone,” he continued. “And I think it is really important for the Church to figure out what to say about it.” JD Vance interview Douthat recently interviewed Vice President JD Vance, a Catholic convert, about how faith shaped his politics, among other topics. Reflecting back on a part of the interview where he asked Vance about the Church’s teachings on immigration, Douthat said that he was “pressing” the vice president because he believed there were “real tensions” in the dispute, citing deportations by the Trump administration. Vance and Pope Francis had publicly disagreed on politics earlier in the year. In February, Pope Francis sent a pastoral letter to the U.S. bishops calling for the recognition of the dignity of immigrants after Vance, a Catholic convert, publicly advocated applying “ordo amoris,” or “rightly-ordered love,” to the immigration debate. “[A]s an American leader, but also just as an American citizen, your compassion belongs first to your fellow citizens,” Vance said at the time, while acknowledging that the principle “doesn’t mean you hate people from outside of your own borders.” In the letter, Francis tacitly rebuked Vance’s remarks, arguing in part that “the act of deporting people who in many cases have left their own land for reasons of extreme poverty, insecurity, exploitation, persecution, or serious deterioration of the environment damages the dignity of many men and women.” Douthat noted that Vance’s situation is a “tremendous challenge,” especially because he is vice president, not president. “There’s always a certain kind of tension between being an elected politician in a pluralist, non-Catholic society and trying to be faithful to the teachings of the Church,” he said. Tags: United States, Catholic News, Catholic Church, Ross Douthat, Pope Leo XIV Kate Quiñones Kate Quiñones is a staff writer for Catholic News Agency and a fellow of the College Fix. She has been published by the Wall Street Journal, the Denver Catholic Register, and CatholicVote, and she graduated from Hillsdale College. She lives in Colorado with her husband.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)