"Making Amends," the title of the Clinton Presidential Center's new special exhibition, is unlikely to set hearts throbbing.
Anthropic sues the federal government—and kicks off a debate about free speech for artificial intelligence systems.
The Zimbabwean on MSNOpinion
Analysis of the Constitution Amendment Bill : Part 2
In the first part of our analysis of the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment (No 3) Bill [link] we looked at the amendments ...
There’s not much ambiguity in the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. It reads: “Congress shall make no law respecting ...
Opinion: Each of the five protections of the First Amendment — the press, speech, assembly, petition and religion — is being undermined in today’s political climate.
A tense exchange over the proposed Constitutional Reform Council turned the floor of the Jatiya Sangsad into a forum ...
The Kansas Supreme Court determined in 2019 that the state's constitution protects abortion because it protects a woman's ...
Free speech on university campuses is a perennially hot topic, perhaps most recently reflected in protests about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict at places like Ball State University, Harvard, and ...
Don Lemon is ready for change. The notable journalist has had quite the year so far as he was arrested by federal agents ...
Politics / But make no mistake: The company is not one of the good guys. Elie Mystal Anthropic, makers of the “Claude” AI model, has sued the Department of Defense in two separate lawsuits, including ...
Early voting officially began Friday for the April 21 redistricting referendum, in which Virginia voters will decide whether ...
SCOTUSblog on MSN
The dissent that believed the Olympics belong to everyone
In Dissent is a recurring series by Anastasia Boden on Supreme Court dissents that have shaped (or reshaped) our country. The Olympics are one of those rare moments when the […] The post The dissent ...
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