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  • The Week Evening Review
    The Catholic take on Trump, aging aviation, and science’s ‘Big Crunch’ debate

     
    Today's Big Question

    Is the Catholic Church taking on Trump?

    The first American pope leads a church increasingly willing to express disapproval of the president. Pope Leo XIV and a few U.S. bishops have recently criticized President Donald Trump’s policies on immigration, with Leo saying “deep reflection” is needed about his home country’s treatment of migrants.

    Leo’s recent comments were his “strongest criticism of Trump yet,” said the BBC. Scripture asks, “how did you receive the foreigner, did you receive him and welcome him or not?” Leo said to journalists. 

    The pope was “obviously talking about the ICE roundups,” said Catholic historian Austen Ivereigh. Immigration is not an abstract issue for the church. “Many people targeted in the ICE raids are Catholic,” said the BBC.

    What did the commentators say?
    The Catholic Church and the White House are “not getting along,” said Elizabeth Bruenig at The Atlantic. The MAGA movement is “home to its share of outspoken Catholics” like Vice President JD Vance, Steve Bannon and Jack Posobiec, but its anti-migrant stance contradicts church teachings about the “dignity and love that the faithful owe to foreigners and refugees.” 

    Trump’s policies have pitted the “demands of the faith” against the “law of the land,” said Bruenig. The church does not require open borders. But the “scale and brutality” of its anti-migrant policies have left “little for Catholics to endorse.”

    If the Trump administration wants to “set itself up as somehow Christian,” then it should do the “bare minimum” and “welcome the stranger,” said Simcha Fisher at America, a Jesuit magazine. But there’s not much sign of that happening. 

    It’s “reasonable and acceptable” for Americans not to want to live next door to migrants, Vance said in a recent podcast interview. Such comments from a Catholic official are a “flagrant insult to our faith,” said Fisher.

    What next?
    Conservatives say a “silent majority” of American Catholics support Trump’s immigration policies, said Catholic News Agency. The president “received a majority of Catholic votes in the last election, depending on which poll you look at,” said Andrew Arthur, a fellow at the Center for Immigration Studies.

    Leo’s criticisms of Trump’s policies are “emboldening Catholic efforts to help immigrants” affected by the crackdown, said Reuters. It’s meaningful that the pope is “paying close attention to the suffering of migrants and their families here,” said Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich.

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    ‘We are not enemies with America. We are friends. So why should we be afraid?’

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on his relationship with Trump, in an interview with The Guardian. Zelenskyy, however, also said that “everyone in the world” is afraid of Trump.

     
     
    IN THE SPOTLIGHT

    A 34-year-old plane is at the center of the UPS crash

    The cause of the deadly Nov. 4 crash of a UPS cargo airplane in Louisville, Kentucky, has still not been confirmed, but some aviation experts have pointed to the fact that the plane was over three decades old. And while passenger planes are constantly being updated with new iterations from Boeing and Airbus, using an antiquated plane isn’t all that rare for cargo aviation.

    ‘Behind the times’
    The jet that crashed was a McDonnell Douglas MD-11F manufactured in 1991, according to the Aviation Safety Network. This model has been a “workhorse in the cargo industry for years,” but it had “gained a reputation as an aircraft that was behind the times,” said USA Today. The MD-11 started as a passenger jet, but that ended more than a decade ago because of “high fuel and maintenance costs.” But it has remained a common model for cargo companies.

    McDonnell Douglas “built only 200 aircraft between 1998 and 2000” before discontinuing the MD-11 and merging with Boeing, said the Louisville Courier Journal. The MD-11s are “not as fuel-efficient. They require more maintenance,” said John Cox, the founder of aviation consultancy Safety Operating Systems, to USA Today. 

    Following the crash, UPS decided to temporarily take the MD-11 out of service. This was done “out of an abundance of caution and in the interest of safety,” the company said in a statement. 

