#371826

Chris Christie has a habit of telling outright lies, and it's@ getting worse as he seeks the presidency.

#371827

Career CIA officer David Manners offered sworn testimony to the District Court of Arizona on May 5, claiming, "It was then, and remains now, my opinion that the United States did participate, directly or indirectly, in the supply of weapons to the Libyan Transitional National Council (TNC)."

#371828

A Louisiana man is asking for an explanation from Walmart after his request for a Confederate flag cake was rejected, but a design with the ISIS flag was made.

#371829

Walmart store bakes man an ISIS cake after refusing to ice Confederate flag design

#371830

“You gotta give it to her. She ain’t afraid.”

#371831

Pope Francis’ highly anticipated papal encyclical “Laudato Si,” which means “Praised Be to You,” was released on June 18 by the Vatican, and the potential fallout from the pope’s assault on fossil fuels will devastate the world’s most impoverished people and cause untold unnecessary deaths.

#371832

The Texas Senator and 2016 presidential candidate weighs in on major political issues including the 2016 GOP candidates and the recent SCOTUS decisions.

#371833

Justice Scalia ripped Justice Breyer's dissent in a death penalty case Monday, saying Breyer "rejects the Enlightenment."

#371834

Salon has brilliantly presented the argument that animals should be considered people.

#371835

Getty Images 'SCOTUS Ruling On Same-Sex Marriage Mandates Nationwide Concealed Carry Reciprocity.' This was the title of a highly shared article over the w

#371836

Why I co-wrote amicus brief backing idea that marriage is the union of a man and a woman.

#371837

MORE SCOTUS CRAZY: States Can't Force Illegals to Prove Citizenship When Voting - The Gateway Pundit
The Supreme Court continued it’s reign of ridiculousness on Monday by deciding US states can’t force voters to prove their ...

#371838

Let the lost revel in their sin as they have always done. Let us continue to make war on our own sin and live in a way that brings glory to God

#371839

The first gay Imam Daayiee Abdullah claims the Quran does not specifically mention punishment of homosexuals.

#371840

"A judicial victory doesn’t automatically translate into a political victory, let alone a policy success."

#371841

The case arose after Arizona voters opposed to congressional gerrymandering had taken the power away from state legislators.

#371842

Donald Trump, official presidential candidate, has never personally declared bankruptcy. The business ventures that bear his name, however, are a different story.

#371843

A Pennsylvania newspaper is facing a firestorm of criticism after the editorial board said it would very strictly limit op-eds and letters against same-sex marriage on the heels of Friday's historic Supreme Court ruling.

#371844

What would our founders make of this nightmare?

#371845

Eight hundred years and 11 days after the stamping of the Magna Carta, it's been an appalling week at the Supreme Court for the Constitution and the rule of law. Today's ruling is, in a sense, the Roe v. Wade of our generation. And I would think that even if I were gay and wanted to marry.As I noted on Twitter yesterday, it is entirely possible to like the outcome of a court ruling (or legislation) while being appalled at the process by which it was achieved. For instance, one can be both pro-choice and still believe (as in fact Ruth Bader Ginsburg does) that Roe v. Wade was wrongly decided.But too many people (including, apparently and sadly, many of the justices themselves, perhaps even including the chief justice) think that the purpose of the Supreme Court is to give them things they like, like subsidies for health care, or the right to marry someone of the same sex. They care only about the results, and are utterly indifferent to the process (as we saw with the way the PPACA was passed). They believe that the ends, if sufficiently desirable, always justify the means.But the means matter.If, as Chief Justice Roberts implied yesterday, ambiguous laws can be changed by judges per their divination of legislative intent, then there is no law except what the judges think it is. (I would note that in fact his reasoning was fundamentally flawed by his statement that it was Congress's goal to simply 'improve insurance markets.' I think their intent was to increase their control over our health providers, and ultimately lead us down a path to single payer. But neither of us knows.) This was not judicial activism -- it was judicial nihilism.Similarly, if the Fourteenth Amendment contains a hitherto unknown right to marry someone of the same sex, then it contains multitudes of rights that will be discovered in the future by more 'enlightened' judges.On Twitter, someone posted a picture of an inscription from the southeast portico of the Jefferson Memorial to justify the court's ruling:I am not an advocate for frequent changes in laws and constitutions, but laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind. As that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new discoveries are made, new truths discovered and manners and opinions change, with the change of circumstances, institutions must advance also to keep pace with the times. We might as well require a man to wear still the coat which fitted him when a boy as a civilized society to remain ever under the regimen of their barbarous ancestors.But that is not an argument for a 'living Constitution' that contains heretofore undiscovered 'rights.' By 'changes,' he meant that Constitutions must occasionally be amended, not reinterpreted.This ruling wasn't quite as bad as Roe, in that while a majority still support some restrictions on abortion, there has been a movement in public opinion on same-sex marriage in recent years. It was becoming legal in more and more states (though often, as was the case here, not by a popular vote, but by judicial fiat). Such a trend was probably inevitable, and young people are much more favorable to the idea than older ones (though they may change their minds as they age, as people do on many other issues). It was creating a problem in terms of 'full faith and credit' between states that recognized it and those that did not.But the Founders foresaw this sort of thing. That is why they put a provision into the founding document to deal with it. The proper way to address the issue, in terms of making SSM universal, was not to manufacture a new right from the Constitution, but rather to amend it. But that is something that hasn't happened in a long time, because it is (rightly) difficult to do, and the Congress, the courts and the public have become too impatient, and prefer to sidestep it (which in fact has happened in, among other things, the federal War on Drugs, which somehow didn't seem to require an amendment even though the prohibition of alcohol did).The Constitution was meant to be the bedrock of laws, and the laws were to be enacted by the Congress, and signed by the president, not ignored or superseded by the president, or rewritten by the chief justice, to satisfy their own preferences, or those of others, even a majority. We are neither a tyranny of men, or that of a majority. As has often been told, when Benjamin Franklin came out of the Constitutional Convention, a woman asked him, 'Mr. Franklin, what have you given us?' His reply: 'A republic, madam, if you can keep it.'When we ignore and side step the Constitutional and legal process to achieve a desired end, the bedrock starts to turn to sand. When the laws are ignored by those who have sworn to uphold or review them, the rule of law itself disintegrates. When the public doesn't care, or understand the role of the branches of government, but votes anyway for people who tell them they'll just give them stuff they like, that is how republics are lost.

#371846

Store owner and customers cite Southern heritage and say the flag is not a racist symbol.

#371847

Dude dances in the back...

#371848

Men are suffering more severe mental health problems than women, so why isn't there more of a focus on male psychology, asks Martin Daubney

#371849

Charlie Kirk is a 21-year-old energetic entrepreneur from Lemont, Illinois, who is committed to piercing the left's stranglehold of the minds of American youth. Three years ago, he launched Turning

#371850

How do you fix a failing high school? Change the grades. Under pressure to boost student achievement, the state-designated “out of time” Automotive HS in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, has resorted to riggi...
