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Is cheating on your spouse illegal in Missouri or Illinois?

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fox2now.com – Joey Schneider – 2025-07-31 15:07:00

SUMMARY: Two weeks after a viral Coldplay concert incident sparked talk about cheating, legal perspectives on adultery across the U.S. have come into focus. Adultery, a common reason for divorce, can sometimes carry legal consequences, though federal law does not ban it. In Missouri, adultery is not a criminal offense, but it can influence divorce rulings and inheritance rights. Illinois allows no-fault divorce, but adultery remains a Class A misdemeanor if “open and notorious,” punishable by jail or fines, though prosecutions are rare. Adultery often appears in related legal matters rather than as a direct criminal charge.

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News from the South - Missouri News Feed

Chef Kurt Stiles shows us some quick, healthy meals!

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www.youtube.com – FOX 2 St. Louis – 2025-07-31 11:45:13

SUMMARY: Chef Kurt Stiles, a research chef who adopted a plant-based diet after surviving a massive stroke 15 years ago, shares quick, healthy meal ideas. He emphasizes allergy-free, chemical-free, and minimally processed ingredients, making plant-based eating easier and less stressful. His recipes focus on convenience with long shelf-life products like soups and vegan bacon alternatives that are GMO-free and low in sodium. After collaborating with students to create a cookbook, he sold out 2,500 copies and plans another plant-based book. His inspiring story aims to help others embrace healthier, plant-based lifestyles with simple, practical solutions.

ST. LOUIS – Research Chef Kurt Stiles comes into the studio to showcase some of his plant based culinary creations, including Chef Pure Soups and eggplant bacon products.
Stiles is known for blending culinary expertise with food science, and creates recipes that are flavorful, functional, and nutritionally smart. His soups are designed for people with food sensitivities, busy professionals, and health-conscious individuals looking to eat clean.
He showed us some his Pot Pie, Wild Rice & Mushrooms, White Bean Chili, Italian Zuppa, Sweet Corn Chowder, and Potato Soup. These soups are gluten-free, low-sodium, and low-glycemic, crafted to maintain taste without sacrificing health benefits.

In addition to soups, Stiles presents eggplant bacon jerky and eggplant bacon bits, showcasing his vegan, allergen-free approach that avoids dairy, wheat, and soy.

Stiles emphasizes the importance of ingredient quality and preparation, offering tips for making healthy, satisfying meals in 20 minutes or less.

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Shuttlecock statues at Nelson-Atkins Museum undergoing complete restoration

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fox4kc.com – Olivia Johnson – 2025-07-31 10:05:00

SUMMARY: Since 1994, the Nelson-Atkins Museum in Kansas City has showcased four iconic 19×15-foot “Shuttlecocks” sculptures by Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen outside its walls. These playful sculptures symbolize a badminton game with the museum building as the net, contrasting the museum’s neoclassical design. After over three decades exposed to harsh weather, the Shuttlecocks are undergoing their first complete restoration to preserve this beloved Kansas City symbol. The conservation team will carefully disassemble, repaint, and restore each piece, aiming to complete all four by next year, enhancing pride in this unique public art.

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‘Whites-only’ group draws bipartisan rebuke over potential move to Missouri 

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missouriindependent.com – Jason Hancock – 2025-07-31 06:00:00


A whites-only group called Return to the Land, which bans Jews and non-whites, plans to expand from Arkansas into southwest Missouri, sparking bipartisan condemnation. Missouri lawmakers and Springfield officials denounce the group’s racist and antisemitic policies, stating such divisive ideology is unwelcome. Co-founder Eric Orwoll defends their white identitarian stance as cultural preservation, denying hate or supremacism. State Rep. Betsy Fogle and others emphasize the importance of speaking out against racial and religious discrimination. Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin is investigating but found no legal violations. Missouri’s Attorney General has not commented.

by Jason Hancock, Missouri Independent
July 31, 2025

The possibility of a “whites-only” organization from Arkansas expanding into Missouri has inspired bipartisan outrage from state lawmakers and local officials who decry the group as racist and antisemitic. 

