Understanding the Constitution: the 14th Amendment: Part I
- November 15, 2021
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READ MORESalon.com issued a defamatory article it has refused to correct.
READ MOREOnline tools combined with face-to-face instruction create what is known as blended learning. Effective integration of technology can allow more efficient use of instructional time and save schools money. Colorado is well positioned to implement and test blended learning programs on a larger scale. Charter and district public schools have begun to implement blended learning models and have seen promising results.
READ MOREThis article outlines constitutional parental rights and why forcing transgender ideology on parents violates those rights.
READ MOREThe person Obama appointed to censure so-called “disinformation” had a record of spreading disinformation of his own.
READ MOREColorado’s legislative Bozos have decided to get clever—orr, what in Clownland passes for clever.
READ MOREA constitutional lawsuit against TABOR would have no objective merit, but the Colorado Supreme Court’s persistent hostility to TABOR might induce it to rule for the plaintiffs anyway.
READ MOREWhen the federal government certified the Colorado Constitution as “republican” in 1876, the Colorado constitution limited the legislature more than TABOR does.
READ MOREDespite Colorado’s $1.2 billion budget deficit, increasing regulatory woes, and a souring economic outlook, the state legislature continues to proliferate new legislation that promises to increase government size and spending. The 120-day 2025 legislative session is beyond the halfway point, and Colorado’s 35 senators and 65 representatives have introduced over 500 bills so far, with
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