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Showing 23 results for "trials errors"
  • In 2006, Elaine Huguenin, a wedding photographer in New Mexico, received an inquiry from Vanessa Wilcox to photograph her same-sex commitment ceremony. Elaine respectfully declined. She and her husband, Jonathan, couldn’t in good conscience use their artistic talents to tell the story of a ceremony that conflicts with their faith.
  • Since the beginning, the Stormans have run their business consistent with their Christian faith. That faith informs their decisions about their stores, from the way they interact with employees and their community, to their decision to not stock early abortifacient drugs, like the morning-after pill (Plan B) and ella in Ralph’s Thriftway’s pharmacy.
  • In 1993, Dr. Mike Adams, a self-declared atheist and liberal, began working at the University of North Carolina-Wilmington (UNCW).
  • When Alexis heard about the lawsuit, she knew that she was called to join. Why? Because she felt that her voice brought something different—and needed—to the conversation. A female’s perspective on privacy needed to be heard.
  • Winning a Supreme Court case should have settled this. Yet cake artist Jack Phillips finds himself in court a third time. Enough is enough.
  • … Jack until he is punished, aiming to “correct the errors of [his] thinking.” The Colorado Supreme Court has …
  • When it comes to gender in sports, most Americans do not want male athletes to compete against women and girls.
  • In June, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that government officials cannot misuse public-accommodation laws to force people to say something they don’t believe.
  • A Minnesota woman sued a pharmacist because his beliefs prevented him from dispensing potentially life-ending drugs.
  • Peter Vlaming, a high school French teacher in Virginia, was fired for respectfully declining to use pronouns inconsistent with biological sex.