AITKIN — The Minnesota Clemency Review Commission will hear Brian Pippitt’s case in April for potential commutation of his ...
AI’s increasingly rapid growth poses risks of unchecked acts of discrimination leading to laws emerging which will require ...
I wrote in this summer asking for advice about whether to purchase a house ahead of the election since my partner and I are ...
With Valentine’s Day looming, I invited readers to submit sex-related questions. Some of the letters I got made me smile; ...
Trump has long referred to January 6 rioters as “hostages,” framing their convictions as politically motivated. Speaking to ...
Only 25% approved of renaming the Gulf of Mexico as the "Gulf of America," while 70% disapproved; pardoning the Jan. 6 ...
Even the appalling sweeping pardons of the January 6 rioters and insurrectionists have their limits. If any of those people ...
In his final days in office, President Joe Biden decided to pardon the innocent — people who committed no known crimes — including former Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., former U.S. Capitol Police ...
Welcome to this week’s edition of the Surge, whose ploy to convince Joe Biden that we were his long-lost brother Stevie “Two Shoes” Biden failed to win us a preemptive pardon. Test, test, test. Can ...
The Tennessean’s proposed 28th Amendment would bar the president from pardoning himself, his close relatives (and their ...
When a party’s leader claims to “back the blue” but pardons or frees those who assaulted police, some party members may feel dissonance. How do they reduce that dissonance?
In the aftermath of President Trump’s pardons, there has been an abundance of illustrations of these modes of dissonance reduction. I highlight several. Social Comparison: Many people have ...