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Yahoo! News: World - China |
- Police identify bodies found in suitcases on Seattle beach by teens recording TikTok
- Trump's planned order on 'dreamer' immigrants will not include amnesty -White House
- Letters to the Editor: Joe Biden is probably picking the 2024 Democratic nominee. Choose wisely
- Israel looked like a model for halting coronavirus. Here's how it 'lost its bearings.'
- Coronavirus: What are the numbers out of Latin America?
- United and American Airlines are cancelling flights to Hong Kong over a requirement that crew members get tested for COVID-19 on arrival
- Dr. Bernice King and Mayor Michael Tubbs on How Universal Basic Income Can Help Address the Racial Wealth Gap
- 1986 cold case on ‘Dateline’ now has arrest in teen’s disappearance, Indiana cops say
- Supremes: NY Can Get Trump’s Tax Returns, but Not House Dems
- UN official: 700 people died in Syrian camps for IS families
- De Blasio: Black Lives Matter Protests Exempt from Large-Event Ban
- 4 Flight Attendants Evaluated At BWI After Spirit Airlines Flight Reports Medical Emergency
- Outdoor Dinging Decor That's Sure to Bring Joy to Any Table
- This aviator just became the US Navy's first Black female fighter pilot
- US universities are charging full fees for 'virtual' class this fall. This is absurd
- Gun violence disproportionately affects minorities. Data shows it's getting worse.
- "It's going to happen again," says former New Zealand PM Clark tasked with WHO COVID-19 review
- No regrets: wounded Hong Kong police vow to keep enforcing law
- 'I would be very careful in the middle of the street': Drivers have hit protesters 66 times since May 27
- Jared Kushner said the US would be 'really rocking again' by July. 7 states are shutting back down, and new COVID-19 cases have set records 6 times in July's first 10 days.
- Protester: Man pulls gun on anniversary of flag’s removal
- Trump abruptly postpones weekend campaign rally in New Hampshire
- Xinjiang: US sanctions on Chinese officials over 'abuse' of Muslims
- The Best Smart Technology for Your Socially Distanced Summer
- Heat advisory issued as South Florida prepares to break temperature records
- Gilead analysis shows remdesivir reduced coronavirus death risk, more studies needed
- What Ghislaine Maxwell's arrest means for Epstein case
- Netherlands takes Russia to European Court of Human Rights over MH17 downing in Ukraine
- Texas carries out its first execution during pandemic after Supreme Court gives go-ahead
- Death of Black man found hanging from tree ruled a suicide
- Trump: Doctors Were ‘Very Surprised’ I ‘Aced’ Cognitive Test
- Pompeo slams UN report on deadly US drone strike on Iranian
- 'UK faces mobile blackouts if Huawei 5G ban imposed by 2023'
- Explained: The battle over Turkey’s Hagia Sophia
- U.S. has not yet decided how it will retaliate to France digital tax: Mnuchin
- The Best Beach Towels That Aren’t Totally Boring
- Satanic Temple threatens lawsuit over Mississippi’s ‘in God we trust’ flag plan
- Hundreds of US Postal Service delivery trucks are catching fire as they continue to outstay their 24-year life expectancy
- Trump and conservatives hijacked the Supreme Court. We're progressives ready to fight back.