The private membership association, called Return to the Land, owns 160 acres in northeast Arkansas, according to its website. Jews and non-whites are explicitly banned from membership. 

The group’s leader recently said it is exploring the idea of expanding north and building a new enclave in the Springfield area. 

“We have the God-given right to form communities according to whatever values we hold dear,” Eric Orwoll, co-founder of Return to the Land, said in a recent social media post, “and the government does not have the right to tell free American citizens what values they have to live according to in their own private lives.”

The idea of a segregated community coming to southwest Missouri was greeted with scorn by both Democratic and Republican legislative leaders from the area. 

“Racism in any form is evil and reprehensible,” said House Majority Leader Alex Riley, a Springfield Republican. “Groups engaging in racist conduct are not welcome in Springfield.”

State Rep. Betsy Fogle, a Springfield Democrat, said history has been “very clear on what happens when you stay silent as groups discriminate based on race and discriminate based on whether or not someone is of the Jewish faith. I cannot believe that in 2025 we are retreading this ground.”

In an emailed statement, a spokesperson for Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey said racial discrimination “has no place in Missouri.”

“Attorney General Bailey is committed to protecting the constitutional rights of all citizens,” the statement said. “The landmark Supreme Court case Shelley v. Kraemer, which originated in St. Louis, made clear that government cannot enforce racially discriminatory housing practices, and Missouri will not tolerate efforts to revive them.”

The Springfield City Council and City Manager David Cameron issued a joint statement this week declaring that “there is no place in Springfield, or anywhere, for such a divisive and discriminatory vision.”

“While it is improbable that such a project could legally or practically occur within city limits, silence is not an option,” the statement said. “As a regional leader, we will not stand idly by in the face of attempts to revive outdated, harmful ideologies.”

On its website, Return to the Land its mission is to “separate ourselves from a failing modern society, and we will make positive cultural changes in ourselves and in our ancestral communities.”

It also includes a disclaimer that the group does not engage in the sale or rental of real estate.

State Rep. Betsy Fogle of Springfield, ranking Democrat on the House Budget Committee, speaks on a capital improvements bill during special session in June (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

Orwoll responded to criticism from Springfield elected officials in his social media post, denying that excluding people of color and Jews should be considered racist. 

“We are not a hate group,” he said. “We have never expressed hate towards any ethnic group, racial group or religious group.”

He took umbrage with Fogle calling the group racist, saying: “She wants to call us racists because we prefer being among our own people.”

“It’s not a supremacist group. It’s not a hate group. It’s not even a white nationalist group,” he said. “We are white identitarians. We value our identity and want to preserve it. That’s not hate. That is love for your own people.”

Fogle, who was among the first public officials to condemn Return to the Land’s possible expansion to Missouri, said she has been inundated with “pretty horrific messages and pretty horrific responses” on social media. 

But she said she has no intention of being silent. 

“It’s my job to make sure I’m using my platform to communicate that there’s no place in Springfield, no place in Missouri, no place in this country for a group who is intentionally leaving behind people who have a different skin color or intentionally leaving behind people of the Jewish faith,” she said. “And I would expect every elected official at every level to use their platform to see the same things.”

Across the state line, the group also drew the ire of Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin. 

The Republican announced his office would open an investigation of the group to ensure its activities didn’t violate state or federal law. That probe, Griffin said in an email to The Independent, has not turned up any illegal activity. 

“Racism has no place in a free society,” he said, “but from a legal perspective, we have not seen anything that would indicate any state or federal laws have been broken.”

This story was updated after publication with a quote from the Missouri Attorney General’s Office. 

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Missouri Independent is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Missouri Independent maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jason Hancock for questions: info@missouriindependent.com.

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Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

This content presents a straightforward news report covering the controversy around a whites-only group possibly expanding into Missouri. The article quotes officials from both the Republican and Democratic parties condemning the group’s racial exclusivity and articulates their concern without apparent editorializing. It also includes the group’s perspective denying accusations of racism. The balanced presentation of multiple viewpoints and reliance on official statements indicate a centrist or neutral stance aimed at informing rather than persuading readers toward a particular political leaning.

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