The biggest takeaway from the Supreme Court’s decision in 303 Creative v. Elenis, which came down Friday, the last day of the term, is that the government cannot compel you to say or write something that you don’t want to…
For so many decades, extending more than half a century, the United States Supreme Court inspired and led America’s moral decline, legalizing abortion on demand, subverting traditional marriage, and allowing “Affirmative Action” racial quotas to replace merit as the standard…
On Friday, the Supreme Court ended the week by releasing its 6–3 ruling on 303 Creative v. Elenis, which overturns a Colorado law that would “compel an individual to create speech she does not believe.” “Taken seriously, that principle would…
On Thursday, the U.S. Supreme Court issued the greatest majority opinion ever written by Chief Justice John G. Roberts. That one-time Obamacare savior, who in 2012 rewrote the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate as a “tax” in order to salvage…
Employees seeking religious accommodation in the workplace won a big victory Thursday as the Supreme Court sided with a former U.S. Postal Service worker who says he was disciplined for refusing to work for religious reasons on his Sabbath. In…
One supposes it’s a good, and quite fitting, thing that it was higher education that served as the medium for the Supreme Court’s ending of affirmative action in America. You’ve probably read all you needed to on that subject. If…
“Affirmative Action” never was affirmative. From the day of its inception, it closed doors to people who had worked hard all their lives to excel and succeed. It imposed barriers against those who had earned success, while it advantaged less…
The U.S. Supreme Court outlawed explicit racism in college admissions on Thursday. This naturally outraged those so obsessed with outlawing explicit racism in college admissions that they instituted it. The dissent defends, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote in the Students…
Today, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected the substitution of race for merit when it ruled against Harvard University’s use of racial preferences in admissions. “I write,” Justice Clarence Thomas states in his concurring opinion, “to clarify that all forms of…