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Disabled Father’s Explosive ADA Lawsuit Slams Maryland Court for Systemic Discrimination—Will AG Brown Defend the Indefensible?

Disabled veteran Jeff Reichert’s federal lawsuit against the Anne Arundel County Circuit Court reveals alleged systematic discrimination and retaliation in his custody battle. Despite his disabilities, the court denied reasonable accommodations required under the ADA, raising significant concerns about bias and access to justice within Maryland’s family court system.

Disabled Father’s Explosive ADA Lawsuit Slams Maryland Court for Systemic Discrimination—Will AG Brown Defend the Indefensible? Read More

Was the Arrest of Don Lemon an Attack on the Constitution?

The arrest of journalist Don Lemon has sparked claims of First Amendment violations from Democratic officials. However, federal authorities clarified that the arrests were tied to alleged criminal conduct related to the targeting of a church, not journalism. The First Amendment protects speech but does not exempt individuals from investigation for non-speech conduct.

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Student Government or Political Gatekeeper?

St. John’s University has once again denied official club status to the Turning Point USA chapter, raising concerns about student government acting as ideological gatekeepers. Critics argue this reflects a pattern of selective scrutiny against conservative organizations, undermining claims of commitment to diversity and free expression in higher education.

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Illinois’ ‘Clean Slate’ Experiment Goes National — and So Do the Risks

Illinois has enacted the Clean Slate legislation, enabling automatic sealing of qualifying nonviolent criminal records without court petitions. While supporters see it as a means to enhance opportunity, critics argue it compromises accountability and public safety. This trend is part of a broader movement across several states, raising concerns over transparency and long-term consequences.

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Supreme Court TikTok Ruling Sparks Clash Between Free Speech and National Security

A debate over free speech, national security, and presidential power has emerged following a Guardian opinion piece criticizing the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling upholding the law requiring TikTok’s divestiture to mitigate foreign control risks. Critics argue it sets a precedent for censorship, while supporters emphasize genuine security concerns and uphold Congressional authority.

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Supervised Visitation in Westchester County: A Probation-Run Program That Proves False Arrest

In 2018, Marc Fishman was falsely arrested during a supervised visitation with his son, igniting a lawsuit over civil rights and disability discrimination. Under Westchester County policy, his probation officer was present, but law enforcement acted without her approval, highlighting systemic issues in the county’s handling of supervised visitation and civil rights violations.

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A Department in Decay: How Prince George’s County Police Became a Case Study in Institutional Failure

Prince George’s County’s police department sits at the uneasy intersection of race, power, and accountability — a majority-Black force in a majority-Black county still haunted by decades of corruption and cover-ups. From the $20 million William Green shooting settlement to this month’s $2.35 million verdict for whistleblower Mohamed Magassouba, the pattern is clear: misconduct isn’t the exception, it’s the expense of doing business. “A Department in Decay” traces how internal retaliation, political favoritism, and taxpayer-funded damage control have replaced real reform — and why even honest cops are paying the price.

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The Records They Wouldn’t Release — and the Mother They Jailed

The case of Giselle Smiel highlights significant issues of transparency and jurisdictional failures in California’s justice system. After a May 2025 incident involving alleged child abduction, Smiel faced six felony charges despite having no criminal history. Denied access to public records and effective legal representation, she remains in jail, raising concerns over systemic accountability and due process.

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The Union Station Assault: When Free Speech Meets Leftist Intolerance

On October 1, 2025, conservative journalist Cam Higby was assaulted at Union Station in Washington, D.C., while wearing a MAGA hat during his “Fearless Tour.” Video shows Maryland teacher Taylor Alexandra Forte lunging at Higby, ripping off his hat, and striking him before being pepper-sprayed in self-defense. The attack, now viral online, has sparked outrage over political violence and calls for Forte’s termination, raising broader questions about free speech, public safety, and accountability in taxpayer-funded schools.

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