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Crypto veterans call out DOJ for targeting Roger Ver a decade after he left US
Empire Managers Say Russia, China And Iran Are Tricking Students Into Opposing Genocide
Feminism has left middle-aged women like me single, childless and depressed
Bombshell: 1-in-5 2020 Mail-in Ballots Were Fraudulent, Survey Shows
The first reverse microwave in the U.S.: you can have it at home to save energy while cooking
BREAKTHROUGH : Lightsolver Makes Ultrafast Laser Based Computers
$300,000 robotic micro-factories pump out custom-designed homes
$300,000 robotic micro-factories pump out custom-designed homes
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Blazing bits transmitted 4.5 million times faster than broadband
Certain lawmakers in New York oppose the president's actions as they believe that Church (and nonprofits) and politics should not mix. They sought to make the Johnson Amendment's prohibitions state law in the event that the statute is ever repealed federally. "This is a simple bill that serves an important purpose: to keep in place standards we have had in this country for over sixty years that shield not-for-profits and houses of worship from political entanglement," Sen. Liz Krueger, D-Manhattan, and author of S. 4347, said in a statement.