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Showing 3534 results for "freedom matters podcast being woman only state mind"
- … Church Evangelistic Ministries v. Glover … religious freedom … public square … equal access … ADF to appeal …
- … From all of us at Alliance Defending Freedom, thank you. We have so much to be thankful for as we … Friends like you. These are not just Alliance Defending Freedom’s victories. They are your victories, too. Thank YOU … and parental rights this year. Thank YOU for standing for freedom. May God bless you and your families in the year …
- … to share dorm rooms and even showers. Alliance Defending Freedom has been with the college every step of the way as …
- … we are each created male or female. Alliance Defending Freedom is on the front lines, pushing back against gender …
- … for Life and Regulatory Practice at Alliance Defending Freedom. Before joining ADF, Hawley practiced appellate law … Court as well as numerous federal courts of appeals and state courts of last resort. She also worked at the …
- … parents is often described as a “crisis.” But state governments are slamming the door on Christians and …
- … ‘sex’ in Title IX. Written by Alliance Defending Freedom Published May 14, 2024 Revised May 24, 2024 Congress … recently argued in another Alliance Defending Freedom case, B.P.J. v. West Virginia State Board of Education , that Title IX requires schools in …
- … 7617 … Case:A.P. v. Tomah Area School District … religious freedom … education … k-12 … public school … free speech … …
ADF files lawsuit on behalf of students of FCA club denied equal access by school district officials
… v. Pleasanton Unified School District … religious freedom … education … k-12 … public school … equal access … …- WASHINGTON — Attorneys and allied attorneys with the Alliance Defense Fund filed a friend-of-the-court brief Monday with the U.S. Supreme Court asking it to reverse an appellate court judgment that overturned the Federal Communications Commission’s censure of indecent language broadcast during Fox’s televised Billboard Music Awards. The appellate court held that because the words in question were merely “fleeting expletives,” Fox shouldn’t be held accountable for breaking FCC rules that forbid the use of indecent language on network television while children are likely to be watching. “The ...