Southwest Airlines Falsely Accuses Mom of Trafficking Biracial Daughter
Plus: Backpage trial pushed back, Bidenomics doens't resonate, and more...
Plus: Backpage trial pushed back, Bidenomics doens't resonate, and more...
His panicked manifesto contains a strong case against CRT activism, but he ultimately falls into the same trap as his enemies.
Political appointees should have no role in faculty hiring decisions.
If activists want to help young people, they should start before college.
Contra Joe Biden, they argue that these recent rulings show respect for individual rights and concern for racial and sexual minorities.
The article assesses strengths and weaknesses of the Court's decision, and what it will take to implement Chief Justice Roberts' admonition that "[e]liminating racial discrimination means eliminating all of it."
Achieving this goal will require a lot more than banning racial preferences in college admissions. That includes some measures that will make the political right uncomfortable, as well as the left.
A new complaint argues that legacy admissions violate the Civil Rights Act.
A collection of links to some of my previous writings on these topics, which I think remain relevant today.
Plus: A listener question on the potential efficacy of congressional term limits.
There is no reason for public universities to grant preferential treatment to the scions of their alumni.
In a 6–3 decision, the Court ruled that race-based affirmative action in college admissions violates the 14th Amendment.
Spiked's leading polemicist defends J.K. Rowling, Brexit, and Enlightenment values of free speech and pluralism.
Ron DeSantis and Mike Pence are wrong to advocate naming a US Army base after an incompetent Confederate general who betrayed the United States to fight for slavery.
Laws against displaying Nazi-esque iconography are well-intended, but they pose a threat to free speech and the principles of a free society.
Freedom's Dominion argues Southern history was animated by "racialized radical anti-statism." The case is lacking.
Her podcast Unreformed: The Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children delves into abuse at a state-run institution.
Two historians go head-to-head on whether the controversial New York Times project has any value.
Two historians go head-to-head on whether the controversial New York Times project has any value.
"They had a duty to protect her," says Ta'Neasha Chappell's sister. "She was not attended to because she was a Black woman and they didn't feel like she was worth getting any attention."
The COVID-19 lab leak theory was labeled "misinformation." Now it's the most plausible explanation.
"KCPD has continuously and repeatedly advised Plaintiff and his fellow officers that if they did not fulfill a 'ticket quota' then they would be kicked out of the unit," the complaint states.
The Manhattan Institute senior fellow and the NYU historian debate whether black Americans should move away from progressivism.
The Manhattan Institute senior fellow and the NYU historian debate whether black Americans should move away from progressivism.
Books by the acclaimed mystery author have been edited, ostensibly to comport with modern sensibilities.
The former head of the NYPD and the LAPD talks about how bad leadership creates police brutality and why he's still against pot legalization.
It argues for increasing the number of cases in the Supreme Court's "Hall of Shame" and proposes three worthy additions.
"If I disagreed or offered another opinion, I was told I had cognitive dissonance," Josh Diemert says.
In the early 20th century, the Klan's virulent nativism and anti-Catholicism fueled its interest in education policy.
The first FBI director wasn't a cross-dresser, says a new biography, but he was often quick to flout constitutional limits on state power.
Their suggested replacement for 'Karen' is far more offensive than the term itself.
A staggeringly high number of families are subject to child abuse and neglect investigations in Maricopa County, Arizona.
The "free speech absolutist" is maintaining some content restrictions while loosening others.
The journalist has taken a great deal of flack—from both sides.
The "Ye24" campaign is seemingly managed and shaped by the likes of Milo Yiannopoulos and Nick Fuentes.
On Thursday, a federal court granted a preliminary injunction against the portion of the law applying to higher education, with one judge describing the law as "positively dystopian."
In the two cases, brought against Harvard and the University of North Carolina, anti-affirmative action group Students for Fair Admissions argues that race-conscious admissions violate the Civil Rights Act
Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill in September that will chip away at a policy that has long been criticized as enabling racially-motivated policing.
Having a city council secretly dominated by people with racist views is troubling, but having an entire political system controlled by one special interest group is also scandalous.
The G Word, a new documentary, only occasionally covers serious issues. But it opts not to do honest reporting.
A lack of transparency doesn't make politicians better people.
Plus: Copyright versus the internet, roofer helping rebuild hurricane-damaged Florida houses arrested for lack of Florida license, and more...
A new petition seeks a posthumous pardon for Callie House.
"There's a new special interest group in town: parents."
A new report looks at decades of troubling trends of bad convictions in murder, rape, and drug cases.
More universities than ever are now requiring lengthy DEI statements from job applicants. Is that good for academic freedom?