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As the Supreme Court ends its 2024-2025 term, the justices’ rulings offered major wins for religious liberty activists in cases involving the religious rights of both organizations and individuals.
Logo TV, the first 24-hour LGBTQIA+ television network, launched June 30, 2005. Logo's first president reflects on its ...
While the rainbow war banners of Pride Month have dominated June over the past several years, immigration raids, riots, airstrikes in the Middle East, and a host of significant U.S. Supreme Court ...
New York Times columnist David Brooks and Washington Post associate editor Jonathan Capehart join Amna Nawaz to discuss the ...
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A nonprofit religious freedom organization is providing tools for parents to help them opt out of public-school LGBTQ+ ...
In Mahmoud v. Taylor, the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that a Maryland school board’s introduction of "LGBTQ+-inclusive" books and ...
Crowds in Budapest waved rainbow flags and carried signs mocking Prime Minister Viktor Orban amid a new ban on Pride marches.
The U.S. Supreme Court over the 2024-2025 term ruled on many so-called "culture wars" issues. Here's a look at those and ...
The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that parents can opt their children out of a Maryland school district’s LGBT-themed ...
The Supreme Court on Friday ruled in favor of Maryland parents who sued a school district over its refusal to allow them to ...
Parents with religious objections to schoolbooks that favorably refer to lesbians, gays or trans people have a right to be ...
The Supreme Court ruled in favor of Maryland parents who objected on religious grounds to the use of books with LGBTQ ...
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