Things are not going very well for Republicans "investigating" the wrongdoings of those in the administration who successfully opposed Trump. But they are managing to make fools of themselves, repeatedly.
Mounting evidence is showing gas stoves pose a health risk. Not surprisingly, the fossil fuel industry has been pushing back hard. Now, we find out they've known about the problem and have hidden it for over half a century.
Tennessee's Republican majority is succeeding at making utter fools of themselves as they try vainly to legislate the LBGTQ+ community out of existence.
Universities used millions of dollars from Big Oil to fund research promoting natural gas as a "clean" alternative to oil and coal and downplaying the negative impacts of fossil fuel emissions.
Apparently Nazi domestic terrorists need a Day of Hate to remind everyone about what losers they really are. But true to form, not a lot of them actually showed up.
White members of the Tennessee legislature attempted to censor new black member Justin Pearson for his appearance—in a traditional Dashiki—citing "rules for House decorum and dress attire" that don't actually exist.
The Biden administration aims to open up more than 100,000 offshore acres near Lake Charles, Louisiana and nearly 200,000 acres near Galveston, Texas as part the plan to develop wind power along every U.S. coastline.
Jimmy Carter is best known for America's longest, finest, most big-hearted post-presidency, building over 40 years a purposeful life of service that became his greatest legacy.
A bill introduced by Florida Republicans would make it easier for DeSantis to sue the press and stifle investigative reporting. Definitely unconstitutional.
Unknown to most, the manosphere is the international engine of far-right extremists using the culture-war playbook and relying on its unique capacity to super-spread outrage and "aggrieved masculinity."
Key findings from the latest survey include that 53% of about 5,600 Americans across political affiliations have an unfavorable view of the U.S. news media overall, compared with just 26% who hold a favorable view.