Eleanor Jones started homeschooling her learning-disabled son in the fall of 2020 when Maryland’s public schools were virtual — and she’s had no desire to send him back since they’ve reopened.
A new law passed by North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un’s puppet parliament will allow for the leader to fire a preemptive nuclear attack if the country believes such an action would protect it from a threat.
As California students head back to school this year, they may encounter books and materials promoting LGBT topics, transgenderism, and gender ideology for children as early as preschool and kindergarten.
The Department of Defense (DOD) Inspector General (IG) will investigate allegations that President Joe Biden resettled nearly 400 Afghans across the United States who are listed as “potential threats” to national security.
The Biden administration is hard at work – just not at solving the border crisis, bringing down inflation, dealing with massive spikes in crime across our cities, or upping our foreign policy game.
A new investigation into the record-keeping of 100 key 2020 battleground counties found that nearly all threw out or mishandled voting documentation they are supposed to keep for 22 months in case an audit is called.
Oberlin College has begun paying more than $36 million to Gibson’s Bakery after a legal dispute in which the business said the college slandered it as racist following a shoplifting incident.
King Charles III vowed in his first speech as monarch Friday to carry on Queen Elizabeth II’s “lifelong service” with his own modernizing stamp, as Britain entered an uncertain new age under a new sovereign.
Queen Elizabeth II, Britain’s longest-reigning monarch and a symbol of stability in a turbulent era that saw the decline of the British empire and embarrassing dysfunction in her own family, died Thursday after 70 years on the throne. She was 96.