Freedom from Religion Foundation claims Christian group should stop using public park during school hours to provide free lunch for students; shows up and provides its own literature, desserts, and potential scholarships to the college-bound.
Whole Foods files a countersuit against an Austin-area pastor, who is openly gay, over his alleged fraud in claiming a company bakery topped his cake with a gay slur. Compelling video evidence from the store's security cameras torpedoes the story of LGBT persecution by the company widely known for ...
A policy preventing transgender student, Gavin Grimm, from using a boys restroom at his Virginia high school is discriminatory, a federal appeals court today ruled, overturning a prior decision to reject Grimm's discrimination claim.
A day before the New York presidential primaries, a coalition of 60 conservative ministers who support Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump met with the candidate as part of his National Diversity Coalition for Trump.
Jordan Brown, who says he is the openly-gay pastor of a Church of Open Doors in Austin, Texas, claims he ordered a cake from the pro-LGBT grocer Whole Foods. The cake supposedly was topped with a gay slur.
Outspoken atheist/agnostic Bill Maher says Christianity and other religions should be taxed, not simply because he believes it's fair but also because he thinks it would contribute to their demise.
Councilman in one of the nation's largest cities attempts to make a point by inserting language from the Satanic Temple in a city resolution encouraging citizens to be compassionate and "Serve the Earth." Council did not object until they learned about the website from which the language was ...
During an interview earlier this week on CNN, Heidi Cruz, the wife of Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz, says she would focus on school choice—among other priorities—if her husband is elected president.
With an R-rated version of "Batman vs. Superman" slated for DVD, a leading film reviewer says he is concerned about the trend toward making superhero movies – once a safe genre for families and children – coarser.
Gov. Bill Haslam claims in letter that bill violates both the federal and state constitutions and trivializes God's word. The original proponents of the bill are promising an effort to overturn the veto.