(By Michael Chamberlain, RealClear Wire) “Disinformation and misinformation is the bona fide enemy of public health,” Dr. Anthony Fauci stated in a recent interview. But he also said, “We should embrace differences in opinion.”
What if misinformation is coming from the public health officials themselves? And lately, government has not...
(By Jon Miltimore, FEE) For more than a quarter-century, we’ve been hearing predictions about the demise of cable—and with it, cable news.
A Pew Research article from 2000 showed the trends began more than 30 years ago, when consumption of broadcast and local news began to decline, and users began to get...
(Headline USA) Despite privacy concerns and dysfunctional models, some states are determined to replace gas taxes with taxes for every mile driven, a model that requires tracking devices to monitor the movement of citizens.
Evan Burroughs has spent eight years touting the virtues of an Oregon pilot program charging motorists by...
(Headline USA) New York City officials called on the public to help with a crackdown on unsafe e-bikes and e-bike shops after a spate of deadly fires caused by lithium ion batteries.
Daniel Flynn, the chief fire marshal of the FDNY, encouraged New Yorkers to report “hazardous conditions” inside repair...
(Headline USA) A bridge that crosses the Yellowstone River in Montana collapsed early Saturday, plunging portions of a freight train carrying hazardous materials into the rushing water below.
The train cars were carrying hot asphalt and molten sulfur, Stillwater County Disaster and Emergency Services said. Officials shut down drinking water...
(Headline USA) Battery plants planned in Tennessee and Kentucky for Ford's electric vehicles are on track to receive up to a $9.2 billion federal loan from the U.S. Department of Energy in addition to millions more from the two states.
The money for construction would secure a sizable chunk of...
(Bethany Blankley, The Center Square) Since Texas’ border security mission Operation Lone Star launched more than two years ago, the multi-agency effort has led to the apprehension of nearly 400,000 foreign nationals who entered the U.S. illegally.
Since last April, Texas has sent over 500 buses of foreign nationals to...
(Headline USA) Moscow on Saturday erected checkpoints with armored vehicles and troops on its southern edge, Red Square was shut down and the mayor urged motorists to stay off some roads as the Russian capital braced for the arrival of a private army led by a rebellious mercenary commander.
Authorities...
(Headline USA) The 'rage giving' did not last.
Anti-life pro-abortion activists, who received a windfall of donations following the Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade one year ago, say giving has dropped off.
After the Dobbs decision, some major funders of abortion access also have ended or shifted funding from...
(Headline USA) Republican lawmakers in Montana are sharing that they received letters with white powder as federal agents investigate mysterious substances similarly mailed to GOP officials in two other states.
In a Friday night tweet, Republican Gov. Greg Gianforte said he has received “disturbing” reports of anonymous threats sent to...
(Headline USA) Kris Kobach, the attorney general of Kansas, asked a judge to end a requirement for Kansas to allow transgenders to change their birth certificates.
U.S. District Judge Daniel Crabtree imposed the requirement in 2019 to settle a lawsuit filed by four transgenders against three state health department officials.
It...
(Headline USA) Opposing parental control over the children’s sections of libraries will be a major focus of the American Library Association's annual meeting this weekend in Chicago.
Librarians may attend sessions aimed at helping them confidently counter parental book challenges and fight legislative regulation of indecent library material.
All day Saturday,...