January

New Hampshire House Approves Over-The-Counter Ivermectin

New Hampshire took a giant step closer to becoming the first U.S. state to offer Ivermectin without a prescription on March 16.

Children Facing Drastically Lower Reading Ability Compared to Pre-COVID Times: German Study

Reading ability of fourth-graders drastically dropped since pre-pandemic assessments of children in the same grade.

Texas Mail Ballot Rejections Soar Under New Restrictions

Texas threw out mail votes at an abnormally high rate during the nation’s first primary of 2022, rejecting nearly 23,000 ballots outright under tougher voting rules that are part of a broad campaign by Republicans to reshape American elections, according to an analysis by The Associated Press.

Mississippi Governor Signs Bill to Ban Critical Race Theory in Schools

Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves on March 14 signed into law Senate Bill 2113, which prohibits critical race theory (CRT) ideologies in publicly funded schools.

Fed Raises Interest Rates for First Time in 3 Years, Projects 6 More Hikes as Inflation Soars

Federal Reserve increases key benchmark rate by 25-basis points

Banned Film Exposes the Real Reason for the COVID Pandemic

Prior to 2020, if you heard the term “lockdown” you might think of something that happens in a prison — not in a free society. This mechanism of control has since become commonplace — not among prisoners but among the free — with repercussions that are only beginning to be understood.

Biden Sued for Withholding Info on Controversial Migrant Housing Contracts

A nonprofit watchdog group has sued the Biden administration for its failure to turn over documents that explain how massive government contracts to detain migrants at the border were awarded to a former Biden transition team member.

San Antonio Elementary Schoolers Reportedly Segregated for Lesson on Racism

Elementary schoolers in San Antonio, Texas, were segregated by the color of their hair, and children in one group were told they were not as smart as the other group, according to parents who spoke with a local NBC affiliate.

Thousands of Russians Seeking Asylum at the U.S. Southern Border

More than 8,600 Russians have attempted to cross into the U.S. border from August through January after entering Mexico as tourists

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