The Supreme Court tackles AR-15 bans
After years of dodging the issue like a bad text, the highest court in the land is finally taking on the big one: whether states can actually ban semiautomatic rifles.
After years of dodging the issue like a bad text, the highest court in the land is finally taking on the big one: whether states can actually ban semiautomatic rifles.
So, on its final day of the term, the highest court in the land decided that the Constitution actually means what it says. Imagine that.
Mother Nature just threw a terrifying one-two punch at Venezuela, with back-to-back massive earthquakes hitting right near the capital during a holiday.
You’d think not betting on the very elections you are actively running in would be a basic rule of employment. But apparently, US representatives needed a formal bill to tell them to stop.
Well, the highest court in the land just dropped its final pre-summer-break rulings, and they’ve officially given states the green light to keep biological boys out of girls' locker rooms.
Because if there’s one thing American politics clearly lacked, it was more billionaire cash sloshing around. Let's wave goodbye to those quaint post-Watergate rules.
Just when you thought the news cycle couldn't get more retro, we are now arguing about the 14th Amendment like it’s 1868 all over again.
If your business plan is "give me money to overthrow the Chinese government" and you spend it on a yacht instead, the feds might eventually want a word.
Because what American democracy really needed was more billionaire money washing through the system, the high court just decided that political parties and candidates can now coordinate their spending with absolutely zero limits.
Looks like the Constitution still has a few tricks up its sleeve against executive whims.
It’s the final day of the Supreme Court term, and they are dropping massive, country-altering decisions. Meanwhile, the country is quietly getting a lot safer.
There is bad luck, and then there is whatever cosmic horror just played out for a group of Venezuelan deportees.