- Lawmakers vote to shut down Philippines' largest TV network
- Environmental Injustice Is Another Form of 'Assault on Black Bodies,' Says Sen. Cory Booker
Police identify bodies found in suitcases on Seattle beach by teens recording TikTok Posted: 10 Jul 2020 01:26 PM PDT |
Trump's planned order on 'dreamer' immigrants will not include amnesty -White House Posted: 10 Jul 2020 03:57 PM PDT "This does not include amnesty," White House spokesman Judd Deere said in a statement, after Trump said in a television interview his planned order would include a road to citizenship for such immigrants, known as "Dreamers." In the interview with Spanish-language TV network Telemundo, Trump said his executive order would involve Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), the program that protects hundreds of thousands of such immigrants from deportation. |
Letters to the Editor: Joe Biden is probably picking the 2024 Democratic nominee. Choose wisely Posted: 10 Jul 2020 03:00 AM PDT |
Israel looked like a model for halting coronavirus. Here's how it 'lost its bearings.' Posted: 09 Jul 2020 01:31 AM PDT |
Coronavirus: What are the numbers out of Latin America? Posted: 09 Jul 2020 05:28 AM PDT |
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Posted: 09 Jul 2020 11:55 AM PDT |
1986 cold case on ‘Dateline’ now has arrest in teen’s disappearance, Indiana cops say Posted: 09 Jul 2020 11:33 AM PDT |
Supremes: NY Can Get Trump’s Tax Returns, but Not House Dems Posted: 09 Jul 2020 07:13 AM PDT President Donald Trump is not immune from turning over his tax returns and other financial records to the Manhattan district attorney, the Supreme Court has ordered in a ruling that has enraged the president. In a 7-2 decision, the court sided with Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance, who asked for eight years of Trump's business and personal tax records to help an investigation into whether Trump and his company violated state laws in connection with hush-money payments to women who allegedly had affairs with the president.The ruling sent the case back to the lower courts, however, meaning Trump's legal team could still try to delay the release of his records before the case is ultimately resolved. Trump reacted angrily to the decision, condemning it as "political prosecution" before vowing to "keep fighting in a politically corrupt New York."In a separate ruling that also came in at 7-2 among the justices, the Supreme Court ruled that Congress cannot subpoena a broader range of tax and financial records that House Democratic investigators had requested.Trump has been refusing to release his tax returns for years, overturning the precedent set by the last six presidents. Both of the court cases have been fought tooth and nail by the president, who argued the cases lacked legitimate legislative purpose and were driven by partisan intent.In a statement released after the decision in the office's case, Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance said, "This is a tremendous victory for our nation's system of justice and its founding principle that no one—not even a president—is above the law. Our investigation, which was delayed for almost a year by this lawsuit, will resume, guided as always by the grand jury's solemn obligation to follow the law and the facts, wherever they may lead."In Trump v. Mazars, a case consolidated with Trump v. Deutsche Bank, three House committees argued it was within their constitutional authority to issue Trump a subpoena to obtain several years worth of personal financial documents and records from Mazars, his accounting firm. The committees, including the Committee on Oversight and Reform that issued the subpoena in mid-2019 to Mazars, argued the documents were part of an investigation into government ethics and conflicts of interest in the Executive Branch. Part of the investigation, the committee argued, included "the accuracy of statements made by the president on various financial discloses." In the Deutsche Bank case, the House Committee on Financial Services and the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence issued subpoenas to the bank and Capital One for records into Trump, his family, and the Trump Organization as part of an investigation into any links or coordination between the Russian government, or any other foreign actors, that may have influenced the 2016 U.S. elections. The investigations by the two committees also focused on Russian money laundering. The subpoenas came after Trump's former personal lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen testified that the president had previously exaggerated his wealth in order to seek loans from several banks, including Deutsche. Cohen also provided financial documents showing Trump's personal assets between 2011 and 2013 to prove his allegations during his February 2019 testimony to the House Oversight Committee.Trump's team swiftly fought back against the subpoenas, asking a federal judge in New York to block the banks from complying and arguing that the subpoenas open the door to allow Congress to seek legislative powers beyond their job description. But federal judges in New York and Washington, D.C.