Trump’s ‘get tough’ on Cuba policy piles on island’s suffering
Trump’s “tough Cuba policy” breaks with recent efforts toward rapprochement supported by the Catholic Church, with the aim of overturning the Cuban revolution by year’s end.
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Trump’s “tough Cuba policy” breaks with recent efforts toward rapprochement supported by the Catholic Church, with the aim of overturning the Cuban revolution by year’s end.
Young Latinos are leaving the church. That’s not a problem to be put off.
According to Pew Research, young Latinos are more likely to be unaffiliated with a religion than they are to be Catholic. Among U.S.-born Latinos ages 18 to 29, 49 percent do not affiliate with a religion. Across all generations, only 36 percent of U.S.-born Latinos identify as Catholic.
Juan Miguel Alvarez, the director of New Horizons at the University of Notre Dame, noted the trend of disaffiliation in his recent feature for America and recommended some practical solutions. The X-factor, I would argue, is the American who walked out onto the Loggia of Blessings dressed in white just over a year ago.
When Pope Leo XIV introduced himself to the world in prepared remarks on May 8, 2025, he spoke almost exclusively in Italian. He did pray in Latin and, to the delight of Latin Americans everywhere, he also briefly spoke in Spanish when greeting his “dear Diocese of Chiclayo, Peru.
As graduates walked across the stage to receive their degrees at Lourdes University in Sylvania, Ohio, over Mother’s Day weekend, the ceremony was more poignant than usual. Lourdes is one of at least three Catholic colleges closing this year, part of a wider trend expected to claim hundreds of institutions over the next decade.
The closures are the result of declining enrollment, much of it caused by the “demographic cliff” of prospective college-age students, mounting financial challenges from decreased tuition revenue, and loss of federal grants and funding. Also closing this year are Ana Maria College in Paxton, Massachusetts, and Siena Heights University in Adrian, Michigan. All three institutions were founded by orders of religious women and prioritized serving poor and marginalized populations—unfortunately not a ticket to financial success.