District Court Enjoins S.B. 4, the Texas Immigration Enforcement Law
A follow-up.
Students should be able to peacefully protest events, but they shouldn't disrupt a speaker or assault attendees.
Parents in Arizona have already proven themselves capable of holding schools accountable.
Bryan Johnson, venture capitalist and founder of Blueprint, discusses his $2 million a year effort to reverse aging on Just Asking Questions.
The debate is over. Trump's steel tariffs failed.
The Chick-fil-A story heard 'round the world.
The justices reframed the question presented in the case and expedited its consideration.
The other Biden policy abroad that left an imprint on Tuesday’s presidential primary
Plus: Balkan begging, California corruption, Russian gravediggers, and more...
Schools were already staffed at record levels even before COVID-19, when enrollment fell by nearly 1.3 million students.
"Nobody's ever reported that to me," Rankin County Sheriff Bryan Bailey said after his deputies admitted to brutalizing innocent people.
The continuous, manual forward pressure on the handguard precludes “automatic” function.
Despite the popular narrative, Millennials have dramatically more wealth than Gen Xers had at the same age, and incomes continue to grow with each new generation.
But the ruling will be effectively overturned if the federal Supreme Court rules in favor of Trump in the Colorado disqualification case, as seems likely based on the oral argument in that case.
Several justices seemed troubled by an ATF rule that purports to ban bump stocks by reinterpreting the federal definition of machine guns.
Oral argument is set for the week of April 22.
Even though police found no signs of drugs or other contraband, Holly Elish was strip-searched by Pennsylvania police officers.
Two-thirds of Americans oppose the Alabama ruling that claims frozen embryos are equivalent to children.
It's a step in the right direction. But a better solution would be for Congress to allow them to stay permanently.
While a disappointment to green-tech supporters, Apple's decision reflects the growing uncertainty in the E.V. market.
Mississippi's prisons are falling apart, run by gangs, and riddled with sexual assaults, a Justice Department report says.
Probably because Greg Flynn, who operates 24 of the bakery cafes in California, is a longtime friend of Gov. Gavin Newsom.
A federal judge in an ongoing case called the porn age-check scheme unconstitutional. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton doesn't seem to care.
"I'm concerned about a Trump-Biden rematch," argues Riedl. "You have two presidents with two of the worst fiscal records of the past 100 years."
Plus: Brooklyn communists, Shenzhen Costco, Chernobyl mythbusting, and more...
The First Amendment restricts governments, not private platforms, and respects editorial rights.
I shouldn't have to spend so much money on an accountant every year. But I don't really have a choice.
Supreme Court arguments about two social media laws highlight a dangerous conflation of state and private action.
In Cargill v. Garland, the Court should apply the National Firearms Act text that Congress did enact, and not the text that gun control advocates wish had been enacted.
Maybe the problem for teens isn't screens, but what they are replacing.
"No parent can shield a child from all risks," the Iowa Supreme Court ruled.
It's just one reason the program should likely be terminated altogether.
The Supreme Court seems inclined to recognize that content moderation is protected by the First Amendment.
El Salvador stands at a crossroads between popular sentiment and adherence to constitutional principles.
Criminal justice advocates say the evidence doesn't back up Republicans' claims that Louisiana's landmark 2017 reforms are to blame for violent crime.
Hackers have unmasked some of the tactics Beijing and Tehran use to silence their opponents.
The survey also found that two-thirds of respondents believe that America is on the "wrong track" when it comes to free speech.
The monologue was sexually themed, but it's not clear to what extent the court's rationale might extend to situations where a student objects to the monologue for other reasons.
A new economic paper explains why interest rates are the missing piece to understanding why people are unhappy about a seemingly strong economy.
The plaintiffs claimed that 15-year-old Bella Herndon committed suicide because of the film.
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