The president may not be able to control what content Twitter and Facebook run, but he can still attempt to intimidate or silence the platforms.
The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Obergefell v. Hodges will shift the debate over gay-marriage debate from a legal fight to a cultural and religious conflict.
The Supreme Court found in favor of a baker who refused to sell a cake to a same-sex couple, but used a rationale that sheds little light on the case’s larger civil-rights implications.
The Supreme Court justice says backers of the ERA must “start over” in their bid to amend the Constitution. A leading backer of the effort explains why she believes that the icon of the women’s-rights movement is wrong.
The effort of some U.S. Supreme Court justices to extend the Second Amendment’s protections to all guns in common use is at odds with its history.
Speaking at the Fortune Most Powerful Women Summit, Justice Elena Kagan answered the question of how colleagues in the 21st century communicate with one another, if not electronically.