—both at the district and appeals court levels—repeatedly ruled against Trump and agreed with the argument that the subpoenas did not exceed Congress' power."It is simply not fathomable that a Constitution that grants Congress the power to remove a president for reasons including criminal behavior would deny Congress the power to investigate him for unlawful conduct—past or present—even without formally opening an impeachment inquiry," U.S. District Court Judge Amit P. Mehta wrote in the appeal court ruling in October. In December, the Supreme Court agreed to take up both cases in a combined hearing. In his January brief to the Supreme Court, the president slammed the "unprecedented" subpoenas and said a ruling siding with the House Committees would have implications for presidents seeking to keep their financial records private. Trump Sues House Oversight Chairman to Block Subpoena of His Financial RecordsTrump v. Vance is rooted in a New York grand jury investigation into whether Trump and his company violated state laws in connection with hush-money payments to several women who allegedly had affairs with the president. Vance is seeking eight years' worth of Trump's financial records and tax returns. The president has denied having affairs with these women, but Vance said the financial records were crucial to see if business records were falsified and if any tax laws were violated. Trump argued in federal district court in New York that he couldn't be subpoenaed in a criminal case because he is a sitting president. The president lost several bids last year in lower courts to stop the subpoenas, prompting the Supreme Court in December to agree to hear the case. Similar to his argument against the congressional committees, Trump argued that the legal move sought "to compel the production of an enormous swath of the president's personal financial information." His legal team slammed Vance for "pointedly refus[ing] to eliminate the president as a target for indictment."Judge Napolitano Schools Fox News on Trump's SCOTUS 'Defeat'Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
UN official: 700 people died in Syrian camps for IS families Posted: 09 Jul 2020 10:30 PM PDT The U.N. counterterrorism chief said his office received information that 700 people died recently in two camps in northeast Syria, where more than 70,000 mainly women and children connected to Islamic State fighters are detained in "very dire conditions." Vladimir Voronkov told a news conference Thursday that the people, including children, died of "lack of medicine, lack of food" at the al-Hol and Roj camps, which are overseen by Kurdish-led forces allied with the United States who spearheaded the fight against the extremist Islamic State group. Voronkov did not clarify when the 700 reportedly died or what the source of the information was. |
De Blasio: Black Lives Matter Protests Exempt from Large-Event Ban Posted: 10 Jul 2020 04:55 AM PDT Mayor Bill de Blasio has canceled all large events in New York City through September, but will continue to allow Black Lives Matter protests in the city, he said."This is a historic moment of change. We have to respect that but also say to people the kinds of gatherings we're used to, the parades, the fairs — we just can't have that while we're focusing on health right now," de Blasio said during a CNN appearance Thursday night.While other areas, including Los Angeles, Seattle, and Miami-Dade County, Fla., have said protests in their cities may have contributed to the spread of the virus, New York has denied experiencing any surge in cases after weeks of protests sparked by the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis police custody. "Based on our health indicators, which measure hospital admissions, number of people in ICU and percentage of New Yorkers testing positive, we have seen no indication of an uptick in cases," Avery Cohen, de Blasio's deputy press secretary, told Fox News.Coronavirus cases in the city have been declining for weeks after spiking in mid-April. There have been 32,283 deaths in New York, more than any other state. The rule cancels street fairs, outdoor concerts, parades, and other big events, including the West Indian American Day Carnival in Brooklyn Labor Day weekend, the Dominican Day Parade in midtown Manhattan, and the San Gennaro festival in Little Italy.While religious events and press conferences will also be exempt from the ban, the city will deny all permits for street fairs, events stretching larger than one block or requiring a sound system and events in parks it believes will "unreasonably diminish public use.""As New York has begun its reopening process, accessible open spaces are more important than ever," said de Blasio in a statement. "While it pains me to call off some of the city's beloved events, our focus now must be the prioritization of city space for public use and the continuation of social distancing." |
4 Flight Attendants Evaluated At BWI After Spirit Airlines Flight Reports Medical Emergency Posted: 10 Jul 2020 08:33 AM PDT |
Outdoor Dinging Decor That's Sure to Bring Joy to Any Table Posted: 10 Jul 2020 05:00 AM PDT |
This aviator just became the US Navy's first Black female fighter pilot Posted: 10 Jul 2020 08:54 AM PDT |
