If a gay or transgender person is bullied by students, the media are sure to highlight it. They should. But when Christians are victimized, the story gets little or no coverage. Some of this is deliberate, and some of it is not. While bias explains the former, cluelessness explains the latter. Occasionally, the media's blinders even extend to deadly incidents.
If a gay or transgender person is bullied by students, the media are sure to highlight it. They should. But when Christians are victimized, the story gets little or no coverage. Some of this is deliberate, and some of it is not. While bias explains the former, cluelessness explains the latter. Occasionally, the media's blinders even extend to deadly incidents.
If a gay or transgender person is bullied by students, the media are sure to highlight it. They should. But when Christians are victimized, the story gets little or no coverage. Some of this is deliberate, and some of it is not. While bias explains the former, cluelessness explains the latter. Occasionally, the media's blinders even extend to deadly incidents.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against Facebook (now known as Meta) this week over the company's use of facial recognition technology in "secretly harvesting Texans' most personal information," which Paxton says is in violation of the state's privacy protections.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against Facebook (now known as Meta) this week over the company's use of facial recognition technology in "secretly harvesting Texans' most personal information," which Paxton says is in violation of the state's privacy protections.