The results are in, and same-sex marriage was a win for children and society

Source: Los Angeles Times
by Benjamin Karney

“To build public support for rolling back marriage rights, new campaigns have been repeating the claims that legal recognition of same-sex marriages may harm children or even the stability of different-sex marriages. These are some of the same concerns that were raised in the years prior to the Obergefell decision. They were groundless then, and, more than 10 years later, the data confirm these fears to be unfounded.” (04/14/26)

https://archive.is/aucmu

Attacks on Mail-In Voting Are Attacks on the Working Class

Source: CounterPunch
by Sarah Anderson

“Donald Trump loathes mail-in voting — except, of course, when he uses this method to cast his own ballot, as he did in a recent Florida special election. Frustrated by Congressional inaction, Trump issued an executive order last week to restrict what he likes to call ‘mail-in cheating.’ Actual proven cases of mail voting fraud? Those amount to a whopping 0.000043 percent of total mail ballots, according to Brookings experts. Trump’s real fear: that vote by mail gives Democrats an edge. In reality, broad, cross-partisan swaths of our electorate benefit from access to this convenient means of exercising our most basic democratic right.” (04/14/26)

https://www.counterpunch.org/2026/04/14/attacks-on-mail-in-voting-are-attacks-on-the-working-class/

This Is the Basic Political Problem for Republicans

Source: The American Conservative
by W James Antle III

“There is simply nothing that has happened in American politics between Trump’s epic 2024 political comeback and the Democrats’ romp in last year’s off-year elections running on an affordability mantra that would suggest voters prioritize a foreign war over higher prices. A thousand clips of Trump expressing his distaste for the ayatollahs or a hundred polls showing rank-and-file Republicans still support him do not prove otherwise. … Salvaging the Republicans’ midterm election prospects is going to require extricating the U.S. from the war in Iran while keeping the Strait of Hormuz open, whether GOP lawmakers know it (or are willing to publicly admit it) or not.” (04/14/26)

https://www.theamericanconservative.com/this-is-the-basic-political-problem-for-republicans/

Chiles v. Salazar: A New Frontier of Speech

Source: Washington Monthly
by Alison Gash

“In its 8–1 ruling on Colorado’s conversion therapy ban, the Supreme Court recast mental health care as protected expression.” [editor’s note: The First Amendment is not unclear. Speech is speech, Not liking particular content of speech doesn’t magically make it not speech – TLK] (04/13/26)

https://washingtonmonthly.com/2026/04/13/chiles-v-salazar-conversion-therapy-a-new-frontier-of-speech/

Big Beautiful Tax Returns Are Keeping Consumers Afloat

Source: Town Hall
by EJ Antoni, Ph.D.

“While families struggle with high gas prices in the wake of the Iran war, many American workers are getting help this year from an unlikely place: the Internal Revenue Service. Tax refunds from the IRS are up almost 14% from last year — another reason to file your taxes by Wednesday’s deadline, especially if you’re affected by a handful of changes to the tax code. Last Summer, the One Big Beautiful Bill became law, preserving some tax cuts that would’ve expired but also introducing a few new tax cuts too. Because many of the law’s provisions were made retroactive for the entirety of 2025, these changes significantly reduced some Americans’ tax liabilities, resulting in today’s big refunds.” (04/14/26)

https://townhall.com/columnists/ej-antoni/2026/04/14/big-beautiful-tax-returns-are-keeping-consumers-afloat-n2674389

Trump Is Making the Best of ObamaCare

Source: Independent Institute
by John C Goodman

“Healthcare usually benefits Democrats politically, but some of the most important health-policy changes of the past decade have come from Donald Trump’s White House. Now his administration is proposing a reform that could change the U.S. healthcare system as radically as Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act did. This latest proposed reform, the 2027 ACA Exchange Rule, would allow health insurers to offer nonnetwork plans on market exchanges where people buy their own insurance. Today, most healthcare plans cover care only from doctors and hospitals with which they have contracts for treatment and payment. Under the new rule, health insurers would be able to set ‘reference prices’ — say, for an MRI or a knee replacement — that would apply regardless of which provider a patient chooses.” (04/13/26)

https://www.independent.org/article/2026/04/13/trump-is-making-the-best-of-obamacare/

The Supreme Court’s refusal to stand up for press freedom is catastrophic

Source: The Hill
by Austin Sarat

“In 2017, journalist Priscilla Villarreal did what good journalists ordinarily do. She was working on two stories — one about the suicide of a border agent and the other about a serious car accident. To confirm the names of the people involved in those incidents, Villarreal texted a member of the Laredo Police Department. The officer responded and provided the information she was looking for. … But then someone in the police department got wind of what Villarreal was up to. Soon afterward, she was charged with violating an obscure, Orwellian provision of the Texas Penal Code, the Misuse of Official Information Act. … the Misuse of Official Information Act cannot be reconciled with the First Amendment’s protection of press freedom. But on March 23, the U.S. Supreme Court let it stand by declining to hear the case.” (04/13/26)

https://thehill.com/opinion/judiciary/5826184-texas-law-muzzles-journalists/

Can You Beat ‘Em If You Don’t Join ‘Em?

Source: Gideon’s Substack
by Noah Millman

“It’s far from unheard of in world history for leaders, faced with losing an election, to cancel said election, or falsify the results, or in other ways more or less openly admit that they are ruling without popular consent. So it’s good to know that Hungary has not become one of these. But there are two other possible lessons to draw from the Hungarian election that should be more sobering for opponents of the right-wing populist turn in politics, here in America and elsewhere in the world.” (04/13/26)

https://gideons.substack.com/p/can-you-beat-em-if-you-dont-join

Goodbye to the property ladder

Source: Adam Smith Institute
by Madsen Pirie

“The idea of the ‘property ladder,’ buying a starter home, then trading up over time to larger ones, was a huge part of UK culture from the late 20th century through the early 2000s. It has not disappeared entirely, but for many people it barely functions in the way that it once did. The average property now costs nearly eight times the average income, making it one of the toughest financial challenges of our time. According to the Resolution Foundation, it now takes the average first-time buyer about nine years to save for a deposit, and more than half of all first-time buyers under 35 rely on family help, the so-called ‘Bank of mum and dad,’ to enter the property market. Barclays research from 2025 found that many first-time buyers are no longer perceiving their first home as the start of a journey, but as the final destination.” (04/13/26)

https://www.adamsmith.org/blog/goodbye-to-the-property-ladder

Aftermath: Plastics Clogged in the Persian Gulf

Source: The American Prospect
by David Dayen, Emma Janssen & Whitney Curry Wimbish

“It may seem strange to focus on consequences while the war is still occurring, but the truth is that the die has already been cast when the Strait of Hormuz became a choke point rather than a natural waterway. This will have deep implications on economic security, technology, energy, and geopolitics, which we can now begin to chronicle, regardless of the ultimate outcome of the fighting between the U.S., Israel, and Iran.” (04/14/26)

https://prospect.org/2026/04/14/aftermath-plastics-clogged-in-persian-gulf/