A small group of conservative religious colleges is defying the national trend of declining enrollment in higher education and crediting their missions, as well as their handling of COVID-19, for the bump.
Pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson on Friday agreed to a $26 billion settlement to thousands of claims by local and state governments of the alleged role that it and several others played in the U.S. opioid crisis.
Nebraska and Wisconsin are the two most recent of the 17 states that have now passed resolutions to hold an Article V convention that look to clip back the rights of the federal government over citizens.
California lawmakers want COVID vaccine mandates for all K-12 students and the right to “discipline” doctors who step outside public policy guidelines for treating COVID patients. But other states, including New Hampshire and Kansas, are eying legislation designed to protect physicians who prescribe drugs like ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine.
Michael Bloomberg, former mayor of New York City, has issued a warning to Democrats ahead of the next midterm elections saying they will be devastating if they don’t change tactics.
Here’s an actual headline good for some laughs: “Vulnerable Senate Dems try to run as tax-cutters.” That howler of a header appeared this week in Politico.
The Biden administration created a plan for 16,000 Afghan refugees to be housed at a Loudoun county Virginia convention center in resettlement program.