    Aging fleets
    While some might be surprised to learn that a 34-year-old plane was still flying, this is “not so unusual in the world of air cargo,” said CNN. Planes often have a “much longer lifespan than the average flyer realizes,” and older models are typically “retired due to fuel economy, rather than wear-and-tear on the aircraft itself.” This is especially true if a plane isn’t in the air as much, and cargo planes generally “fly about 30% less than passenger jets.”

    Even though the MD-11 has a “poor safety record” and “reputation for difficult landing behavior,” UPS has “only retired about 30% of its historic total of MD-11Fs,” said Simple Flying. But the company announced in 2023 that it had “begun a planned retirement of aging MD-11 freighters as part of a plan to renew the fleet with more fuel-efficient aircraft,” said supply chain site FreightWaves.

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    11,408: The number of 211 calls from people seeking food pantries in the three days since it was announced this month’s SNAP benefits would be halted, according to a CNN analysis. It’s a massive increase from the normal 2025 rate of 1,000 people calling daily.

     
     
    the explainer

    ‘Big Crunch’: science divides over future of the universe

    The expansion of the universe may be slowing down, rather than accelerating, according to a new study. If confirmed, this would have “profound implications for the fate of the universe,” said The Guardian. The findings challenge the Nobel Prize-winning theory of dark energy and suggest that “rather than expanding forever” the universe could end in a “reverse Big Bang scenario,” or Big Crunch. 

    What’s happening? 
    In the 1990s, astronomers first estimated the expansion of the universe by studying exploding stars known as type 1a supernovas. The distant supernovas were dimmer than expected, leading scientists to conclude that the expansion had sped up and was continuing to accelerate. 

    But these new findings from a team at Yonsei University in South Korea suggest that this force, dark energy, “may not be driving galaxies apart at an accelerating rate any more,” said Space.com. By estimating the ages of 300 host galaxies, the researchers concluded that there were variations in the properties of stars in the early universe that meant they produced, on average, fainter supernovas. 

    Who said what? 
    There was a “key assumption” that “turned out to be incorrect,” said Young-Wook Lee, one of the study’s authors. It’s like “doing up a shirt with the first button fastened incorrectly.” 

    This is “definitely interesting” and “very provocative,” but it “may well be wrong,” said Carlos Frenk, a cosmologist at the U.K.’s Durham University. The “influential” Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument, or DESI, consortium reached a conclusion similar to the researchers earlier this year, so a “fierce debate is opening up in cosmology” over dark energy and the “probable fate” of the universe, said The Guardian. 

    What does all this mean? 
    If the findings are confirmed, it could “open an entirely new chapter” in the quest to “understand the past and future of the universe,” said Phys.org. It could “revolutionize” our understanding of the universe and “offer clues about how our cosmos will end,” said Space.com. If dark energy has “lost the battle against gravity,” the next step could be the “contraction of space” and the end of the universe in a Big Crunch.

     
     

    Good day 🇫🇷

    … for a former French president. Nicolas Sarkozy was released from prison today after serving 20 days of his five-year prison sentence for criminal conspiracy. Judges granted his request to be freed pending an appeal hearing. Sarkozy told a Paris court that being behind bars was “gruelling” and a “nightmare.”

     
     

    Bad day ✈️

    … for jet-setters. About 9,300 flights have been cancelled as of press time since the Federal Aviation Administration ordered on Nov. 4 that 40 airports cut traffic by 4% to maintain air traffic control during the government shutdown. The FAA wants airlines to increase cancellations to 6% by Tuesday and 10% by Friday.

     
     
    Picture of the day

    Mysterious blast

    Fire Brigade personnel inspect damage from an explosion near the Red Fort Metro Station in New Delhi, India. The cause of the blast, which killed at least eight people and injured 20, remains unknown. A vehicle with three people reportedly stopped at a red light before exploding.
    Sanjeev Verma / Hindustan Times / Getty Images

     
     
    Puzzles

    Daily crossword

    Test your general knowledge with The Week's daily crossword, part of our puzzles section, which also includes sudoku and codewords

    Play here

     
     
    The Week recommends

    The end of ‘Stranger Things’ and more new TV 

    This month’s new releases run the gamut. There’s a dive into history, the return of “Stranger Things,” and a new show from TV legend Vince Gilligan.

