Making it in the (secular) (white) media as a Catholic Latina. Ep. 19




jesuitical show

Summary: <br> This week, we talk Latina identity, journalism and more with Juleyka Lantigua-Williams. She is the former senior supervising producer and editor of <a href="http://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/">NPR’s Code Switch</a> and a former <a href="https://www.theatlantic.com/author/juleyka-lantigua-williams/">staff writer at The Atlantic</a>. She has covered issues ranging from women’s rights at home and abroad, environmental justice, U.S. immigration policy, poverty, maternal health, early childhood development and demographic changes. Lantigua-Williams is also the founder of Lantigua Williams &amp; Co., a production company that seeks to amplify the “voices of organizations, people and projects that have a real sense of social justice.” <br> In Signs of the Times, on his 25th anniversary as a bishop, Pope Francis told members of the College of Cardinals, “We are grandfathers called to dream and to give our dreams to the young people of today.” <a href="https://www.americamagazine.org/politics-society/2017/06/27/can-religious-schools-receive-state-funds-supreme-court-gives-qualified">Can state funds be used in religious schools?</a> According to the Supreme Court’s ruling in Trinity Lutheran Church v. Comer, the answer is (a qualified) yes. Finally, it’s been a year since the creation of the Global X S&amp;P 500 Catholic Values ETF. We discuss what it is and how comfortable Catholics should feel when venturing into the stock market. <br>