Facial recognition slips past the turnstile of convenience, reshaping consent one gate at a time.
The post Biometric Surveillance Expands: American Airlines Rolls Out Facial Recognition at Four Major Airports appeared first on Reclaim The Net.
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Then this January, DC Superior Court Judge Alfred Irving ordered Mann to pay National Review over $500,000 for its legal fees, and this was followed in March by a reduction of Mann’s “grossly excessive” $1 million award … to just $5,000.
“My lawyers and I believe that the fee award entered by the trial court was not correctly decided, and we intend to seek further review of that award,” Mann said in a statement.
Lower courts ruled that the GOP lawmaker lacked legal standing to sue over the Illinois election law.
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https://bearingarms.com/camedwards/2025/06/02/breaking-scotus-rejects-challenges-to-assault-weapon-and-magazine-ban-cases-n1228791
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The Supreme Court had earlier allowed the government to end a policy that allows 350,000 Venezuelans to live and work in the United States.
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Oregon is among a handful of states that allow males to compete in female sports.
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Cities and states have been trying to put gun manufacturers out of business for decades with frivolous lawsuits, blaming them for the criminal use of their products. This got to be such a problem that Congress passed the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act. Now Mexico has joined the fight, blaming Smith & Wesson for their drug cartel problems.
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The Constitution Study with Host Paul Engel – Donald Trump’s “Swamp” refers to federal bureaucracy, but a deeper “Legal Swamp” entangles Americans daily. Bureaucrats draft quasi-laws, judges enforce them, lawyers exploit them, and legal system insiders pervert justice. This insidious network far exceeds the D.C. Swamp’s reach, subverting law and fairness while impacting lives through unchecked regulatory and judicial power…
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