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  • On Rights and Restraints0

    Individual Rights and Structural Restraints The difference between rights and structure within the overall Constitution is commonplace. For government to avoid violating an individual right is a matter of constitutional duty. On the other hand, for government to remain within its structural restraints is a matter of confining legislation and the actions of its officials

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  • Censorship and Religious McCarthyism0

    On April 9, 2008, the administration of the U.S. Air Force Academy planned to present a seminar titled &”U.S.A.’s War on Terror: Not a Battle Between Christianity and Islam.&” It would feature Michael (Mikey) Weinstein, alumnus of the academy and director of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation; Muslim scholar Reza Aslan; and former U.S. ambassador

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  • The Summum of All Fears0

    The Supreme Court of the United States of America is not given to levity. Even the occasional outburst of its resident bad boy Antonin Scalia is less humorous than it is revealing of deeper divisions within the court not yet truly explored. We may yet get to see where all that leads—and a strange case

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  • The Break From Rome0

    This article is part one in a four part series. Read Part 2 Henry VIII set off an extraordinary chain of vents in the 1530s when he broke away from the Roman Catholic Church, becoming the first European monarch to deny the power of the Papacy, and establishing himself as “Supreme Head” of the church

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  • Gaining the Upper Hand0

    Catholicism of the twentieth century experienced a renaissance of global proportions. In the 1990s, Catholicism played a dominant role in the downfall of Communism in the former Soviet Union. His charm with the masses and his diplomatic skill earned Pope John Paul II &”Man of the Year&” recognition by Time magazine. The Catholic vibrancy of

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  • The American Advent of Benedict XVI0

    It wasn’t quite the Second Coming, but almost. For the six days in April that Pope Benedict XVI visited the United States, all the coverage, the hoopla, the accolades, the promotion, and the PR surrounding the visit could have led someone to believe that it had been Christ, and not His self-proclaimed vicar, who had

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