Ben Carson to press houses of worship to help in fight against homelessness
HUD Secretary declares, 'In God We Trust'
HUD Secretary declares, 'In God We Trust'
Detransitioners tell 9th Circuit as it hears challenge to Oregon policy that so-called gender affirming care caused "physical harm" and "did not resolve their mental health issues or gender dysphoria."
The event and ticketing company could face a conservative boycott the likes of which dethroned Bud Light this year as Virginia's Governor Youngkin tells his operations to stop using the service. Eventbrite's co-founder and Chairman, Kevin Hartz ended a message to those raising the issue by saying “Please go f*** yourself!”
In reviewing religious accommodation requests, the Air Education and Training Command is relying on analysis tool that reaches blanket predetermination that the vaccine is the "least restrictive means" by which to further the service's "compelling government interest."
Anti-Defamation League chief Jonathan Greenblatt blasted Goldberg for saying Nazi genocide was 'not about race,' despite organization defining racism in way that supports Goldberg's controversial, historically inaccurate remarks.
New York "hateful conduct" law, spurred by Jan. 6 riot and Buffalo mass shooting, infringes rights of both social media platforms and users, judge says. Florida ruling finds public comment policy does not create "objective chill."
University of Colorado faces tug-of-war between dueling legal groups over its famous coach's fondness for religious expression in team settings. South Carolina town defends permit process to hold Christian signs on public sidewalks.
U.S. taxpayers are subsidizing New York's Culturally Responsive Sustaining Education Framework, which "portrays America as a structurally biased and oppressive nation in need of fundamental transformation," warns scholar/commentator Stanley Kurtz.
From Supreme Court analyses to "stupid jokes," Empire State's legislative response to livestreamed Buffalo mass shooting threatens wide swath of constitutionally protected content, diverse groups tell appeals court.
"Underrepresented groups" become "all persons" but require targeting of 14 "identity characteristics," and schools can't cite SCOTUS to get out of complying, working group says. Congress should revoke ABA's "near-monopoly," prof says.