In a Tuesday interview with Australian television presenter Andrew Denton, singer Madonna suggested that Jesus Christ would have favored a woman’s right to undergo an abortion.
While promoting her newly released album Madame X, Madonna veered off on several tangents about the Catholic Church and Pope Francis. After a joke from Denton about her and the pope knocking back drinks, the Material Girl singer said she wouldn’t be surprised if the opportunity presented itself. “One day he might invite me. I think this one might,” she said, before listing off what the pair would discuss.
“Let’s talk about Jesus’ point of view about women,” Madonna mused about what she would talk about with the pope. “Let’s talk about it. What do you really think he thought of women? And don’t you think Jesus would agree that a woman has the right to choose what to do with her body? I think he would be open to having that conversation with me.”
In 2015, Madonna said that despite being purportedly “excommunicated” by the Catholic Church on numerous occasions, the possibility of her and the pope meeting up to talk about hot-button issues wouldn’t be outside the realm of possibility. “I also feel like this new pope is kind of groovy, and I think we might be able to get together and have a chat about sex,” she said at the time.
Guatemalan man illegally in US accused of sexually abusing Alabama child shows no remorse: ‘It is what it is’
Marco Rubio heading to Panama on first trip as secretary of state: ‘We won’t continue to ignore the region’
Tennessee school shooter who killed 1, injured another identified as teen student: police
Trump warns FEMA faces a reckoning after Biden admin: ‘Not done their job’
Department of Justice freezes all civil rights division cases: report
Trump’s ICE racks up hundreds of arrests, including illegal immigrants arrested for horror crimes
Trump names Sean Curran as Secret Service director
Trump Pardons Tech Pioneer Who Was Arrested in Library’s Sci-Fi Section, Given Two Life Sentences
Prince Harry’s Invictus Games Go Woke, Removes Guns from Shooting Events
Breaking: House OKs Laken Riley Act – Next Stop, Trump’s Desk
Jimmy Carter’s grandson defends Trump raising flags on Inauguration Day
Four Illegal Immigrants Charged with Targeting NFL Superstar in Gang Operation
Trump DOJ Set to Crack Down on State and Local Officials Who Oppose Deportation Efforts: Memo
US Marine killed in freak accident at ski resort
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to a probable weekend session to confirm Trump nominees
Madonna’s remarks come as Hollywood is ratching up its pressure campaign against states that have recently passed strict abortion laws. Republican governors in Georgia, Mississippi, and Ohio have signed their own “heartbeat” bills in the last year, barring the killing of infants after a fetal heartbeat is detected — which occurs within six weeks of pregnancy. Last month, Missouri lawmakers passed similar legislation, becoming the eighth state to do so. On the same day, the Texas House of Representatives approved a measure aimed at banning any state or local government from using taxpayer money to partner with abortion providers.
Major Hollywood studios in recent weeks have joined Netflix in saying they may reevaluate filming in Georgia if the state’s abortion law goes into effect. The state is known for its lucrative tax incentives for filming.
WarnerMedia, NBCUniversal, Sony Pictures Entertainment, and the Walt Disney Co. followed the streaming service’s lead earlier this week with a deluge of statements, breaking a three-week silence from the big players in entertainment on the law.
Although individuals in Hollywood had been vocal on the matter and smaller production companies had weighed in on plans to boycott, pull productions, or donate money to help organizations fighting the law, as J.J. Abrams and Jordan Peele pledged to do with Lovecraft Country, the silence from the big players was conspicuous. And none of the major studios have definitely pledged to pull productions from Georgia or other states that have recently enacted strict new abortion laws.
Disney CEO Bob Iger told Reuters that it would be difficult to continue filming there if it becomes law. Iger said that the company has heard from people who say they won’t work there should the law take effect.
Guatemalan man illegally in US accused of sexually abusing Alabama child shows no remorse: ‘It is what it is’
Marco Rubio heading to Panama on first trip as secretary of state: ‘We won’t continue to ignore the region’
Tennessee school shooter who killed 1, injured another identified as teen student: police
Trump warns FEMA faces a reckoning after Biden admin: ‘Not done their job’
Department of Justice freezes all civil rights division cases: report
Trump’s ICE racks up hundreds of arrests, including illegal immigrants arrested for horror crimes
Trump names Sean Curran as Secret Service director
Trump Pardons Tech Pioneer Who Was Arrested in Library’s Sci-Fi Section, Given Two Life Sentences
Prince Harry’s Invictus Games Go Woke, Removes Guns from Shooting Events
Breaking: House OKs Laken Riley Act – Next Stop, Trump’s Desk
Jimmy Carter’s grandson defends Trump raising flags on Inauguration Day
Four Illegal Immigrants Charged with Targeting NFL Superstar in Gang Operation
Trump DOJ Set to Crack Down on State and Local Officials Who Oppose Deportation Efforts: Memo
US Marine killed in freak accident at ski resort
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to a probable weekend session to confirm Trump nominees
Many Georgians, from politicians to the people who work on film sets, worry about the adverse effects of the law. Georgia’s Democratic lawmakers and local film workers have urged Hollywood to keep production in the state. Boycotts, some say, are not the response they are looking for.
Story cited here.