
April 2, 2018
Good morning from Washington, where the inspector general looking into FBI and Justice Department corruption gets an assist from a prosecutor from the Beehive State. Fred Lucas introduces him. The media's favorite teen gun-control proponent dodges dialogue with a conservative counterpart. Ginny Montalbano reports. Why does McDonald's think employees deserve a break today? Rachel del Guidice tells. The president scores during a Texas crisis, Robert Henneke writes. Plus: Michelle Malkin on toothy tyranny, Joshua Gill on Mary Magdalene as victim, and Hans von Spakovsky on heroic Easter service.
Empowered by government, dentist’s offices use their authority to threaten families with child abuse charges if they don’t comply with the cavity police.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions decides to hold off on naming a second special counsel, but reaches well outside Washington to tap federal prosecutor John Huber to investigate possible wrongdoing by the FBI and Justice Department.
Despite a push from Congressional Black Caucus members to prematurely label the bombings as "ideologically or racially motivated," federal law enforcement took a deliberative approach to addressing the attacks.
"David has insulted us gun owners enough, and Kyle deserves a chance to get his ideas out to the most amount of people possible," Turning Point USA's Charlie Kirk says.
The fast-food giant allocates $150 million over five years to its Archways to Opportunity education program, tripling assistance to 400,000 U.S. employees.
A California state court, ruling in favor of a Bakersville bakery, concludes that it has an obligation to protect free speech for everyone.
Seventy-three years ago on Easter weekend, American troops invaded the Japanese island of Okinawa. It proved to be the costliest battle of the war.
The claim that Western churches have maligned Mary Magdalene is dubious at best.
"Like smoking, mixing politics and professorship should be taboo," Michael Watson writes. "All schooling should be about how to think, not what to think."
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