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US Sending $725 Million More in Weapons to Ukraine

The Department of Defense (DOD) has announced that the United States will provide $725 million in additional security assistance to meet Ukraine’s “critical security and defense needs” as it battles a Russian invasion.

‘Wild Ride’ Begins With Court Clash Over First US Law To Ban Child Transgender Surgeries

When America’s first law banning “gender transition procedures” for minors was passed in Arkansas last year, it spawned a wave of similar legislation. But legislative proposals in...

House GOP probing whether National Archives conspired with Democrats in Trump records dispute

Reps. James Comer and Jim Jordan say they have suspicions there was collusion between NARA and congressional Democrats. Two powerful House Republicans demanded Friday that...

The Pro-Life Movement Charts a New Path

For a half-century, anti-abortion protestors have traveled from across the country to Washington for the March for Life, an annual demonstration that starts on...

Trump’s Truth Social app soars to No. 1 on the Google Play store

After a long wait, the Trump-owned app scores 100,000 plus downloads in first days in Android marketplace. Former President Donald Trump's social media app Truth...

J.K. Rowling Responds to Threats of Being Canceled

J.K. Rowling, author of the famed Harry Potter series, isn’t concerned about losing fans due to her outspokenness on transgender issues—and expressed so in truly epic fashion.

Pennsylvania’s Fetterman, a Man Fettered by Problems, Shouldn’t Be a Senator

Republicans have put up (and even elected) a bevy of awful federal candidates this year and in the recent past, but none of them are any more unfit for office than Democratic Senate nominee John Fetterman of Pennsylvania.

Class of 2022 Produced Lowest ACT Scores in More Than 30 Years

The country's 2022 graduating high school class produced the lowest average ACT score in more than 30 years, according to the organization that administers the standardized college readiness exam.

Americans’ Heating Bills Expected to Soar This Winter

American families will pay far more to heat their homes this winter, according to the Energy Information Administration (EIA), which predicts that some people will see bills as much as 28 percent higher compared to last winter, with the grim outlook coming as households expect inflation to rise and the economy to get worse.

At Least 2,600 Government Officials Trade Stocks in Conflict of Interest Deals

Department of Defense officials trade stock from Chinese companies, EPA officials hold oil and gas shares, and almost 2,000 federal employees trade stock with Big Tech groups.

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