April 20, 2023
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Top 3 Abortion Pill Myths Perpetuated by the Abortion Industry |
by Mary Szoch |
On Wednesday, SCOTUS will review whether the Fifth Circuit decision to restore critical safeguards to the distribution of mifepristone will remain in effect as the case makes its way through legal proceedings. As the lawsuit unfolds, the pro-abortion industry is perpetuating a number of myths as to why the Fifth Circuit decision should not go into effect. Here are the facts. |
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Rubio: 'No Precedent' for Chinese 'Police Stations' in U.S. |
by Dan Hart |
In the wake of the arrests of two alleged Chinese operatives who managed a clandestine "police station" in New York City earlier this week, U.S. lawmakers are expressing alarm about the Chinese government's increased efforts to infiltrate American society on a variety of fronts, due in part to perceived weakness on the part of the Biden administration as well as financial ties between Chinese actors and American companies and officials. |
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'One or Two' Lab Leaks Most Likely Origins for COVID: Senate Report |
by Joshua Arnold |
Senator Roger Marshall (R-Kans.) on Monday released a 301-page report concluding that COVID-19 "most likely" leaked from a lab weeks before China's official narrative as the result of "one or possibly two" lab accidents. "We won't be able to prove this in a criminal trial. But I do think there's enough evidence, if this was a civil case, that we would convince a jury," said Marshall of the report fittingly titled, "Muddy Waters." |
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Opposing Porn in School Makes You Part of New 'Uptown Klan,' SPLC Researcher Says |
by Tyler O'Neil |
Do you think parents should have a say in their children's education, that kids shouldn't be judged according to the color of their skin, that parents should know if their children say they identify as transgender, or that books with explicit sexual images should be removed from school libraries? If so, you represent a threat to civil rights tracing back to the "Uptown Klans" of white Southerners trying to maintain segregation after the Supreme Court's landmark 1954 ruling in Brown v. Board of Education, according to a researcher with the Southern Poverty Law Center. |
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