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Yes, religious symbols can be appropriate in public settings if they reflect historical or cultural significance and do not promote a specific religion. The First Amendment protects both freedom of ...
Legally, the memo doesn’t change existing protections under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, which prohibits discrimination ...
Trump's administration previously touted guidance Clinton's administration issued in 1997 on federal employees' right to ...
Religious statues in our homes, gardens and churches are intended to inspire us, not cause us to make them idols. Sometimes non-believers charge Christians, especially Catholics of praying to statues.
Federal workers will be allowed to discuss and promote their religion in the workplace as well as challenge the “correctness” ...
Sr. Sujata Jena, a lawyer and nun of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary in Odisha, refutes allegations ...
Office of Personnel Management Director Scott Kupor wrote that the memo “provides guidance to agencies on robustly protecting ...
Federal employees may start seeing and hearing more about religion in the workplace, following new guidance from the Trump ...
Shiromani Akali Dal president Sukhbir Badal criticized the barring of a Sikh girl at a Jaipur exam center for wearing sacred ...
Controversy in Madhya Pradesh as Baby Convent School principal distributes Hindi alphabet charts with Islamic references.
This shift sparked a new wave of Latter-day Saints joining the tattoo revolution, Dodge said, with some members choosing ...
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