SCOTUS Just Demolished ANOTHER 50-Year Legal Precedent
There has been another major victory out of the U.S. Supreme Court. Just days after standing up for life with Friday’s decision that overturned Roe v. Wade, today the Court has taken a stand for religious liberty.
As we’ve told you before, a high school football coach was fired because after every home game, he would quietly pray on the field. We filed an amicus brief in the case defending the coach's right to pray.
Today, in a 6-to-3 ruling, the Court reversed the Court of Appeals verdict and stated that the school had punished the coach for an act that was "doubly protected by the Free Exercise and Free Speech Clauses of the First Amendment."
This is a big win for religious liberty. It’s gratifying to see a return to the importance of free exercise of faith meaning something again.
Today’s full Sekulow broadcast includes more in-depth analysis of this latest Supreme Court win, as well as the impact it could have for other religious liberty cases moving forward.
-
1:10:19
Teaching Liberty
11 months agoSCOTUS clarifies the Right to Religious Exemptions in the workplace | Groff v. DeJoy
129 -
1:10:21
Teaching Liberty
11 months agoSCOTUS clarifies the Right to Religious Exemptions in the workplace | Groff v. DeJoy
11 -
21:50
Robert Gouveia
3 years agoSCOTUS Warrant Ruling​
1412 -
0:35
Mr Producer Media
2 years agoKamala: SCOTUS Ruling Is An Attempt To Undo 50 Years of Precedent
25118 -
15:14
Project Sentinel
3 years agoWhat's at Stake when SCOTUS Hears an Historic Right to Carry Case
88 -
24:23
Bearing Arms' Cam & Company
3 years agoSCOTUS Turns Away Felon Gun Case
152K1 -
1:40
One America News Network
1 year agoSCOTUS Makes Ruling In Moore V. Harper
9.64K1 -
2:40
TrendingNewsToday
1 year agoSCOTUS Scores Major Conservative Victory – Laws Are Being Struck Down Like Flies That Are Anti-2A
9 -
2:30
One America News Network
3 years agoSCOTUS rules in favor of college student targeted by school in free speech case
3.8K20 -
1:02:10
Project Sentinel
2 years agoConstitutional Originalism, The Protection of Rights and Recent Landmark SCOTUS Decisions
36