Plus: 800,000 Foreign Citizens May Soon Vote in New York City Elections
November 30 2021
Good morning from Washington, where today the nation’s highest court will hear a case that is fraught with consequences for Americans’ religious liberty. Sarah Parshall Perry explains. The Heritage Foundation becomes one of the latest employers to sue the Biden administration over its sweeping vaccine mandate, reports Fred Lucas, who also interviews the head of a trucking company who opposes the mandate. On the podcast, an involved lawyer unpacks the landmark abortion case before the Supreme Court tomorrow. Plus: allowing noncitizens to vote, and making homeschooling a success. Forty years ago today, the U.S. and Soviet Union open what will be inconclusive talks to reduce intermediate-range nuclear arms in Europe.
This case has colossal implications for the battle to protect religious freedom, especially as it intersects with modern interpretations of civil rights law and anti-discrimination provisions.
Approximately 117,500 citizens of Red China would select the mayors, City Council members, district attorneys, and other officials of America’s most populous municipality.
“If you look at an ultrasound from 1973 … you really can’t see much at all. And today in contrast, we know a tremendous amount about … development of the unborn,” says Hawley.
“We view this mandate as a deadly serious threat to our individual liberty and the values that make America great,” says Kevin Roberts, incoming president of The Heritage Foundation.
“We’re not able to haul all of our customers’ freight as it is now,” says Eric Lawrence, chief executive of Minnesota-based Lawrence Transportation Co.
Something called social and emotional learning is the latest trend at your child’s school. It sounds beneficial, but actually indoctrinates kids with extremist ideas.