The appeals panel said the military itself was better suited than a court to make its own personnel decisions.
The Trump administration this week began cuts to $600 million in funding used to track and prevent HIV and STDs in four Democrat-led states. (Scripps News) ...
The Supreme Court of Liberia has ordered the immediate reinstatement of Dr. Dougbeh Christopher Nyan as Director General of the National Public Health Institute of Liberia (NPHIL), ruling that his ...
Some bills have drawn significant opposition as Kentucky's legislative session nears its midway point. Here's what to know ...
This reader admires the Kennedy family, but draws the line at U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
The civil rights activist and presidential candidate made LGBTQ+ rights central to Democratic politics.
In a move that already has Elon Musk calling people "traitors," the U.K., Spain and Greece are moving ahead on teen social ...
A look at 50 years of Philadelphia Gay News through the eyes of the editors who shaped it into a vital LGBTQ+ community resource.
A U.S. appeals court on Wednesday upheld the U.S. military's longstanding policy banning people with HIV from enlisting, rejecting claims that advances in medical treatment made it unreasonable.
The Supreme Court said Tuesday that it will start using software to assist in justices’ decisions to recuse themselves from cases that present a potential conflict of interest.
Pentagon can ban HIV-positive recruits from US military, conservative appeals court rules - Hegseth’s Defense Department can continue banning people living with HIV from joining, judges say ...