Today in Supreme Court History: May 8, 1884
5/8/1884: The birthday of President Harry S. Truman. Four appointments would be made to the Supreme Court by him: Chief Justice Vinson and Justices Burton […]
5/8/1884: The birthday of President Harry S. Truman. Four appointments would be made to the Supreme Court by him: Chief Justice Vinson and Justices Burton […]
Parents made difficult decisions about how their kids would be educated during the last two years. This group included my family. Instead of enrolling our […]
Are two teenage boys in a sweet, innocent romance the solution to the current culture wars? No, it’s not. However, the young adult offerings of […]
The next Oxford Handbook of Christianity and LawPaul Miller and myself are contributing chapters on Christianity and Equity. The chapter has been substantially revised. The new […]
John Paul Mac Isaac, the former owner of a computer repair shop in Wilmington, Delaware where Hunter Biden’s infamous laptop was dropped off in 2019, […]
Leaked opinion “1st Draft” of the U.S. Supreme Court Dobbs against Jackson Women’s Health OrganizationThis was published by yesterday PoliticoWould, if released by Court officials, […]
To avoid Trump supporters, Senator Mitt Romney may have donned a disguise while out in public. This, according to excerpts from a new book titled, […]
Bodies of tortured prisoners. Kolyma Gulag, USSR (Nikolai Nikitin, Tass). NOTE: The following post is a reprint of last year’s Victims of Communism Day […]
“This Will Not Pass,” the new book written by two New York Times reporters Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns, has spilled the beans on quite […]
An earlier month, I mentioned Judge Bill Pryor’s Federalist Society lecture, “Against Living Common Goodism,” which criticized Harvard law professor Adrian Vermeule. Common Good Constitutionalism. Professor […]