Take That, Internet Censors!
A court ruling knocks digital censorship to the canvas, ordering a sweeping halt to the "nothingburger" described in Missouri v. Biden and the Twitter Files.
Judge Blocks Biden Officials from Coordinating Censorship
By: Ari Blaff - nationalreview.com - July 5, 2023 Terry Doughty, a Louisiana federal judge, issued a preliminary injunction Tuesday blocking certain federal agencies and officials, including the FBI a...
America’s 250th Birthday
By: Dan McLaughlin - nationalreview.com - July 4, 2023 ‘Semiquincentennial’ might not have the same ring as bicentennial, but we could use a reminder that America has always been great because it stan...
Christianity and America’s Founding
Aside from the parades, flags and cookouts associated with Independence Day, some commentators (myself included) like to examine the philosophical and religious underpinnings of the American founding....
True Step Toward Equality
It may not have had the significance of the Emancipation Proclamation, or the civil rights legislation of the 1960s, but last week's ruling by the Supreme Court that affirmative action in college admi...
Supreme Court Strikes Down Biden’s Student Loan Forgiveness
The Court ruled 6-3 that the HEROES Act does not give Biden the authority to forgive billions in loans from millions of borrowers.
Colorado Can’t Punish Christian Website Designer
The United States Supreme Court has ruled that Colorado cannot force a Christian website designer to create websites celebrating same-sex marriage.
Merrick Garland Doth Protest Too Much
By: Spencer Brown - townhall.com - June 29, 2023 It's not as eloquent as Shakespeare's "Hamlet," but it sometimes feels like we're watching a similar play-within-a-play. One where, instead of an attem...
Courts Can’t Have the Last Word?
By: Brittany Bernstein - nationalreview.com - June 29, 2023 President Biden said Thursday the Supreme Court can’t have the “last word” on affirmative action, hours after the Court ruled that the race-...
A Supreme Victory - Gerald Groff
Gerald Groff was forced to quit his job as a postal carrier because of his religious beliefs. He believes in the Christian Sabbath, but the USPS refused his religious accommodation request not to work...
Supreme Court 9-0 Win for Postal Worker
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in a religious freedom case brought by a former postal worker who refused to work Sundays due to Sabbath observance.
Supreme Court Strikes Down Affirmative Action
The Court ruled that race-based college admissions policies violate the Equal Protection Clause.