US universities are charging full fees for 'virtual' class this fall. This is absurd Posted: 10 Jul 2020 01:30 AM PDT Schools with huge endowments are pretending remote learning is the same experience. Give students a break Colleges and universities are in an unprecedented bind. Coronavirus continues to rage in many parts of America, making the sort of communal gatherings that are hallmarks of collegiate life outright dangerous. Lecture halls, libraries, football games and dorm-room parties can all be superspreader events.Some educational institutions have already declared that almost the entire academic year will occur remotely, while others are forging on with in-person learning. Two of the schools I teach at, NYU and St Joseph's College in Brooklyn, are attempting the latter, which will carry its own risks, depending on how New York City progresses in its continuing battle to keep infection rates low.For schools that have decided against most in-person instruction, the caution exercised is understandable. The University of California system, Harvard, Yale, Princeton and Rutgers have all declared that the bulk of their course offerings will be online. But about 60% of schools nationwide are still planning an in-person start to the year.What they all aren't doing is reducing tuition, even though a significant portion of the value these educational institutions provide is now lost indefinitely. Only Princeton has offered a 10% price cut. Harvard, with its $40bn endowment, is still charging full tuition. So are Rutgers and the University of California schools, both public universities.Though they charge less than private institutions, Rutgers or a University of California school aren't cheap. In-state students at California public universities still pay about $14,000 a year to attend. At Rutgers, in New Jersey, in-state students pay a little more than $12,000. (At both schools, out-of-state tuition is far higher, more than $40,000 and $30,000 respectively.)Remote learning, no matter how well-intentioned, is a diluted product, and students deserve a tuition reduction for sitting at home and staring at a laptop screen. As someone who taught remotely this past semester, I strained to provide a comparable experience to what students were used to. Ultimately I could not. Professors cannot connect with students in the same way. And the ancillary benefits of college – making friends, networking with peers, joining clubs, playing intramural sports – are all lost.> College costs have soared, and now almost every institution, in the age of coronavirus, faces a reckoningThere is an argument that students, especially at prestige schools, are still getting the value of a degree and therefore should pay the full freight. Isn't the diploma ultimately what matters? But that's not how colleges and universities pitch themselves to unsuspecting freshmen.College life is not merely about scoring a dream job right after graduation. It's supposed to be an experience. Behold our manicured lawns, our successful basketball team, our state-of-the-art fitness center, the newly revamped computer lab – and pay dearly for them. Part of the tradeoff of taking on crippling debt is supposed to be the creation of unforgettable memories, those four life-changing years you'll never have again. Remote learning promises none of that.Public schools are in a tougher position than their wealthier private counterparts. Tuition is how they generate much of their revenue, particularly after decades of cost-cutting by state governments. Many states have left world-class public institutions begging for money; the cuts after the 2008 economic crash were especially deep. Without a massive federal bailout package, public universities and community colleges will be suffering for years to come, starved of tax revenue in the wake of the pandemic.Still, these public institutions can offer tuition discounts while seeking cuts elsewhere. Fun fact: who is the highest paid public employee in the history of New Jersey? It's Greg Schiano, the Rutgers football coach, who makes $4m annually. Rutgers, like other universities across the country, has been in an athletics arms race to match powerhouses like University of Michigan and Ohio State, which also happen to be public institutions. The profligate spending led Rutgers to amass a $100m athletic budget in the 2018-19 school year, running up large deficits.Rutgers could offer a good faith tuition reduction to students while shrinking nonessential expenditures, like athletics. The same could be done at the University of California system, where the two crown jewels, UCLA and UC Berkeley, had massive athletic deficits during the 2019 fiscal year.College costs have soared over the decades for a variety of reasons – declining public aid, expensive athletics, increased demand, and the rising cost of staff, particularly those not tied to the faculty – and now almost every institution, in the age of coronavirus, faces a reckoning. They can continue to overcharge students. Or they can attempt a measure of economic justice at a time when, from the White House on down, it's utterly lacking. * Ross Barkan is a writer based in New York City |
Gun violence disproportionately affects minorities. Data shows it's getting worse. Posted: 09 Jul 2020 06:51 AM PDT |
Posted: 09 Jul 2020 07:01 PM PDT New Zealand's former prime minister Helen Clark warned if the world remained "flat-footed" in its response to pandemics it faces future economic, social and political crisis, after she was appointed by the World Health Organization (WHO) to lead a review of the global response to the COVID-19 pandemic. WHO announced late on Thursday that Clark and Liberia's former president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf will lead a panel scrutinising the global response. The COVID-19 outbreak originated in China in late 2019 and has infected a reported 12.16 million people globally and 550,242 have died, according to a Reuters tally. |
