Articles
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Culture & the Family
Stitt: Oklahoma will continue ‘winning’ vaccine-mandate fight
During a press conference, Gov. Kevin Stitt and Oklahoma Attorney General John O’Connor said the state will continue pushing back against federal overreach and also vowed to stand up for Oklahomans whose religious freedoms are infringed upon by private businesses’ vaccine mandates.Ray Carter | December 7, 2021
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Education
Cherokee chief mocks Oklahoma’s anti-CRT efforts
In a recent online post, Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin, Jr., mocked efforts to keep Critical Race Theory out of Oklahoma classrooms.Ray Carter | December 7, 2021
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Education
Child harm from COVID shutdowns evident in suicide data
COVID and associated shutdowns have fueled a dramatic increase in suicidal thoughts and attempts among Oklahoma children, officials told lawmakers, and the repercussions are now leading to multi-million-dollar requests for new spending on treatment services.Ray Carter | December 3, 2021
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Budget & Tax
Oklahoma’s income tax, by the numbers
In 2012 Oklahoma’s top personal income-tax rate was 5.5 percent. After two rate cuts of a quarter of a percentage point, Oklahoma’s top income tax rate was 5 percent in 2021.Curtis Shelton | December 3, 2021
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Higher Education
OU’s lobbying pays off for school, not student rights
OU’s courtroom victory may lead state lawmakers to revisit the issue.Ray Carter | December 2, 2021
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Education
Parents’ children, parents’ choice
Public schools aren't accountable. Parents need choices.Greg Forster, Ph.D. | December 2, 2021
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Education
Lawmaker wants teacher-training materials made public
In response to growing parental concern over the use of Critical Race Theory in public-school classrooms, one state lawmaker wants Oklahoma schools to publicly post their teacher-training materials.Ray Carter | November 30, 2021
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Higher Education
Though ‘allowed by contract,’ OU denies communist influence on curriculum
When skeptics concerned about the role and influence of Confucius Institutes on American college campuses began asking pointed questions a few years ago, they had no idea that at the University of Oklahoma, agencies of the oppressive Chinese communist government were allowed to select the curriculum and course material Oklahoma students were forced to use.Mike Brake | November 30, 2021
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Education
Oklahoma parent unrest could boost school freedom
Recently released district-level data show that Oklahoma parents have reason to feel as aggrieved as counterparts making their voices heard at school-board meetings across the country. Things are so bad that simply holding steady on poor performance is almost an accomplishment.Jonathan Small | November 24, 2021
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Budget & Tax
Income-tax-cut trend continues
Recent action in North Carolina and Louisiana continues the tax-cut trend seen across the country. Both states are making changes to their tax code by simplifying their income tax structures and reducing rates for both individuals and corporations.Curtis Shelton | November 23, 2021