This week the FDA announced it was limiting the use of Johnson & Johnson’s Janssen COVID-19 vaccine due to the risk of developing a rare blood clotting disorder.
Some 2,000 Ukrainian fighters defending the remains of Mariupol’s Azovstal steel factory refused to surrender Thursday under relentless attacks by Russian forces that included air support.
Pro-abortion activists have published the home addresses of six Supreme Court justices to encourage protests at their homes over a leaked opinion which could lead to the overturning of Roe v. Wade.
The Department of Education has approved $6.8 billion in student debt relief for over 110,000 Americans, with the average borrower eligible for $60,000 in student loan forgiveness.
Billionaire and Tech Tycoon Elon Musk, who is no stranger to the headlines, made shockwaves last week when he sealed the deal to buy Twitter in an effort to make the platform more open to free speech.
Following the unprecedented SCOTUS leak of a draft opinion overruling two historic pro-abortion decisions by the court, President Biden has demonstrated a lack of sound reasoning in the pro-abortion argument.
Amid the left’s collective outrage over a possible reversal of Roe v. Wade, VICE recently touted the use of a veterinary drug used to treat ulcers in horses as a convenient do-it-yourself abortion alternative in response to the “horrifying prospect” that Roe will be overturned.
The famous Israeli intelligence agency, Mossad, captured and interrogated an Iranian national, Mansour Rasouli, last week. According to Rasouli, he was involved in a plot to kill an Israeli diplomat in Turkey, a French journalist, and a senior U.S. General in Berlin.
President Joe Biden made multiple controversial statements following an address on Wednesday; suggesting that abortion is a God given right and that today’s Republican party is the the “most extreme political organization” in modern American history.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection arrested approximately 234,000 illegal immigrants at the southern border last month, easily surpassing March’s record-shattering number by nearly 13,000, according to preliminary data obtained by The Washington Post.