No regrets: wounded Hong Kong police vow to keep enforcing law Posted: 09 Jul 2020 10:02 PM PDT Nine months ago he was burned by corrosive liquid hurled during anti-government protests, but Hong Kong police officer Ling says he has no regrets and remains devoted to being a law enforcer. Officers like Ling have formed the spear tip of Beijing's pushback against huge and often violent pro-democracy protests in the restless finance hub. Now the police have been given expanded powers under a sweeping new national security law imposed by Beijing that aims to crush the democracy movement once and for all. |
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Protester: Man pulls gun on anniversary of flag’s removal Posted: 10 Jul 2020 09:58 AM PDT Counterprotesters said a passing driver pointed a gun at them Friday and said "All Lives Matter," as competing groups gathered in front of South Carolina's capitol building to mark the five-year anniversary of the state's removal of the Confederate battle flag from Statehouse grounds. The driver stopped in the middle of the road and stuck his middle finger out at several demonstrators who were on a road median shortly before noon, protester Kamison Burgess told The State newspaper. |
Trump abruptly postpones weekend campaign rally in New Hampshire Posted: 10 Jul 2020 10:25 AM PDT |
Xinjiang: US sanctions on Chinese officials over 'abuse' of Muslims Posted: 09 Jul 2020 10:56 PM PDT |
The Best Smart Technology for Your Socially Distanced Summer Posted: 10 Jul 2020 10:04 AM PDT |
Heat advisory issued as South Florida prepares to break temperature records Posted: 09 Jul 2020 05:21 PM PDT |
Gilead analysis shows remdesivir reduced coronavirus death risk, more studies needed Posted: 10 Jul 2020 06:02 AM PDT Remdesivir has been at the forefront of the global battle against COVID-19 after the intravenously administered medicine helped shorten hospital recovery times, according to data in April from a separate U.S. government trial. In the latest analysis, Gilead said it analyzed data from 312 patients treated in its late-stage study and a separate real-world retrospective cohort of 818 patients with similar characteristics and disease severity. Gilead's late-stage study evaluated the safety and efficacy of five-day and 10-day dosing durations of remdesivir in hospitalized patients. |
What Ghislaine Maxwell's arrest means for Epstein case Posted: 08 Jul 2020 09:06 PM PDT |
Netherlands takes Russia to European Court of Human Rights over MH17 downing in Ukraine Posted: 10 Jul 2020 07:03 AM PDT The Dutch government will sue Russia in the European Court of Human Rights for its role in the crash of Malaysian Airlines Flight 17, shot down over eastern Ukraine in 2014. "Achieving justice for 298 victims of the downing of Flight MH17 is and will remain the government's highest priority," Dutch Foreign Minister Stef Blok said in a statement. "By taking this step today – bringing a case before the ECHR and thus supporting the applications of the next of kin as much as we can – we are moving closer to this goal." Russian officials had no immediate reaction to the announcement. Malaysian Airlines flight MH17 was en route from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur when it was shot down by a missile on July 17, 2014, over rebel-controlled eastern Ukraine, in what came to be one of the most tragic episodes in the bloody separatist conflict in eastern Ukraine. Russia has stubbornly denied any role in supporting the rebels with troops or weapons. The Dutch-led joint investigative team has insisted that it was the Russian military that deployed a Buk missile launcher to eastern Ukraine that shot down the plane, a claim that the Kremlin has denied. The case is separate to the ongoing trial that opened in the Netherlands in March after Ukraine's Leonid Kharchenko and Russian separatist commanders, Igor Girkin, Sergey Dubinskiy and Oleg Pulatov, were charged with destroying the aircraft and murdering all people on board. None of the men, who are in Russia or separatist-held eastern Ukraine, are attending the trial, and only Mr Pulatov has appointed counsel to defend him in court. Lawsuits by one country against another are extremely rare for the European Court of Human Rights, which typically deals with claims lodged by individuals against their country, and Friday's announcement highlights the Netherlands' frustration with Russia which has refused to cooperate with the Dutch investigation. |
Texas carries out its first execution during pandemic after Supreme Court gives go-ahead Posted: 09 Jul 2020 04:52 AM PDT Texas has executed its first death row inmate since it first confirmed a case of coronavirus after a Supreme Court ruling allowed his execution to go ahead.Billy Joe Wardlow, 45, was sentenced to death in 1993 for a robbery and murder in which he and his girlfriend tried to rob 82-year-old Carl Cole of his truck using a .45-calibre gun. Mr Wardlow fired the gun in a struggle, and Cole was killed; the couple were arrested two days later. |
Death of Black man found hanging from tree ruled a suicide Posted: 09 Jul 2020 04:16 PM PDT |
