A church in Bryan, Ohio, filed a lawsuit against city officials Monday, alleging that they were unfairly targeting their faith-based homeless ministry.
In Moore v. United States, the Supreme Court will decide this year whether the Ninth Circuit was right in upholding as constitutional taxes on unrealized…
In a Friday court filing, state lawyers acknowledged an error in State Issue 1's ballot language describing new signature requirements for proposed constitutional amendments, but said the difference didn't matter.
It is comforting, here in oh-so-sensible Britain, to think that people who fall for conspiracy theories are just crazy, or American, or both. But that’s a little too easy. Phil Tinline investigates why theories predicting military coups and puppetmaster financiers have gripped the political imagination for more than a century.
While the newly crowned King Charles has certainly been the focus of attention this weekend, his younger son, Harry, has also been in the media spotlight. Prince Harry’s decision to renounce his royal role was not the first time a member of the British monarchy decided to opt out. Almost a century ago, King Edward VIII gave up the crown to marry Wallis Simpson, an American divorcée. These two decisions, several generations apart, engulfed the monarchy in turmoil and sent the media into meltdown. What do these two stories tell us about the British monarchy?