News and; Views: June 27, 2025
BREAKING: SCOTUS Quashes Federal District Courts' Nationwide Injunctions, 6-3 Hawaii and Texas judges, hardest hit. And maybe legal strategists who benefit from forum-shopping as well.
In a 6-3 decision released this morning, the Supreme Court put a stop to the practice of district courts issuing nationwide or "universal" injunctions against the executive branch in exercises of its constitutional authority. The case of Trump v CASA arises from Donald Trump's reinterpretation of birthright citizenship, but as Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote for the majority, that question is not yet before the top court. This pertains specifically to federal courts attempting to dictate policies that go beyond the parties before them in legal actions, and the court put a sharp end to that today.
Supreme Court says Maryland parents can pull their kids from public school lessons using LGBTQ books The justices reversed lower-court rulings in favor of the Montgomery County school system in suburban Washington. The high court ruled that the schools likely could not require elementary school children to sit through lessons involving the books if parents expressed religious objections to the material.
The decision was not a final ruling in the case, but the justices strongly suggested that the parents will win in the end.
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Let’s get one thing straight (no pun intended): vandalism is inexcusable, no matter the target or the reason behind it. Yet the left always leaps to the cry of “Hate crime!” whenever somebody messes with a pride flag, side-eyes a gay person, or crosses against the light on a rainbow crosswalk. It’s a certain type of performative justice that also reeks of the desire for normal people to not just accept gay people but also to affirm, revere, and celebrate them. We shouldn’t have to kowtow to the cult of the rainbow.
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Sowell argues that these government programs not only displaced fathers but devalued them. Welfare made it financially feasible to raise children without a male breadwinner in the home. Over time, a cultural shift followed, where fatherhood and marriage became optional rather than essential. In many cases, they were even viewed as outdated or oppressive.
The consequences are measurable. A study published in PubMed by the National Institutes of Health, which tracked over 8,000 children, found a clear link between early childhood father absence and increased depression during adolescence and young adulthood. The study concluded that the psychological effects of fatherlessness are comparable to the impact of severe trauma.
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New York is turning third world 😳 pic.twitter.com/ZwqEvAkdll
— Clown World ™ 🤡 (@ClownWorld_) June 27, 2025


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