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SOUTHEAST TEXAS RECORD

Sunday, December 22, 2024

The Huffington Post

Recent News About The Huffington Post

  • Do Parents Have Rights?

    By Mark Pulliam |
    Loudoun County, Virginia, an affluent suburb of Washington, D.C., represents the contentious zeitgeist bedeviling the body politic. As I reported elsewhere last year, the Loudoun County school board has become ground zero in an escalating culture war in which concerned parents oppose leftist indoctrination posing as curriculum.

  • The ERA Is Back?

    By Lene Caracas-Apuntar |
    The Equal Rights Amendment, a topic I’ve previously discussed in the form of a retrospective on Phyllis Schlafly, is back in the news. The occasion for this déjà vu is the newly-woke Virginia legislature’s recent ratification of the measure, which was proposed by Congress way back in 1972. The ERA pre-dates Saturday Night Fever, Charlie’s Angels, and the death of Elvis! In January, the Democratic majorities in the Old Dominion’s statehouse purported to give the ERA—long thought to be moribund—a new lease on life when Virginia became the 38th state to ratify it.

  • Huffington Post, writer face $1 million libel suit - plaintiff alleges he was falsely labeled white supremacist

    By Marian Johns |
    HOUSTON — The Huffington Post and one of its writers is facing a $1 million libel suit filed by Charles Johnson who alleges he was falsely labeled a white supremacist.

  • Will the Janus Case Strike the Deathblow to Public Sector Unions?

    By Mark Pulliam |
    The Supreme Court will hear oral argument today [February 26] in one of the term’s most important—and highly publicized—cases, Janus v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, Council 31. As many readers are aware, the case involves the constitutionality of “agency shop” arrangements in public sector collective bargaining agreements, which compel non-member employees to make payments in lieu of union dues as a condition of their employment. Agency shop clauses are commonly used in public-sector labor contracts, enabling powerful unions representing teachers and other government employees to collect large sums of money from workers who never consented to such exactions (and who, for that matter, never voted in favor of union representation).

  • Op-Ed: It's Time for Pharma to Take Responsibility for Opioid Deaths

    By Lynne Peterson, Contributing Writer, MedPage Today |
    There is much blame to be shared, but why the delay for judgment?

  • Fannie, Freddie ride foreclosure freeze tide

    By The SE Texas Record |
    WASHINGTON, D.C. (Legal Newsline)--As Capitol Hill remains under siege from all sides of America's faltering economy, pressure to stem the tide of foreclosures continued to make inroads as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac became the latest to join the foreclosure freeze movement.