    ‘Pluribus’
    This series is a little different from Vince Gilligan’s other shows like “Breaking Bad” and “Better Call Saul.” It’s a sci-fi mystery rather than a gritty crime drama. Most of the plot of “Pluribus” was “kept intentionally vague in marketing,” but the series is set in Albuquerque and stars Rhea Seehorn as Carol, a “miserable woman investigating a strange contagion that has turned the population of the city (and the world) unrelentingly happy,” said Wilson Chapman at IndieWire. (out now, Apple TV)

    ‘Death by Lightning’
    This Netflix historical drama spotlights James Garfield (Michael Shannon), the American president assassinated just 199 days into his first term. “That tragedy set the table for one of U.S. history’s great ‘what ifs,’” said David Smith at The Guardian. Matthew Macfadyen also stars as the assassin, Charles Guiteau, who brings about Garfield’s untimely demise. (out now, Netflix)

    ‘Stranger Things’
    It’s hard to believe that “Stranger Things” is returning for its fifth and final season. This last go-round is leading toward the final battle with humanoid monster Vecna, the main antagonist. And the feature-length series finale will screen in theaters on Dec. 31 — a first for Netflix. (Nov. 26, Netflix)

    Read more

     
     

    Poll watch

    Almost seven in 10 Americans (69%) are concerned about finding affordable health insurance, according to a Scripps News survey. And a quarter of the 1,000 people polled think health care affordability is the biggest issue facing the U.S.

     
     
    INSTANT OPINION

    Today's best commentary

    ‘The bipartisan comfort with Islamophobia harms us all’
    Erum Ikramullah and Petra Alsoofy at Al Jazeera
    Islamophobia “spikes not after a violent act but rather during election campaigns and political events, when anti-Muslim rhetoric is used as a political tactic to garner support,” say Erum Ikramullah and Petra Alsoofy. These attacks also “reflect a general trend of rising Islamophobia.” This can “lead to devastating outcomes for Muslims, from job loss and inability to freely worship to religion-based bullying of Muslim children in public schools and discrimination in public settings to even physical violence.”

    ‘The future of US-Canada defense: a new NORAD for the digital age’
    Andrew Latham at The Hill
    Threats come through “data cables, computer networks and supply chains,” and we must “build a new continental defense architecture that defends that space as effectively” as NORAD “once defended airspace above the continent,” says Andrew Latham. For Canada and the U.S., that means “reimagining continental defense as a single, integrated system.” The “Cold War division of labor, with Canada patrolling the northern skies while the U.S. focused on nuclear deterrence, does not meet today’s threats.”

    ‘As a palliative care specialist, I have witnessed the human tragedy of our end-of-life care crisis’
    Rachel Clarke at The Guardian
    For a “hospital palliative care specialist, abstract funding statistics take on daily, indelible form,” says Rachel Clarke. The “hard truth, in short, about underfunding palliative care is that people who are at their most vulnerable, the dying, suffer more pain, more indignity, less choice and less autonomy than they might have.” It means that “suffering at the end of life takes two forms: an inescapable part and an avoidable part.”

     
     
    WORD OF THE DAY

    torpor

    A state of reduced metabolic activity in animals that helps them conserve energy in cold temperatures. Floridians are being warned about iguanas falling out of trees when torpor causes them to become “stunned” by unseasonably low temperatures across much of the state this week. 

     
     

    Evening Review was written and edited by Nadia Croes, Scott Hocker, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans, Joel Mathis, Summer Meza and Chas Newkey-Burden, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Illustration by Stephen Kelly / Getty Images; AP Photo / Jon Cherry; Mariana Suarez / AFP / Getty Images; BFA / Apple TV+ / Alamy
     

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