A Wisconsin bill aimed at sharply restricting foreign ownership of agricultural land is advancing after a public hearing this week. Senate Bill 219 would lower the current cap from 640 acres to just 50 acres for foreign persons or entities owning farmland in the state.
Champlin Park High School made history Friday by winning the Minnesota Group 4A girls’ softball state championship — but the victory is drawing national attention not just for the achievement, but for who helped secure it. The Rebels' dominant postseason was led by junior pitcher Marissa Rothenberger, a transgender-identifying male athlete who pitched a complete-game shutout in the final.
Eighty-one years ago, Allied forces stormed the beaches of Normandy in one of history’s most daring and costly military operations. Among the tens of thousands of young soldiers was a man who defied both age and privilege—Brigadier General Theodore Roosevelt Jr., the eldest son of President Theodore Roosevelt.
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu (D) is under fire for comparing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to neo-Nazis following the arrest of nearly 1,500 illegal aliens in Massachusetts — nearly 800 of whom are accused or convicted criminals.
Chinese state-backed hackers infiltrated a major American telecommunications company as early as the summer of 2023, corporate investigators have revealed, raising serious concerns about the timeline and scope of China’s cyber-espionage in the U.S.
A new bill heading to Governor Greg Abbott's (R-TX) desk requires famous snack foods to receive a warning label. If signed, the bipartisan measure would take effect in 2027.
The U.S. Department of Commerce has suspended export licenses for American nuclear equipment suppliers selling to Chinese power plants, intensifying the ongoing trade conflict between the two nations.