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Annual financial disclosures revealed some of the perks of being on the Supreme Court, including international teaching and ...
If the court finds parents have a First Amendment ... according to our faith,” she said. Steps away, people supporting the use of the books in the school – some wrapped in rainbow flags ...
The Supreme Court justices’ annual financial disclosures were released Tuesday, revealing millions of dollars in combined ...
The Supreme Court didn’t set out to host a book club ... that a lot of religious people would disagree with,” he said. Sotomayor, on the other hand, argued that Uncle Bobby’s sexuality ...
Supreme Court justices can make a considerable amount of outside income from writing books, as their financial disclosure reports show.
"We deserve to have books in our school that teach people about LGBTQ and stuff. It's not touching you, hurting you physically … I don't know why you hate it so much." In the Supreme Court ...
The Supreme Court heard oral arguments on Tuesday ... The right's lawyer argued that censoring these books wasn't about disrespecting queer people, but protecting "children's innocence." ...
This doesn’t mean the court is about to become the “People’s Court.” It does mean a slice of the legal community often ignored by the former Republican majority is poised to exert ...
The conservative Supreme Court majority seemed more ... Justice Samuel Alito to observe that the book has a clear moral message "that a lot of people who hold on to traditional religious beliefs ...
The Fifth Circuit decision holding that libraries may remove books based on the books' viewpoint may lead some to ask: Hasn't the Court resolved this before, in Bd. of Ed. v. Pico (1982)?