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The Supreme Court on Thursday revived a lawsuit from an Ohio woman who claimed she was the victim of reverse discrimination.
The Supreme Court’s recent ruling eliminates the concept of reverse discrimination and changes how majority-group status is ...
2dOpinion
The Christian Post on MSNIs ‘reverse discrimination’ ready for the ash heap of history?Why is the Ames decision potentially so significant It may very well signal the death knell of reverse discrimination as a ...
Ames had sued the Ohio Department of Youth Services in November 2020, alleging that she was wrongfully denied a promotion in favor of a lesbian who was not qualified for the role and then demoted ...
The court unanimously sided with an Ohio woman who claimed she was discriminated against at work because she is straight.
On June 5, 2025, the United States Supreme Court issued a unanimous decision regarding a reverse discrimination case. The ...
In the end, the justices seemed to agree on almost everything—what Justice Neil Gorsuch called “radical agreement”—about the ...
The justices rejected a lower court’s ruling that Marlean Ames could not sue the Ohio Department of Youth Services because she’d failed to provide “background circumstances” showing the ...
The Supreme Court's decision, which landed amid a backlash to diversity programs, could increase "reverse discrimination" lawsuits.
The US Supreme Court has unanimously sided with Marlean Ames, an Ohio woman who claimed she was discriminated against at work for being straight. The ruling is a push back against legal standards that ...
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