Florida is continuing to be on the frontlines of the ongoing debate over the First Amendment. Many of the issues center around public employees, children and social media. For instance, the state is ...
It is about whether the plaintiffs have proffered sufficient evidence, when viewed in their favor, to show they suffered a ...
An annual survey published by the Freedom Forum shows this year that American's understanding of their First Amendment rights remains low. Even as the First Amendment takes centerstage after the ...
In the wake of conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s murder, a fierce First Amendment debate over the concept of “hate speech” has taken center stage across the nation. Conservative lawmakers and ...
President Trump does not have the power to strip Americans who are born in this country of their citizenship, Vox correspondent Ian Millhiser writes.
From protests and journalism to social media and campus speech, explore how the First Amendment safeguards everyone — including immigrants — and what it actually covers. The First Amendment is a ...
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC), in February 2025, launched a request for information seeking public comment about how social media platforms’ “adverse actions” against users and user content may ...
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A wall of separation between church & state: The First Amendment under threat
Speaking today at Turning Point USA’s annual “AmericaFest” conference, Vice President J.D. Vance said, to great applause: “The only thing that has truly served as an anchor of the United States of ...
"[I]n the public university setting, student disagreement with a professor's academic speech on an issue of public concern cannot alter the Pickering analysis in the government's favor." A short ...
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Australian politician calls country ‘guinea pig’ for censorship amid world-first social media ban
Australia enacted a world-first social media ban Dec. 10, blocking kids under 16 from social media, sparking censorship fears ...
Ben Sheehan explains how, and how often, Americans have changed their Constitution. How do we change the U.S. Constitution? We’ve done it 27 times – is that too many or too few? Ben Sheehan explains ...
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