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California Becomes Battleground for COVID Lawsuits, Legislation Surrounding Minors

In California, a state that has been continuously passing bills surrounding COVID-19 vaccine policies, attorneys are “chipping away at each part of this puzzle,” aiming to educate and empower people one lawsuit at a time.

Roy Moore Awarded $8.2 Million in Defamation Case vs. Soros-Funded Dems

Democrats defamed Roy Moore to take Alabama's US Senate seat in 2017, a federal jury has found.

Republicans Who Backed Trump Impeachment Almost All Falter in Primaries

Last year, former President Donald Trump crossed the unique threshold of owning half of all presidential impeachments in United States history. Now, he's out...

Report Indicates The 2024 Election Election Tampering Could Be Starting Right Now In Plain Sight

The FBI raid on Trump’s home isn’t just about prosecuting the former president for Jan. 6, it’s about fixing the next presidential election.

FBI Seized ‘Top Secret’ Documents From Trump Home, Unsealed Court Papers Say

FBI agents who searched former President Donald Trump's Florida home this week removed 11 sets of classified documents including some marked as top secret, the U.S. Justice Department said on Friday, while also disclosing that prosecutors had probable cause to believe Trump...

Florida Will Bar Medicaid Coverage for Gender Reassignment Surgeries, Hormones

Florida will prohibit Medicaid coverage for various gender reassignment measures such as surgeries, puberty blockers, hormones, hormone antagonists, and procedures that would change primary or secondary sex characteristics.

Medical Activists Fight Florida’s Public Health Emergency Laws After COVID-19 Unveils Concerns

Florida has a Republican governor, a Republican-led state House, and Republican-led state Senate. However, it also has some of America’s harshest forced quarantine and public health laws. Some activists plan to change this situation.

Supreme Court to Hear Case That Could End 40 Years of Race-Based Affirmative Action in University Admissions

The U.S. Supreme Court announced it would hear one of two cases on Oct. 31 that could dismantle the 40-year precedent of race-based affirmative action in university admissions, with universities now urging the court to preserve the decision despite some expert opinion to the contrary.

What Conservatives Must Do Following the FBI Raid on Trump

Watch out, Democrats, Republicans are about to take over the House.

CCP Accused of Using COVID Protocols to Further Discriminate Against Uyghurs

The lockdowns come after a reported surge in coronavirus cases.

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