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Showing 227 results for "bracket shame"
- It all began when Bank of America, one of the world’s largest banks sent abrupt notices to a Memphis-based church and Indigenous Advance, one of its ministry partners. The bank said they were closing their accounts and even the ministry’s credit cards. And they both had only 30 days to switch to a new bank. Bank of America didn’t even give a specific reason. All it said was that it simply no longer wanted to serve the ministries’ “business type” and that Indigenous Advance has exceeded the banks “risk tolerance.” But Indigenous Advance isn’t ideological or partisan. And it’s had the same ...
- Religious organizations such as Christian Healthcare Centers in Michigan should be free to operate and serve the community according to their beliefs.
- Now there’s no doubt. Detailed information released this week by the U.S. House Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government makes plain that the Biden administration has been partnering with major banks and payment processors to censor non-profit ministries and threaten the freedom of everyday Americans. And now, the subcommittee has revealed that the government has targeted Alliance Defending Freedom. We’ve been unlawfully swept up in the federal government’s “domestic terrorist” dragnet. While ADF was advocating on behalf of the freedom of EVERY American to live ...
- The Families’ Rights and Responsibilities Act will ensure parental rights are protected just as much as other fundamental rights.
- A lawsuit threatened religious colleges and universities that exercise their religious beliefs about marriage and human sexuality.
- The Copyright Royalty Board is unlawfully requiring religious broadcasters to pay significantly higher royalties than secular NPR broadcasters when streaming songs online.
- Oregon officials excluded Youth 71Five Ministries from a public grant program because of the ministry’s religious beliefs.
- Read about Sharonell Fulton, the foster mom at the center of the Supreme Court case Fulton v. City of Philadelphia.
- The last 12 months have brought countless challenges that even the wisest among us could have hardly predicted.
- Blaine Adamson, owner of the Kentucky-based print shop Hands On Originals, faced legal backlash for following his conscience.