Biden “continues to feel well, though he is experiencing a bit of a return of a loose cough,” his physician Kevin O’Connor said. “He remains fever-free and in good spirits.”
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Biden “continues to feel well, though he is experiencing a bit of a return of a loose cough,” his physician Kevin O’Connor said. “He remains fever-free and in good spirits.”
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday officially certified its month-old ruling that would allow the Biden administration to lift Trump-era “remain in Mexico policy.”
Hua said China has made it clear to the U.S. “how dangerous it would be if the visit actually happens,” adding that any retaliatory countermeasures undertaken by Beijing would be “justified and necessary” in the face of Washington’s “unscrupulous behavior.”
Speaking on the condition of anonymity, an official provided details on the operation that killed Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri.
The loss of 4.6 million barrels from the U.S. emergency crude oil stockpile means that reserve levels are now at the lowest they’ve been in nearly 40 years.
The United States Postal Service is taking the 2020 election chaos to heart by creating a brand new division which will specifically oversee mail-in ballots during election seasons.
Florida’s sea turtles are grappling with a gender imbalance made worse by uncharacteristically high temperatures. Recent heat waves have caused the sand on some beaches to get so hot that nearly every turtle born was female.
At issue is compliance with the state’s HB 1775, which places a strict prohibition on “discrimination on the basis of race or sex in the form of bias, stereotyping, scapegoating, classification, or the categorical assignment of traits, morals, values, or characteristics based solely on race or sex.”
The cost of professing Christ in the West African nation of Nigeria has become dire, and numerous Christian media outlets have begun to report the horrors to which believers have been subjected.
U.S. household debt increased to a record $16.15 trillion in the second quarter, driven mostly by a $207 billion jump in mortgage balances, with credit card and auto loan debt also rising as consumers increased their borrowing to deal with soaring inflation, a Federal Reserve report showed on Tuesday.