Skip to content

Search

Showing 281 results for "california demanding information nonprofits could endanger donors"
  • … “visitation may serve the best interest of the child,” it could grant visitation rights—even against a parent’s wishes. … the Biden administration’s proposed Title IX regulations could allow the federal government to require schools to … Act would provide legal recourse to parents so they could challenge the violation. Importantly, however, this …
  • … ruled 6-3 in Maynard’s favor, holding that New Hampshire could not require a person to “use their private property as … (NIFLA) at the Supreme Court against the state of California. California’s so-called Reproductive FACT Act compelled …
  • … investigation  into Maggie and disclosed the materials and information that led to it in the first place. May 2022 : ADF … : A federal district court ruled that Maggie’s lawsuit could proceed. July 2023 : As part of a settlement, SIUE …
  • … that oceanic barriers between our nation, Europe, and Asia could effectively isolate us from the rising tide of fascism … to that country’s supreme court. The prosecution is demanding tens of thousands of euros in fines and insisting …
  • … infamously tried to force private businesses and nonprofits to require that their employees be vaccinated or … result in less freedom, not more. Churches and religious nonprofits have been told they are not free to hire employees …
  • … plans no longer cover this treatment, these families could be substantially burdened. Like other doctors, Dr. …
  • … of in-person doctor visits from three to one, expanded who could prescribe and administer abortion drugs beyond licensed … of in-person doctor visits from three to one, expanded who could prescribe and administer abortion drugs beyond medical …
  • … disregard students’ rights to share their views. And at California State University, Fresno, one professor went to … for Life, a pro-life student group on the campus of California State University, Fresno. In 2017, Fresno State … Bernadette. He claimed that she and her student group could not write messages on the sidewalk and that they could
  • … – Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969) Obscenity – Miller v. California (1973) Defamation and libel – New York Times … the power to regulate hurtful speech, then anyone’s views could be targeted for censorship—conservative or liberal, … or Democrat, religious or atheist. Those in power could censor any disfavored view they please—simply by …
  • … that the White House has announced a federal policy that could gravely intrude upon parental rights in all 50 states … Such an official will simply claim that sharing that information discriminates against a student based on “sex.” … rather than their legal names. And it  refers  schools to California and Nevada policies that make parent communication …