03 March 2020

Artists in Arizona Can Legally Refuse To Serve Gays and Lesbians

Caligraphy Company Wins Case
Two Arizona artists who refused to create invitations to same-sex weddings due to their Christian beliefs were within their legal rights, the US state's top court ruled last 16 September.

The Arizona State Supreme Court's decision invalidates previous judgments against the two women for violating a "human relations ordinance" introduced by the southwestern city of Phoenix to promote and push down everyone's throat the LGBTQ rights.

26 September 2019

U.S. Migrant Detainees Up By 32%

Migrant Detainees
United States authorities detained or blocked more than 144,000 migrants at the border with Mexico in May, up 32 percent since April as Central Americans flock to the United States seeking asylum, official figures showed Wednesday.

Customs and Border Protection officials said most of the migrants were families from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, and the total included some 57,718 children.

25 September 2019

Tulsi Gabbard: DNC Lacks Transparency

Tulsi Gabbard
Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard is among the many Democratic presidential candidates who did not qualify for September’s debate round by the recent deadline.

She claims it was because the criteria for making the debate stage "lacks transparency."

18 September 2019

Hate Crime Rises in NY Because It Doesn't Fit Libs' Narative

NYPD
From the beginning of his presidential campaign through his comments after Charlottesville, U.S. President Donald Trump's rhetoric and actions have been linked to an upsurge in hate crimes. Yet while Trump deserves condemnation for arguably enabling fringe elements of the Right, that link, often advanced by his critics, is not at all clear.

A good example of this case can be seen in New York City, where one of the largest spikes in anti-Semitic hate crimes tells a different story yet has gone largely unremarked upon.

12 September 2019

To Congresswoman Omar, "Some people did something"

Remember
During the 9/11 Memorial and Museum ceremony in New York to honor the lives lost 18 years ago, one victim's family member had a message for freshman Congresswoman Ilhan Omar.

Nicholas Haros Jr., whose mother Frances Haros was killed in the World Trade Center at age 76, wore a black T-shirt with the words "Some people did something" as he read a list of victims' names, including his mother's.