Supreme Court Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date June 25, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , abortion, activists, assisted suicide, common law, Constitution, courts, Dobbs v. Jackson, Due Process Clause, euthanasia, Fourteenth Amendment, history, hubris, law, Supreme Court, Washington v. Glucksberg How Euthanasia Activists Laid the Groundwork for Overturning Roe Wesley J. Smith June 25, 2022 Bioethics, Medicine 4 Back in the ’90s, the assisted-suicide movement tried to convince the Supreme Court to impose a Roe–style decision for their cause. Read More ›
yellow star Type post Author Casey Luskin Date October 26, 2020 CategoriesScientific Freedom Tagged , academic freedom, Answers in Genesis, Communism, creationism, Darwinism, disclaimer, Discovery Institute, discrimination, Due Process Clause, Elsevier, Fourteenth Amendment, free speech, Institute for Creation Research, intelligent design, Jews, Journal of Theoretical Biology, Martin Gaskell, Medieval Europe, Nature (journal), Nazi Germany, Neo-Darwinism, Norway, peer-reviewed literature, Science (journal), scientific journals, Soviet Union, Stockholm University, Supreme Court, Sweden, University of Kentucky, University of Tromsø, yellow star Intelligent Design’s Yellow Star: Journal’s Disclaimer Refutes a Common Criticism of ID Casey Luskin October 26, 2020 Scientific Freedom 9 Critics of intelligent design (ID) often lecture ID proponents that they are free to submit their work to any scientific journal. Read More ›