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Month: May 2026

Illinois Sued Over Allegedly Using Race as a Factor in Congressional Map

The lawsuit comes after a recent Supreme Court decision that found using race as a factor in drawing districts unconstitutional.

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Plea deal unsealed…

Wang and Sun “executed directives” from the Chinese government, posting propaganda designed to boost China, all while reporting back to their masters with screenshots showing how many people viewed the stories, according to the plea agreement.
In one case, Wang’s spymaster ordered her to post pre-written news articles, including a PRC official-written essay in the Los Angeles Times, the plea deal states.

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California State to Pay for Newborn Diapers

California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced May 8 that the state is launching a program this summer to provide free diapers to all newborn babies in California. “California is taking on the cost of raising a family head-on,” Newsom said. “Every baby born in California deserves a healthy start in life—and that means making sure parents […]

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Senate’s rush to regulate AI chatbots is bad for everybody

Congress can regulate AI without gutting free speech but the GUARD Act risks censorship, compelled speech, and mandatory ID checks.

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The US Government Wants Agents Wearing Face Scanners

The government is building glasses that turn a glance into a federal database query and the deployment date is already set.

The post The US Government Wants Agents Wearing Face Scanners appeared first on Reclaim The Net.

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522 – Free Speech in Colorado

In the recent case Chiles v. Salazar, the Supreme Court was asked if Colorado’s “Conversion Therapy” law violated the Ms. Chiles right to free speech. As is so often the case, the court agreed that the law violated Ms. Chiles free speech rights, just for the wrong reasons.

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Understanding the news means reading beyond the headlines

The Constitution Study with Host Paul Engel – Headlines grab attention, but they often leave crucial context behind. Deeper reading reveals legal nuances, political motives, and unanswered questions behind stories about courts, abortion, transgender treatments, censorship, anti-semitism, and gun policy. Careful readers look past click-driven framing to better understand current events, public debate, and the world around them…

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