California state Sen Scott Wiener condemned the physical intimidation and harassment of political leaders after activists at San Francisco s annual Trans March ran the Democratic politician out of
A Christian college in Missouri is asking the United States Supreme Court to halt a Biden administration directive that requires schools to allow male students to be housed in women-only dormitories ...
Tens of thousands of demonstrators gathered in cities across Mexico on Sunday to protest a new law that would cut funding for the country’s electoral agency. Mexican President Andrés Manuel López ...
The Energy Department said it obtained new intelligence that an accidental leak from a Chinese laboratory started the coronavirus pandemic. The Wall Street Journal first reported Monday that the info...
The Tennessee House passed a bill on Thursday that will ban "adult cabaret" performances such as drag shows in public venues, including anywhere minors might be present.
Entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy entered the race for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination Tuesday, joining a field that includes former President Donald Trump, former U S Ambassador to the United ...
James O Keefe, the founder and longtime president of Project Veritas, a conservative activist organization known for producing undercover videos, has stepped aside after a prolonged conflict with its ...
Former President Donald Trump is scheduled to visit the site of a train derailment in Ohio as the Biden administration faces criticism for its response to the incident, which resulted in the leakage ...
The Internet could soon face a significant transformation, courtesy of the Supreme Court. Justices heard arguments in a case questioning whether tech companies should be liable for content on their platforms. Currently, a decades-old law protects big tech. However, that could change with a landmark decision involving a 23-year-old college student whose family is suing YouTube's parent company, Google, for giving a platform to ISIS terrorists who murdered her.
The 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre ranks among the deadliest incidents of racial violence in U.S. History—with estimates of up to 300 deaths in the African American community, more than 800 hospitalizations, and countless Black-owned businesses and homes burned to the ground in a matter of hours.
The United States Supreme Court justices seemed to take a moderate position Tuesday during oral arguments in Gonzalez v. Google. Justice Brett Kavanaugh asked if the issue wouldn’t best be dealt wit...