Napp Nazworth
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Churches Are Helping Orphans, Changing Lives, Saving Taxpayers, AEI Panel Highlights
The recent devotion of churches to caring for orphans has changed the lives of not only the children they saved, but the communities in which they serve and the churches themselves, panelists pointed out at a Wednesday event hosted by the American Enterprise Institute. With 400,000 kids still in foster care in the United States, though, there is more work to be done.
Obama Under Fire From Liberals for Nominating Social Conservative Judge
President Barack Obama is under fire from some of his liberal friends after nominating Georgia state Judge Michael Boggs, who has a pro-life and pro-traditional marriage voting record as a state representative, for a federal court judgeship.
New Film 'Persecuted' Warns of Abuse of Gov't Power, Religious Persecution
"Persecuted," a new film that will be released on May 9, is a thriller with a political message about religious persecution and the abuse of government power.
To Understand Jobs During the Obama Administration, Forget Unemployment, Look at This Chart Instead
The unemployment rate is at 6.6 percent, its lowest since the financial collapse of October 2008, according to Friday's report by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Though the unemployment rate is the most often cited statistic related to job growth, it is deeply flawed. A better measure is the labor force participation rate.
Your Race Can Change Over Time, Study Shows
A person's race is not fixed but can change over time, research shows.
Obama Delays 'Obamacare' Again
The Obama administration announced Monday its twenty-seventh delay to the full implementation of the Affordable Care Act, or "Obamacare."
A Timeline of the IRS Targeting of Conservative, Evangelical and Pro-Life Groups Scandal
There is "not even a smidgen of corruption" at the Internal Revenue Service, President Barack Obama recently declared in response to a question about IRS harassment of conservative groups. Here is a timeline of the events to which Obama was referring
Analysis: 'Obamacare' Discourages Work and That's a Bad Thing; Here Is Why
The Affordable Care Act, or "Obamacare," will encourage some Americans to work less, the Congressional Budget Office recently reported. That is great news, the Obama administration argued. Here is why they are wrong.
10 Years After 'Obamacare,' About 31 Million Will Be Uninsured, Gov't Study Says
Ten years from now, about 31 million U.S. residents will be without health insurance, predicts a study by the Congressional Budget Office.
Nation's Largest Evangelical Hispanic Group Launches Effort to Support Common Core
The National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference is launching an effort to boost support for the Obama administration's major education reform effort, the Common Core State Standards Initiative.