Record Low Turnout in Iran as Voters Lose Faith in Elections
Iran’s leaders wanted to show the world a high voter turnout. Instead, people stayed home for the "sham" elections.
Iran’s leaders wanted to show the world a high voter turnout. Instead, people stayed home for the "sham" elections.
Plus: Catholic funeral for transgender activist, Donald Trump's props, deep tech in El Segundo, and more...
Big government has been ruinous for millions of people. Charities aren't perfect, but they are much more efficient and effective.
Plus: the U.S. Justice Department says zoning restrictions on a church's soup kitchen are likely illegal, more cities pass middle housing reforms, and California gears up for another rent control fight.
"Being a true free speech champion does require that you defend speech that even you disagree with," says libertarian Rikki Schlott.
The latest RPG from Bethesda Studios chronicles the unexpected ways that private, non-governmental power steps in to fill the gaps and voids left by state actors.
The Amazon miniseries examines the Institute in Basic Life Principles, focusing on the Duggar family and its multiple sex abuse scandals.
A cabinet minister who once defended the right to blaspheme now wants a crackdown.
A Texas judge ordered that the airline submit to training on the rights of religious believers after losing a religious discrimination lawsuit.
Since the Renaissance, we've been increasingly able to define who we are as individuals. But is that a false freedom?
What does that tell us about the state of American Christianity?
The Center has gotten rich in part thanks to its "hate map," which smears many good people.
Plus: Perspectives on the affirmative action ruling, how U.S. policy is thwarting Cuban capitalists, and more...
It's wrong to use human beings as pawns in an apparent political stunt.
Wired's "senior maverick" on his new book of accumulated wisdom, backlash against tech, and why the future still looks bright.
We once ranked No. 4 in the world, according to the Heritage Foundation. Now we're 25th.
Some of the points made by Rabbi Yitzhak Grossman in the course of assessing the issue under Jewish law have broader significance, as well.
Rejection of the state and the use of lethal force can be found in the founding documents of Christianity.
The Scottish thinker's famous friendship with David Hume demonstrates his liberalism, not his atheism.
Farewell to the senator's son who pioneered a TV genre, helped create the Christian right, ran for president, and earned the grudging respect of Abbie Hoffman
Plus: A listener asks if the Roundtable has given the arguments of those opposed to low-skilled immigration a fair hearing.
Too few remember the pope's opposition to Polish building regulation.
The ideology champions the same tired policies that big government types predictably propose whenever they see something they don't like.
The Case for Christian Nationalism advocates for an ethnically uniform nation ruled by a "Christian prince."
The Department of Justice is now intervening on behalf of the Orange County, California, group's right to distribute food at its resource center in Santa Ana.
"When the government picks and chooses among religions," the lawsuit reads, "religious liberty is threatened for all."
Plus: Dominion defamation suit against Fox News starts today, Republicans' debt plan, and more...
“After School Satan Clubs” cause no direct harm—they merely challenge the relationship between religious institutions and public schools.
S.B. 1718 would make it a third-degree felony to “harbor” or “transport” undocumented immigrants. Some Florida faith leaders say it could threaten their church activities.
Plus: Free speech is at the heart of the SCOTUS immigration case, the best and worst states for occupational licensing, and more...
The ADL's annual audit of "antisemitic incidents," which counted a record number last year, is apt to be influenced by changes in methodology and reporting behavior.
Greetings from the second International Conspiracy Theory Symposium, where one of the most cited findings in the field has been debunked.
A new Netflix documentary shows how the seeds of political polarization that roil our culture today were planted at Waco.
"I pray wherever I go, inside my head, for the people around me," said one priest. "How can it be a crime for a priest to pray?"
A rogues’ gallery of institutions that anybody with an independent mind should skip.
"My artwork is unapologetic," said the artist. "Sometimes it can be very political. Sometimes it can be very controversial."
The Supreme Court considers the scope of federally required religious accommodations at work.