In Voicemail, Bank Says It No Longer Lends to Firearms Dealers
April 4, 2016 |
Good morning from Washington. Kelsey Harkness tells the stories of two gun sellers in different states who were denied banking services, possibly the fallout of a secretive program. The share of the national debt for a child born this year will be $68,000 by the time she can vote. Mollie McNeill has solutions. The right-to-work cause advances despite unions' win at a deadlocked Supreme Court, Kevin Mooney reports. Plus: Ryan T. Anderson on why one state's religious liberty bill is a model. |
NewsIn Voicemail, Bank Says It No Longer Lends to Firearms DealersThe stories of two businessmen who recently were denied banking services because they sell firearms suggest a secretive government program called Operation Choke Point still affects industries across the nation that the Obama administration considered undesirable. |
CommentaryKids Born in 2016 Hold $42,000 in Public DebtFederal debt so large that it approaches the size of a nation's economy slows growth and reduces personal incomes. |
CommentaryMississippi Moves to Protect Religious Freedom on MarriageIn some states where marriage had been redefined, citizens and religious organizations who continued believing that marriage was a union of husband and wife have been penalized by the government. So the citizens of Mississippi have acted to make sure it never happens in their state. |
NewsIllinois Town Among New Fronts on Nation's Right-to-Work Map as Supreme Court DeadlocksDespite the lack of a definitive ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court on the constitutionality of mandatory union dues, workers across the nation have ample opportunity to challenge why they're forced to pay for political activism they don't support. |
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