The social network that you can wear
- LIFESTYLE
- February 6, 2015
This article is Part Four in a four part series. Click here for Part One, here for Part Two, and here for Part Three. Religious diversity and thus the very concept of religious freedom in the modern United States both derive from the English Reformation, thanks to the English colonization of North America. However,
READ MOREYou don't have to believe in American "exceptionalism" to recognize that in the way it handles church-state matters the United States of America has made a vital and significant contribution to civilization. In a nutshell this means that government takes no side in religious disputes, does not prefer one religion above others, and does not
READ MOREToday’s national conversation around religious free exercise is radically different in both character and scope from that of three decades ago. What has changed, and why? A former special counsel for religious discrimination in the U.S. Department of Justice provides a front-seat perspective on 35 years of transformation. When I was a law student in
READ MOREInterview with former Australian prime minister Scott Morrison. On the wall of his office in Australia’s Parliament House, Scott Morrison hung a framed newspaper dated May 1, 2019, proclaiming: “ScoMo’s Miracle!” It was a headline that appeared the morning after Morrison’s poll- and pundit-defying election to Australia’s top political job. The evening before, Morrison had
READ MOREDisagreement is inevitable, but disdain is optional. An interview with John Inazu. While attending a conference in Los Angeles, law professor John Inazu realized that he was just a few hours’ drive away from the Manzanar National Historic Site—one of the camps in which more than 120,000 Japanese Americans were incarcerated during World War II.
READ MOREIt's not every Sunday that Washington archbishop Donald W. Wuerl can personally thank the U.S. Supreme Court justices and the vice president of the United States for coming to church. But on the Sunday before the first Monday of October each year, the day the High Court returns to begin a new term,
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