News
If a Democratic president tried to so directly politicize an independent agency, Republicans would be screaming about the coming tyranny.
Offending government officials—even when it involves saying awful things—is a time-honored practice in the United States.
Michael Hayes, a Lakeland, Florida, police detective, was arrested for falsely reporting a crime, a first-degree misdemeanor.
It's August, which means the weather's hot, everyone in D.C. is on vacation, and people on X are having meltdowns about sorority recruitment TikTok videos.
Officials from the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries seized and euthanized the deer, then fined the family $1,600.
A new campaign is pushing back against the widespread use of automatic license plate readers without warrants.
The president's revenue-sharing agreement on chip sales to China may pass legal muster, paving the way for effective export tariffs.
A report affirms that greenhouse gases are warming the planet, but also found no strong evidence that extreme weather has become more frequent or intense.
Universities’ internal culture wars threaten free speech and inquiry, but political attacks on research funding and infrastructure are crippling U.S. scientific leadership.
These students were not cynical, but adaptive. In a campus environment where grades, leadership, and peer belonging often hinge on fluency in performative morality, young adults quickly learn to ...
D.C.'s stepped-up law enforcement continues: Last night, a somewhat predictable scene broke out between Homeland Security officers doing a traffic checkpoint at 14th and W streets NW and protesters, ...
From Judge a decision Monday by Judge Brian Wimes (W.D. Mo.) in Courtright v. Epic Games, Inc.: Carey Courtright ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results