Filter by
Search
Showing 2318 results for "sneak peek alan sears talks religious liberty rfras same sex marriage vice"
- University officials charged Students for Life over $5K security fee to hold peaceful event
- River Falls campus will no longer forbid student conversation without advance permission, student group recognition
- ADF attorneys represent National Institute of Family and Life Advocates
- … … 7627 … 7632 … 7628 … 7617 … Case:Candler v. Jenkins … religious freedom … education … university … free speech … …
- … benchmark designed to measure corporate respect for religious and ideological diversity in the market, workplace, … time for businesses to recommit to respecting the diverse religious and ideological views of their employees, …
- … where he focuses on the impact of administrative law on religious freedom, the sanctity of life, and family. View …
- … Northwest, and now another pro-abortion AG is doing the same in New Jersey. Caring for pregnant women First Choice … law. Rather, he is targeting First Choice because of its religious and pro-life views. First Choice has struggled to … posted by Planned Parenthood, AG Platkin is treating a religious organization worse than others because of its …
- … Senior Counsel Gregory S. Baylor. “Under the HHS mandate, religious employers were given no real choice: They had to either comply and abandon their religious freedom, or resist and pay severe fines for their … enforcement of this mandate to protect the colleges’ religious freedom.” In 2011, the U.S. Department of Health …
- Yale University needs a president who will champion the value of free speech that is so often lacking in higher education.
- The following quote may be attributed to Alliance Defending Freedom allied attorney Michael Tierney regarding the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit’s decision Wednesday in Reddy v. Foster that sidesteps ruling on the constitutionality of New Hampshire’s censorship zone law: “An unconstitutional law shouldn’t remain on the books just because abortionists haven’t taken advantage of the power the law gives them to silence free speech. The 1st Circuit’s decision made no determination as to whether the New Hampshire statute would pass constitutional muster. Instead, the court left the law ...