Romanian Pastors Say They Escaped Oppression Only to be Oppressed in Illinois
A lawyer for First Liberty Institute on Monday criticized the Illinois governor over coronavirus orders aimed at churches that he considers to be unconstitutional.
A lawyer for First Liberty Institute on Monday criticized the Illinois governor over coronavirus orders aimed at churches that he considers to be unconstitutional.
It’s not a great time to be a hotelier anywhere, but it’s especially bad in Los Angeles.
There’s a strange trend in United States history that nearly every decade or era is, in summary, labeled the “height” of one characteristic or another.
Owosso barber Karl Manke says police issued him two citations Wednesday for having his shop open since Monday.
New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell announced business owners will be required to keep logs of the names and contact information of patrons who enter their establishments once the Big Easy reopens to help with contact tracing—a move that Cantrell called "part of the new normal," as New Orleans and Louisiana plan to rollback coronavirus restrictions this month.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton on Wednesday sent a letter urging a Dallas judge to free a woman he sent to jail a day earlier after she refused to apologize for keeping her hair salon open in violation of Gov. Greg Abbott's order aimed at slowing the spread of the coronavirus.
Remember when police departments across America got MRAPs from the military and most of us were asking, “Why the heck do the police need vehicles of war and what are they going to use them for?” Well, now we know.
During oral arguments on Tuesday over a lawsuit filed by Wisconsin GOP legislators to bar the state from extending Governor Tony Evers’ stay-at- orders, a conservative judge called the decision to implement stay-at- orders “the very definition of tyranny.”
On Tuesday, a Dallas, Texas, woman who was sentenced to a week in jail and a $7,000 fine for opening her salon in defiance of state orders delivered a poignant answer when the judge said he’d rescind the jail sentence if she admitted she was wrong.
After a warning from a bank teller, two Kentucky parents are being investigated for a potential case of abuse. According to TheBlaze, the family moved to Kentucky from New York City, ostensibly to avoid this type of nanny-state fiat, a short time before this occurred in March. The parents brought their children into the bank to open an account, since they were too young to be left outside unattended.