Faith Over Fury: How One Man Raised $200K for a Church Shooter’s Family
In an extraordinary act of mercy, a Utah man raised over $200,000 for the family of the Michigan church shooter—citing his Latter-day Saints faith as the driving force.
In an extraordinary act of mercy, a Utah man raised over $200,000 for the family of the Michigan church shooter—citing his Latter-day Saints faith as the driving force.
Donald Trump plans to use a government shutdown as leverage to slash or eliminate agencies like the EPA and Department of Education, calling it an ‘unprecedented opportunity.’
Despite being branded the Los Angeles Olympics, two key 2028 events—softball and canoe slalom—will be held in Oklahoma City to save costs and foster bipartisan unity.
A government shutdown looms as Republicans back a simple funding extension while Democrats insist on adding $1.1 trillion for health programs.
Ann Fagan Ginger, a pioneering civil liberties attorney and mentor to generations of activists, has died at age 100 after a lifetime of defending constitutional rights.
A growing number of Democrats are cutting ties with AIPAC, reflecting a deepening rift over U.S. policy toward Israel and Gaza.
The U.S. Department of Energy has terminated over 300 clean-energy initiatives, with nearly all located in Democratic-led states, amid a federal government shutdown.
The Trump administration has redefined U.S. drug enforcement by labeling recently killed Caribbean smugglers as ‘unlawful combatants,’ signaling a wartime approach to cartels.
A recent incident in San Bruno highlights the legal gray area around autonomous vehicles: when there’s no human driver, who gets cited for traffic violations?
As the U.S. government shuts down, President Trump and Democrats square off over health care—each accusing the other of jeopardizing Americans’ access to affordable coverage.