ACLU

California Students to Have Access to Abortion Pills

A California law requires all schools within the University of California (UC) and California State University (CSU) systems to offer abortion pills beginning Jan 1, 2023.

Pennsylvania School District Limits Student Athletic Participation to Teams Aligned With Their Sex at Birth

Parent groups reacted as a Pennsylvania school district became the first in the commonwealth to vote on a policy requiring student athletes to compete on teams corresponding with their sex at birth.

See Abortion Law in All 50 States

Abortion laws are rapidly changing across the U.S.

Supreme Courts in Texas, Ohio Block Efforts to Reinstate Access to Abortions

Texas’s and Ohio’s Supreme Courts have given the go-ahead for the states to enforce their respective state laws that ban abortion, blocking efforts that barred the laws from taking effect, coming after the U.S. Supreme Court last week overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling.

Pro-Abortion Injunctions Attempt to Delay Abortion Bans

America’s first post-Roe v. Wade pro-life laws have been delayed by a series of injunctions that have resulted in women continuing to be able to have abortions.

Idaho Satanic Temple Hosting LGBT Event Aimed at Kids Featuring ‘Unbaptisms’, Drag Show

Satanists in Idaho are hosting a "family-friendly" LGBT event that targets children while featuring "unbaptisms" and a "drag dance party."

Amber Heard Is ‘Broke’ Due to Mounting Legal Fees, Lavish Spending: Sources

Amber Heard can’t pay the $10.4 million she owes Johnny Depp, her lawyer revealed Thursday — as sources told The Post the actress is “broke” due to hefty legal fees associated with the bombshell defamation trial.

California Votes To End Mandatory Reporting On Students Who Threaten Schools

The California State Senate voted Thursday to end a requirement that students who threaten violence against school officials be reported.

An Unlikely Alliance: ACLU Pushes to Unseal Government Warrants Targeting Project Veritas

Civil liberties groups have expressed concern about DOJ overreaching authority, assaulting free press in sweeping probe against conservative journalist James O'Keefe

Beware the EU’s New Internet Regulations

Writing in the New York Times, Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen writes that new European Internet regulations will “make social media far better without impinging on free speech.” That isn’t true, and the ways in which it isn’t true illustrate rather well just how difficult it would be to regulate social-media platforms without undermining free speech.

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