Tonight on FISM News: President Biden goes after pro-life Republicans, Elon Musk reverses course and decides to purchase Twitter, and Aaron Judge sets a new AL home run record.
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Tonight on FISM News: President Biden goes after pro-life Republicans, Elon Musk reverses course and decides to purchase Twitter, and Aaron Judge sets a new AL home run record.
On Tuesday, the U.S. Department of Justice released a statement regarding five current or former IRS employees who defrauded COVID-19 relief programs, collectively claiming more than $400,000.
The inclusion of electric vehicles into the federal Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) would be one of the largest changes to the program since it began more than a decade ago. The EPA is expected to send the proposal, which will address mandates for after 2022, to the White House for approval by the end of next week, two of the sources said.
One in five minors between the ages of 13 and 17 now identify as transgender, based on a UCLA Williams Institute study.
Pastor John MacArthur implored his congregation at Grace Community Church in Sun Valley to pray for their political leaders, no matter how they may feel personally towards them.
Baldwin and others could still face criminal charges over Hutchins’ death, a New Mexico prosecutor said in September. Investigators have focused on determining who handled the pistol Baldwin fired.
President Biden’s campaign to seek increased oil production from other nations was answered with a resounding “no” on Wednesday.
On Tuesday, history was made in an unorthodox and rather discouraging way for the US economy, as the American national debt exceeded $31 trillion for the first time in the nation’s history.
New documents are shedding light on holes in the FBI’s case against Mark Houck, a pro-life sidewalk counselor and father of seven, who said he agreed to allow agents into his Pennsylvania home only to have it raided by more than two dozen agents who pointed guns at him and his wife while his children watched.
The project, which Micron claims will be the world’s largest semiconductor fabrication facility, is expected to create nearly 50,000 jobs in New York, with the first phase investment of $20 billion planned by the end of this decade.