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News Malta becomes latest country to legalize same-sex marriage
Malta becomes latest country to legalize same-sex marriage
Elizabeth Lowman
July 14, 2017 10:52:04 am

Malta's Parliament approved a bill legalizing same-sex marriage on Wednesday, making it the fifteenth country in the EU and the twenty-fifth country in the world to do so. The bill, in making marriage "fully gender...

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News Federal appeals court upholds Wisconsin ‘right to work’ law
Federal appeals court upholds Wisconsin ‘right to work’ law
Elizabeth Lowman
July 14, 2017 09:11:15 am

A three-judge panel for the US Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit upheld Wisconsin's right to work law on Wednesday. This law says that unions cannot force workers to "ecome or remain a member...

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News Italy outlaws torture in controversial bill
Italy outlaws torture in controversial bill
Elizabeth Lowman
July 7, 2017 10:03:00 am

Italy's Chamber of Deputies approved a bill on Wednesday to outlaw certain forms of torture. The new law defines torture as "acts, single or repeated, causing suffering and trauma such as to harm...

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News Federal appeals court reverses Ohio’s execution delay
Federal appeals court reverses Ohio’s execution delay
Elizabeth Lowman
June 30, 2017 10:32:38 am

The US Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit on Wednesday reversed a previous ruling that Ohio's execution protocol was unconstitutional. The prior ruling had put further executions on hiatus. The question [AP...

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News Federal appeals court upholds North Carolina same-sex marriage recusal law
Federal appeals court upholds North Carolina same-sex marriage recusal law
Elizabeth Lowman
June 30, 2017 09:47:20 am

The US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit on Wednesday upheld North Carolina's Senate Bill 2 , which allows magistrates to refuse to perform same-sex marriages if doing so would conflict with their religious...

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News HRW accuses UAE of supporting human rights abuses in Yemen
HRW accuses UAE of supporting human rights abuses in Yemen
Elizabeth Lowman
June 23, 2017 10:35:43 am

Human Rights Watch on Thursday accused the United Arab Emirates (UAE) of backing "Yemeni forces that have arbitrarily detained, forcibly disappeared, tortured, and abused dozens of people during security operations." According to HRW, the UAE...

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News Federal appeals court upholds almost all convictions of former CIA officer
Federal appeals court upholds almost all convictions of former CIA officer
Elizabeth Lowman
June 23, 2017 09:48:05 am

A panel consisting of three judges from the US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit affirmed all but one conviction of former CIA officer Jeffrey Sterling, who was convicted in 2015 for...

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News Texas governor signs controversial adoption bill into law
Texas governor signs controversial adoption bill into law
Elizabeth Lowman
June 16, 2017 08:45:36 am

Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed an adoption bill into law on Thursday that allows adoption agencies receiving public funding to refuse to place children in adoptive families or foster homes that conflict with the agencies' religious beliefs....

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News Rights groups sue Chicago seeking police reform
Rights groups sue Chicago seeking police reform
Elizabeth Lowman
June 16, 2017 07:51:30 am

Six individuals joined with several civil rights groups, including Black Lives Matter Chicago , to file a federal lawsuit against Chicago, accusing the city police force of racial discrimination against African Americans and Latinos. According to the lawsuit,...

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News Japan lawmakers approve changes to century-old rape law
Japan lawmakers approve changes to century-old rape law
Elizabeth Lowman
June 9, 2017 10:27:29 am

Japan's lower legislative house approved changes to Japan's century-old rape laws on Thursday that would expand the definition of rape, lengthen prison sentences to five years and allow prosecutions to occur in instances where a victim did...

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THIS DAY @ LAW

President Johnson signed law against burning draft cards

On August 31, 1965, President Johnson signed a law making the burning of draft cards a federal offense subject to a five-year prison sentence and $1000 fine. In response to the law and in protest of the war in Vietnam, the student-run National Coordinating Committee to End the War in Vietnam staged the first public burning of a draft card in the United States on October 15, 1965. The constitutionality of the federal law was upheld in 1968 by the US Supreme Court in US v. O'Brien.

Gdansk Agreement reached

On August 31, 1980, the communist government of Poland and labor leaders settled the Gdansk Agreement. The accord settled a summer of labor strikes at the Lenin Shipyard in Gdansk, Poland. With the Agreement, Poland became the first communist country to allow the creation of an independent labor union, which was called Solidarity. Solidarity then became the driving force that ended communism in Poland.
Learn more about the history of Solidarity.

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