
A Tale of Two Names: Journalists on X vs. The Church of Jesus Christ
Journalists embrace X’s new identity but resist the Latter-day Saints’, showing disparate media treatment.

Journalists embrace X’s new identity but resist the Latter-day Saints’, showing disparate media treatment.

Our editors end the year with public accountability and a review of what we did and did not do well.

The fact that accusation clouds religious epistemology is a lesson we can all learn from a debacle on a popular YouTube channel.

When heroes like Tim Ballard face allegations, it shakes public trust and prompts reevaluation of beliefs. The fallibility of influencers, especially within religious communities, reveals the danger of elevating individuals over core principles.

While the Washington Post sheds light on the Church of Jesus Christ’s finances, it overlooks key perspectives, instead allowing our critics to speak for us.

Proposing a New Year’s Resolution better than “Don’t Gaslight.”

I sit down with my friend, CD Cunningham to discuss his recent article regarding the associated press article about a case of abuse.

When I read the recent AP article about a case of abuse, I knew that it was something I needed to learn about and understand better.

A formal request that the AP make key source documents publicly available to confirm and back up serious allegations being made.

Those who wrestle are not a separate category of humans. That describes all of us. If so, the key question is not whether we are “willing to wrestle,” but rather, where that wrestle ultimately takes each of us.

Although John McCain passed away in 2018, his influence has extended far beyond that into 2020 and the election itself, in ways few people have fully considered.