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Trump may be the first former president to face criminal prosecution, but that fact in and of itself is a damning condemnation of the U.S. system of impunity.
Increased burdens on voter-registration groups and higher fines are just some of features of a new bill that was sneaked in quietly after 2 a.m. in the morning.
The GOP-controlled legislature's expulsion efforts came after thousands of Nashville students walked out of their classrooms to demand action on gun violence.
Being stopped by the cops is not supposed to be a life-threatening event. But even in "progressive" San Francisco, things can and have gone very wrong.
More than a third of US households cook with gas stoves, which emit nitric oxides, carbon monoxide and formaldehyde—airborne pollutants that can trigger asthma, wheezing and other respiratory problems.
Before Trump's indictment took over the headlines, a study warned that "melting ice around Antarctica will cause a rapid slowdown of a major global deep ocean current by 2050 that could alter the world's climate for centuries."
A statue long considered a Renaissance masterpiece in Florence (and the world over) has now been deemed pornographic in Florida. Such a stark contrast in points of view—here or there—has a long history.
Instead of negotiating a first union contract as required by law, Starbucks has chosen to fire Alexis Rizzo, a union leader in Buffalo who worked for Starbucks for seven years.
The porn star said she is unafraid of facing the former president in court: "I've seen him naked. There's no way he could be scarier with his clothes on."
While there is a lot about this prosecution that isn’t yet clear to the general public, one thing is clear—this will be a case with unprecedented attention and complexity.
Trump's corruption is finally catching up to him. He was the first president to be impeached twice, and now he’s the first former president to be criminally indicted.
A professor of law and political science examines the consequences of an indictment and potential trial for Trump's campaign and, if his effort is successful, his future presidency.
Sara McLin’s son burned his hand on a stove. She took him to an in-network emergency room near their home in Florida which did not treat him. But they sent bills anyway—to her son, so she can't dispute them.
Militia groups, Christian nationalists, anti-vaccine activists and other conspiracy theorists in the Pacific Northwest have all started working together and are forging new connections with the formal political class.
California is now the first state to penalize big oil companies for their rampant and unrestrained price gouging which has California drivers paying the highest gas prices in the country.
Columnist Jay Bookman opines that of all the potential indictments of the former president the least important concerns hush money allegedly paid to a porn star.
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