Trump: Doctors Were ‘Very Surprised’ I ‘Aced’ Cognitive Test Posted: 09 Jul 2020 08:20 PM PDT President Donald Trump boasted on Thursday night about a cognitive test he took during a Walter Reed physical, telling Fox News host Sean Hannity that doctors were "very surprised" that he "aced" it while calling on former Vice President Joe Biden to take the same test.Calling in to close confidant Hannity's primetime program, both the president and the Fox News star began openly questioning Biden's mental fitness and suggesting he is suffering from cognitive decline.After Hannity aired a montage of selectively edited clips to characterize Biden as senile, and Trump described the former vice president as "brainwashed," the conservative host brought up Biden's recent claim that he "can hardly wait" to test his cognitive capability against Trump's."Now he apparently says that he has many cognitive tests," Hannity said. "He's tested all the time, cognitively. Maybe he'll release those records and maybe he'll release his medical records."(For the record, Biden said he's "been tested and I'm constantly tested," and that all anyone has to do is "watch me," suggesting he means that the real world tests him.)Hannity wondered aloud if Biden has been trying to figure out a way to avoid debating the president, a recent right-wing talking point that has gained steam recently, prompting Trump to say "yes" before going on a tangent."But he meant the COVID tests. He didn't mean cognitive. He meant COVID," Trump declared.After Hannity insisted Biden said "cognitive," Trump continued to argue that the ex-veep meant coronavirus tests—Biden has said he hadn't taken a COVID-19 test yet—but that Biden was "confused by the question and the words and everything else but he didn't take a cognitive test because he couldn't pass one."The president went on to say that he took a cognitive test "very recently" in order to prove to those questioning his mental acuity that he was "all there." (It appears Trump is talking about the Montreal Cognitive Assessment he took during his 2018 physical exam, which he passed.)"I proved I was all there because I aced it," Trump bellowed. "I aced the test and he should take the same exact test. A very standard test.""I took it at Walter Reed, a medical center, in front of doctors, and they were very surprised," he continued. "They said, that's an unbelievable thing. Rarely does anybody do what you just did. But he should take that same test."The president would go on to say that Biden "has been totally taken over" and it's "because he doesn't understand what's going on" before once again claiming that Biden "wants to get out of the debates."Last month, the Biden campaign announced that the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee would be participating in the three scheduled presidential debates this fall.Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Pompeo slams UN report on deadly US drone strike on Iranian Posted: 10 Jul 2020 07:41 AM PDT U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has criticized an independent U.N. human rights expert's report insisting a American drone strike that killed a top Iranian general in January was a "watershed" event in the use of drones and amounted to a violation of international law. The report presented by Agnes Callamard to the U.N.-backed Human Rights Council on Thursday chronicled events around the death of Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani and the legal implications of his killing as part of a broader look on the use of drone strikes. |
'UK faces mobile blackouts if Huawei 5G ban imposed by 2023' Posted: 10 Jul 2020 02:00 AM PDT |
Explained: The battle over Turkey’s Hagia Sophia Posted: 10 Jul 2020 07:39 AM PDT |
U.S. has not yet decided how it will retaliate to France digital tax: Mnuchin Posted: 09 Jul 2020 07:42 AM PDT The United States has not yet finalized a decision on how it will respond to France's digital tax, U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in an interview with CNBC on Thursday. Washington had been in talks with the European Union over the taxes on digital giants like Alphabet's Google, Amazon and Facebook, but Mnuchin called for a break in the negotiations in June. |
The Best Beach Towels That Aren’t Totally Boring Posted: 10 Jul 2020 07:58 AM PDT |
Satanic Temple threatens lawsuit over Mississippi’s ‘in God we trust’ flag plan Posted: 09 Jul 2020 06:53 AM PDT |
Posted: 10 Jul 2020 10:26 AM PDT |
Trump and conservatives hijacked the Supreme Court. We're progressives ready to fight back. Posted: 10 Jul 2020 12:15 AM PDT |
Lawmakers vote to shut down Philippines' largest TV network Posted: 10 Jul 2020 12:30 AM PDT Philippine lawmakers voted Friday to reject the license renewal of the country's largest TV network, shutting down a major news provider that had been repeatedly threatened by the president over its critical coverage. The House of Representatives' Committee on Franchises voted 70-11 to reject a new 25-year license for ABS-CBN Corp. The National Telecommunications Commission had ordered the broadcaster to shut down in May after its old franchise expired. It halted broadcasting then, but the vote takes it off the air permanently. |
Environmental Injustice Is Another Form of 'Assault on Black Bodies,' Says Sen. Cory Booker Posted: 09 Jul 2020 11:29 AM PDT |
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