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Iowa Can Continue To Restrict Instruction On Gender Identity And Sexual Orientation In Schools

Iowa can continue to restrict instruction on gender identity and sexual orientation in schools up through the sixth grade, a federal judge said, but has to allow nonmandatory programs related to the topics. U.S. District Judge Stephen Locher offered a split decision late Thursday, siding in part with a LGBTQ advocacy organization, teachers and students who sued the state. Attorney General Brenna Bird said in a statement Friday that she is committed to defending Iowa's law protecting children and her office is “looking at next steps, including appeal.” In a separate ruling in March, Locher again temporarily blocked another disputed component of the law, which would prohibit school libraries from carrying books that depict sex acts. Iowa has asked the U.S. Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals to overturn that decision. Republican majorities in the Iowa House and Senate passed the law in 2023, intending to reinforce what they consider to be age-appropriate education in kindergarten through 12th grades. It's been a back-and-forth battle in the courts in the two years since. The provisions of the law that are being challenged were temporarily blocked by Locher in December 2023, just before they became enforceable. That decision was overturned in August by the U.S. Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, meaning the law had been enforceable for most of the current school year. The appellate court told the lower court that it failed to apply the correct analysis in determining whether to temporarily block the law. An attorney for the LGBTQ students, teachers and advocacy organization told Locher in February that the law is overly broad because it prohibits “any program, curriculum, test, survey, questionnaire, promotion, or instruction relating to gender identity or sexual orientation” in kindergarten through sixth grade. Opponents argued the law is vague enough to limit any information accessed or activity engaged in within the school. Locher agreed in his decision that any “program” or “promotion” is broad enough to violate students' First Amendment rights and those provisions are therefore on hold. But restrictions on curriculum, tests, surveys, questionnaires or instruction can be interpreted in the way the state argues, as applying only to the mandatory school functions. Locher laid out specifically what that means: “Students in grades six and below must be allowed to join Gender Sexuality Alliances ('GSAs') and other student groups relating to gender identity and/or sexual orientation.” And the district, teachers and students “must be permitted to advertise” those groups. On the other hand, teachers are not allowed to provide mandatory instruction that include “detailed explanations or normative views” on the issues, Locher said. "It does not matter whether the lessons or instruction revolve around cisgender or transgender identities or straight or gay sexual orientations. All are forbidden." The state education agency's rules on the law say they will not take a neutral statement on gender identity and sexual orientation to be a violation of the law. During a February hearing, Locher posed questions to the state’s attorney asking, for example, how a teacher should decide whether a book featuring a same-sex couple is a neutral portrayal allowed under the law, or whether it is a positive or affirming portrayal. The state often said the answers depend on context. Opponents of the law said that means the measure is too vague. Locher's decision dictated that neutral references where sexual orientation or gender identity aren't the focus are allowed. That means books with characters of varying gender identities or sexual orientations are permitted, so long as those “are not the focus of the book or lesson.” Locher also said a teacher can refer to their partner, even if that partner is the same sex. Attorneys for Iowa Safe Schools, students and teachers that sued the state said Friday that the ruling is a win. “Under this order, Iowa teachers no longer can be disciplined simply because their classroom contains a Pride flag or their library contains books with LGBTQ+ characters,” said Thomas Story, staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union of Iowa. “This law, with certain narrow exceptions, should no longer stand in the way of school districts supporting efforts to include and support their LGBTQ+ students.”

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James Comey Knew EXACTLY What '86 47' Meant

James Comey Knew Exactly What '86 47' Meant

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Birthright Citizenship & The Founding Fathers

Birthright Citizenship & The Founding Fathers

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Republicans Reject Trump's Tax-Cut Bill After He Calls For Unity

