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Month: June 2026

Voting by phone is already here — meet the Democratic-linked group trying to take it national…

Its own materials say 330 jurisdictions have piloted mobile voting since 2018, while 13 additional states permit voters with disabilities to return ballots over the internet.
One of the clearest examples came recently from Stephen Richer, the former Maricopa County recorder, who published an April 2026 essay for The Democracy Project making the case for cellphone voting as a solution to a wide range of election-administration problems.

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Why Justice Alito Dissented From the Supreme Court’s Rejection of Pro-Life Student’s Free Speech Lawsuit

The Supreme Court declined to take up a pro-life student’s lawsuit Monday after her school refused to let her post flyers with photos of signs reading “Defund Planned Parenthood,” but Justice Samuel Alito dissented. Alito, an appointee of President George W. Bush, argued that the case represented an important opportunity to clarify the rules on…

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23andMe’s Stolen Data Gets a $46.8 Million Payout

The company that told you to spit in a tube now operates under a different name, a different owner, and a $46.8 million reminder that DNA doesn’t come with a reset button.

The post 23andMe’s Stolen Data Gets a $46.8 Million Payout appeared first on Reclaim The Net.

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527 – Racial Gerrymandering

Racism is wrong. At least that’s what I’ve been told my entire life. But if racism is wrong, why do so many people demand we make decisions based on race? Is an election fair if the people are vote are racially chosen? If it was wrong for people to be denied the representation because of their race, why is it OK for them to deny representation to others for the same reason? Is choosing representation based on race is wrong? That is the question presented to the Supreme Court in the case LOUISIANA v. CALLAIS ET AL.

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Keeping the republic in a lawless age

The Constitution Study with Host Paul Engel – America’s republic faces pressure from citizens, courts, and federal agencies that disregard constitutional limits. From FBI misconduct to appliance regulations and sweeping Google data demands, Richard Mack argues that liberty survives only when officials honor their oaths and citizens defend the Constitution against corruption, judicial overreach, and centralized power…

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Why the Golden State no longer glitters

The Constitution Study with Host Paul Engel – From allegations of election fraud, voter registration, and questionable policies, the shine has truly left the Golden State. How else do you explain the recent exodus from a state with such beautiful scenery and abundant natural resources? With all of the advantages California has, it had to work really hard to drive so many people away…

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