BALTIMORE -- The LGBTQ+ community is worried by one of President Donald Trump's executive orders, which calls for federal agencies to only recognize two sexes -- male and female. The executive order says gender identity "does not provide a meaningful basis for identification."
The Supreme Court will hear parents’ challenge to a Maryland school policy barring opt-outs from LGBT-themed lessons, citing religious rights concerns.
The U S Supreme Court has agreed to hear a plea for parents to have the ability to opt their children out of a Maryland school district s curriculum that they believe promotes LGBT ideology and
The Supreme Court will decide whether a group of Maryland parents can opt to have their children exempted from LGBTQ-themed storybooks. The justices on Friday afternoon granted Mahmoud v. Taylor, in which a coalition of parents from Montgomery County,
The petition was filed on Sept. 12, 2024, after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit turned away the parents’ request for an injunction to halt the Montgomery County Board of Education’s policy of promoting the books.
As part of the slew of executive orders he signed on his first day in office, President Donald Trump rolled back projections for transgender people, and said the U.S. would only recognize two sexes, rejecting their gender identities.
Maryland lawmakers are considering a measure that would create a new designation of “X” for sex on Maryland birth certificates, a design meant to give official recognition to
The case involves whether parents' religious rights were violated when a Maryland school district declined to allow them to opt their children out of gender and sexuality instruction.
All it took was the stroke of a pen to reverse the work of the largest criminal investigation in Department of Justice history, and to keep Adam Obest from reporting to prison. "I have never put up a Trump flag in front of my house,
Maryland children are raising their voices in a song that raises awareness for gun trafficking and the violence associated with it. Singing beautiful melodies surrounded by fellow choir members is a freeing feeling for 9-year-old Jared Wormley,
The Supreme Court has been sympathetic to religious liberty plaintiffs in several recent cases, including 303 Creative v. Elenis, which allowed a graphic designer to discriminate against a same-sex couple, and a high school football coach who prayed at midfield after a game.