President Donald Trump's sweeping tax bill failed in a procedural vote in a key congressional committee on Friday (May 16), as five Republicans rejected the package amid calls for deeper spending cuts, potentially delaying its passage in the House of Representatives. The vote came despite Trump calling for Republicans to "UNITE behind" the legislation, saying on social media: "We don't need 'GRANDSTANDERS' in the Republican Party. STOP TALKING, AND GET IT DONE!" Five of 21 Republicans on the House Budget Committee voted to block the measure, saying they would continue to withhold support unless Speaker Mike Johnson agreed to further cuts to the Medicaid healthcare program for lower-income Americans and the full repeal of green energy tax cuts implemented by Democrats. The vote is likely a temporary setback for the measure in a Congress that is controlled by Trump's Republicans and so far has not rejected any of his legislative requests. But it could delay plans for a vote by the full House next week. The measure would add trillions of dollars to the federal government's $36.2 trillion in debt. House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington convened the panel by stressing the legislation's importance to voters who elected Trump to the White House and gave the party full control of Congress last November. "They want common sense policies. And they want from all of us a commitment to putting America and Americans first. Let's give the people what they voted for," the Texas Republican said. Republican Representatives Chip Roy, Ralph Norman, Andrew Clyde, Josh Brecheen and Lloyd Smucker joined all 16 Democrats on the committee in voting against the measure. "We are writing checks we cannot cash and our children are going to pay the price. So, I am a 'no' on this bill unless serious reforms are made," Roy, of Texas, told the committee. The lawmakers said they hoped to reach a deal with Johnson to amend the bill and enact Trump's tax cuts. The legislation would extend tax cuts passed during Trump's first term. Congress' bipartisan Joint Tax Committee estimates the tax cuts would cost $3.72 trillion over a decade. Trump has highlighted measures including lifting taxes on tips and overtime that Republicans say would boost working-class Americans, while critics say the bill will offer more benefits to the wealthy. Democrats condemned the legislation as a vehicle for giving billionaires tax cuts, while citing a projection from nonpartisan congressional researchers that proposed spending cuts to Medicaid and federally subsidized private health insurance available through the Affordable Care Act could lead to 8.6 million Americans losing health coverage. "This is the over-arching truth. It is the biggest tax cut for billionaires in American history, paid for by throwing 13.7 million Americans off their healthcare coverage" said Representative Brendan Boyle, the committee's top Democrat. The Republicans are split among three factions: moderates from Democratic-led states who want to raise a federal deduction for state and local taxes; hardliners demanding that a bigger SALT deduction be offset by deeper cuts to Medicaid and the full repeal of green energy tax credits; and other moderates determined to minimize Medicaid cuts. The proposed legislation would impose work requirements on Medicaid beginning in 2029. Hardliners want those to begin immediately and have called for a sharp reduction in federal contributions to Medicaid benefits available to working-class people through the Affordable Care Act - an option vehemently opposed by Republican moderates.

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Trump In The Middle-East - What Comes Next?

Trump In The Middle-East - What Comes Next?

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Russia-Ukraine Peace Talks End After Less Than 2 Hours with Deal to Swap POWs

The first direct Russia-Ukraine peace talks since the early weeks of Moscow’s 2022 invasion ended after less than two hours. While both sides agreed on a large prisoner swap, they clearly remained far apart on key conditions for ending the fighting. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he discussed the talks with President Donald Trump and the leaders of France, Germany, the U.K. and Poland. In a post on X from a European leadership meeting in Albania, he urged “tough sanctions” against Moscow if it rejects “a full and unconditional ceasefire and an end to killings.” At the brief Istanbul talks, Kyiv and Moscow agreed to exchange 1,000 prisoners of war each in what would be their biggest such swap.

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Missouri Governor Mike Kehoe Interview

Missouri Governor Mike Kehoe Interview

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Strike by New Jersey Transit Train Engineers Leaves Some 350,000 Commuters in the Lurch

New Jersey Transit train engineers are on strike in a dispute over wages, leaving an estimated 350,000 commuters in New Jersey and New York City to seek other means to reach their destinations or consider staying home. The walkout Friday comes after the latest round of negotiations on Thursday didn’t produce an agreement. Picketers gathered outside transit headquarters and the Hoboken Terminal. It’s the state’s first transit strike in more than 40 years. It halts all NJ Transit commuter trains, which provide heavily used routes between New York City’s Penn Station on one side of the Hudson River and communities in northern New Jersey on the other, as well as the Newark airport.

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New U.S. Ambassador, Former Senator and Business Executive David Perdue, Arrives in China

The new U.S. ambassador to China, former senator and business executive David Perdue, arrived in Beijing on Thursday, just days after China and the U.S. agreed to a temporary break in their damaging tariff war.Perdue said on X that it is an honor to represent President Donald Trump as ambassador.

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Bring Farming Home, Supply Chains

Amb Kip Tom on all the ways farmers can be put first!

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