March 28, 2023
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'This Country Needs Revival': Transgender Activist Kills 6 at Christian School in Nashville |
by Ben Johnson |
A woman who identifies as a transgender man murdered six people inside a Christian school in Nashville Monday morning before police killed her - an assault that a U.S. congressman attributed to potentially "some sort of demonic possession." The United States "needs revival," he said, before such targeted shootings become a heartbreaking new normal. |
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'Dear Jesus, Please Help Them': The Power of Prayer Amid a Mississippi Tornado |
by Joy Stockbauer |
This week, Americans have watched with devastated empathy as a horrific tornado ripped through Mississippi, taking the lives of at least 26 individuals and leaving a path of destruction in its wake. In times of such loss and hardship, it is natural for many people, even those who don't consider themselves to have a personal relationship with God, to turn to Him for comfort or guidance. However, when Matt Laubhan, a Christian and chief meteorologist at WTVA Weather Authority, began to pray on air for those who would be victimized by the tornado, he had no idea of the tangible impact that his prayer would have. |
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Outrage over Lia Thomas Fuels Latest Push to Protect Women's Sports |
by Suzanne Bowdey |
If ESPN is indeed headed for layoffs, then the women of America know a good place to start: anyone involved in the decision to feature male swimmer Lia Thomas in its series on Women's History Month. "Oh H--- NO!" CNN's Megyn Kelly tweeted when the network included Thomas at the expense of real female athletes. "If I was a woman working at ESPN," 12-time NCAA champion Riley Gaines said, "I would walk out. You're spineless, ESPN." |
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Stanford Law Dean Tries to Reconcile University's Commitments to DEI, Free Speech |
by Joshua Arnold |
In a Wednesday letter to the Stanford Law School community, Dean Jenny Martinez presented a case for reconciling diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) with free speech and announced the school's next steps after heckling students and a school administrator derailed federal judge Kyle Duncan's March 9 presentation. We "cannot function as a lawschool from the premise ... that speakers, texts, or ideas believed by some to be harmful ... justify a heckler's veto," she said. |
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